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Author: Vicki Anstey Date Posted:6 August 2021
By Vicki Anstey
Probably the hardest thing during this time of lockdown and social isolation is maintaining any kind of structure in your day. With no (or very few) real markers for the week, one day blends into another, and its very easy to lose all motivation to exercise, let alone get dressed before midday.
Like anything, there’s a period of adjustment and as we come to terms with the ’new normal’ our routines will adapt. Keep the faith – and know that even if you succumb to demolishing the biscuit tin before breakfast and skip a fews days of movement, your body will start to crave activity soon enough. For some, this could be a great opportunity to allow your body to recover and rest a little (me included!).
And as fitness providers adjust to these exceptional circumstances, online workouts will get better, more varied, and inventive. Studios are beginning to put incredible content out there, most of which is possible with little or no equipment, spin studios are loaning out bikes, PTs are delivering (from a safe distance) small pieces of equipment, and even the outrageous prices for kettlebells is dropping back to normal levels as demand plateaus out.
But as self-confessed fitness junkie myself, I can relate to reduced motivation levels, diminished interest due to limited access to equipment, and finding myself sucked into life indoors behind a laptop screen. My 3 hours of training a day are now sporadic, at times reluctant, and definitely less rewarding than it ever has been. And don’t even talk to me about the effect on my mood and waistline!
But I have been blown away by the evidence of our incredible Tribe continuing to work hard at their ‘home barres’ fashioning resistance bands out of pairs of tights and hand weights out of tins of beans.
Keep the selfies coming, keep the faith that doing a workout a day will see you through this!
1. Plan ahead. Have a structure to your day – book a class, even better if you have to pay for it and it is therefore of value to you. Live Instagram’s are two-a-penny and you have no real incentive to ‘attend’. Record yourself doing the workout. Useful for you to check your own form, but also great as a means to stay accountable to yourself. It’s all too easy to press pause or stop altogether and head for the fridge. Whether you share it with anyone is up to you.
2. If you can’t get motivated to workout, take a walk or run. You have full permission to do that once a day, EVERY day. Turn that ‘permission’ into a directive. Get the fresh air, get the endorphins. Do all the things.
3. Make sure you keep your routine as close to ‘normal’ as possible. Get out of your dressing gown, shower, get dressed. Do your hair. Remember how you used to think that a new workout outfit would make you train harder? That still applies. Even if no-one can see you.
4. Do not get sucked into daytime TV. Netflix can wait until after 8pm. Limit instagram scrolling to an hour per day. Ration your access to the news, once a day is plenty. All of this will help your mental state and help you keep a positive outlook that life as we know it will return soon.
5. Take time to work on things that you ‘never have time’ to do. Mobility, flexibility, mindfulness, gymnastics, fascial release. Explore workouts you never usually have access to. Now that almost everything is online, geographical constraints, work schedules and kids’ bedtimes are no longer in the way. Do the workout at a time and in a place to suit you (social distancing rules allowing). Find a room in your house that no-one will enter while you are doing your ‘thing’. Lock the door if necessary.
6. If home-schooling and endless conference calls make it really difficult to break for a solid hour, break your workout up into 3, 20-minute sections. This is a great way to break the day up and make sure you aren’t sat in one posture-destroying position for too long. If you have teenagers at home, schedule breaks together and do the workout segments as a family. Workout together, laugh together, release tension together. Get competitive if it helps. “My plié is better than your’s” etc.,
7. Do your pre-workout prep. Consider what you need equipment and space-wise in advance. Get water ready, a towel maybe. Do you have enough room to lie out on a mat? To reach up and out, to move forwards, backwards or from side-to-side? There’s nothing more frustrating than starting a workout and finding that you can’t complete it because you don’t have the necessary space or tools to do so. If you give yourself any reason to sneak out of the room to find something, all bets are off for whether you’ll resume. Give yourself the best possible chance of success.
8. Break it down. Never has the phrase ‘who knows what tomorrow brings’ held more meaning. Take each day as it comes and don’t expect too much of yourself. We have no idea how long this will go on for, so try to stay present.
Think of the phrase ’Summer bodies are made in the Winter’ this is the time that your training counts the most. Work on the rehab, the niggles, your core strength, trigger points and endurance. Do a wall sit or a plank for a little longer each day. Perfect your press ups. The list goes on.
9. In spite of the isolation, find a community in any way you can. Whether that’s on Zoom, Houseparty, What’s App or just a friendly wave from a distance. If you enjoy interacting with people your workout with, make a little more effort to keep that going. There are plenty of challenges doing the rounds from handstands to Tik Tok dances to the best workout facial expressions. They say necessity is the mother of all invention, so get inventive. Turn social distancing into social solidarity. We will get through it better together. A bit like a barre workout!
10. Remember that you never, EVER feel worse after a workout. So no matter how bad things seem to be, switch off for an hour, immerse yourself in your body, in movement and remind yourself of what you CAN do. You may feel that doing a few squats isn’t going to change anything fundamental, but even if it just lifts the fog a little or changes your perspective (think of turning a hologram by 1 degree) it may make all the difference.
Control the controllable. Everything else is out of your hands. And sometimes that’s actually quite liberating.
If you are in the search for fitness equipment to get your clients through this testing period, browse our 2500+ fitness and wellbeing-related products. If you are a business who has a registered ABN number, feel free to create a wholesale account on our website by following the below link: https://www.morgansports.com.au/_myacct/wholesaleregister