Sitting in front of a computer for 16
or more hours a day isn't conducive to svelteness. It is instead
conducive to the consumption of many doughnuts and glasses of wine,
so there has come a point where my entire face is so subsumed
by my double chin that I can no longer see the screen.
I have to do something about it. But
will I ever be one of those Facebook people who announce at 5am that
they've just done an exhilarating 50-mile run and can't wait to meet
all the exciting opportunities of a new day? Every way I turn,
deadlines home in like Pacman ghosts, and sometimes just getting to
the kitchen for another strong black coffee feels like winning a gold medal.
I know exercise is a Good Thing and
that it will not only improve my health but increase my
concentration, reduce anxiety and make me look slightly less like
Jabba the Hutt. Years of humiliating PE lessons, however, drummed it
into me that taking part in any sporting activity is likely to be
awful.
The 30 Day Shred is an exercise DVD by
Jillian Michaels, who is apparently famous for exercisey kind of
things. I saw it highly praised on a few internet forums and have
decided to give it a go. It contains three 20-minute workouts of increasing difficulty – you do each one every day for ten days before moving on to
the next, which is supposed to leave you 'shredded' (I've no idea
what that means but it's presumably something desirable that one
should aim for).
I perceive several advantages to this:
I perceive several advantages to this:
- It only takes 20 minutes and is done at home – if you go to the gym or the swimming pool or wherever, you have to factor in getting there, getting changed and getting home again, which is more time away from the WIP.
- It's not depressing. The exercises are hard work and when you first start it's possible to feel that you will collapse, but each element of the workout only lasts three minutes at most before switching to something else, so there's always an end in sight.
- It is good value for money – you don't have to buy anything except the DVD. The only things you need are some hand weights, which can just be water bottles or tins at first. There are no expensive gimmicky bits of equipment to fill up the loft.
- If I were good at taking orders, I'd be in the army, not sitting misanthropically in front of a laptop. Jillian Michaels is what our American chums might call a hard-ass, but she's refreshingly unpatronising. Her toughness isn't sadistic – she respects participants enough to know we are capable of more than we think. Her style will not be for everyone but I find her motivating.
- It is possible to notice a difference very quickly – within a few days the Level 1 workout begins to feel much more manageable, which gives a real sense that it's working. It's proper intensive stuff, not some sleb wafting around in their designer fitness gear.
- No one has to witness my efforts. The problem with running and that sort of thing is that I'd have to do it in public. Everyone in the vicinity would see me go out in the brand new running shoes I'd have to buy, then flub ten metres down the pavement, trip over my own chins and hobble home in shame. Doing an exercise video means I can die in the dignified seclusion of my own living room.
This all seems pretty appealing to me,
so watch this space... next time I'm here on Strictly, I'll be in
training for 2016!*
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