(Parts 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 and 16)
Readers who are still with me most of the way through what is turning into a very lengthy series: Help me out. I need some material to work with.
Got any exercise plans? Ones you hope to do, are thinking of doing, are already doing?
Let's see if we can't get it into the TARP (or whatever) format that I described in this post, and append to it some thoughts about athletic identity and attitude.
So… in the exercise plan or plans that you are considering, that you would like to do if you could just figure it out, or are already doing….
(1) What's your athletic identity?
a. "I'm an individual athlete"
b. "I play a sport"
c. "I'm working on the very basic fundamentals" e.g. walking to become a runner
d. "I'm rehabilitating myself"
e. "I'm cross-training—I do several different things"
f. "I'm staying fit in the off-season, so to speak"
(2) What's your sport? What's the activity that defines what you are or what you hope to become? Running, swimming, dancing… (It's not necessarily what you actually do to exercise each week. My husband would tell you he's a skier, not a runner; he runs all year to stay fit for 6-10 days of skiing.)
(3) What are your time slots (in your plan, whether it's active or only thought of)?
(4) What activity?
(5) Where?
(6) What arrangements have you made, or might you make, for people in your care during the workout?
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My example is my Winter '08, brand-new exercise plan:
I wanted to become a swimmer, an "individual athlete." I planned two workouts per week, Monday and Thursday, for forty minutes. Swimming both times. I went to the local YMCA, where we have a family membership. On Monday nights, I left the children with my husband Mark. On Th
ursday nights, the family went to the gym together, and Mark would stay with the baby (who wouldn't stay by herself) in the child care center while I swam. (He'd get his turn to exercise after I was done.)
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So, those of you who do get regular exercise, tell us how. Or if you had a plan that worked great in the past, especially a beginner plan, describe it. Those of you who have a plan only in mind, throw it out there for us to hear. I really want to hear from as many readers as I can on this one, because I want to use the results as a jumping-off point to write about making backup plans.