• @[email protected]
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    2 years ago

    Cycling - saves me gas, often as quick as driving would be (we have epic all day congestion here). And its fun except when the weather is really bad. Only drive if I have a heavy load to go somewhere, or if I’m picking someone up or it is pouring

    Also swimming - can be done year round indoors, and I dont sweat! Having a waterproof MP3 player helps me with motivation too

        • @[email protected]
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          12 years ago

          I have decent bone phones that are water resistant and I’m mostly keeping my head above water for now. I’m going to test the range on the Bluetooth for my phone soon, but if there’s something that can come in the water with me that’d be great

            • @[email protected]
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              12 years ago

              Yeah so I won’t be underwater with the bones phones (they’re only resistant) I’m just using a kickboard for leg rehab - phone will be pool side and I’m hoping the 10m distance allows me to use them. If not, waterproof option for the emitting device is ideal

      • @[email protected]
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        32 years ago

        I’m using the Sony WS410, great player, goes good and loud (I swim to metal) but unfortunately no longer available in my country, but I believe still available in the US

          • @[email protected]
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            22 years ago

            Close, New Zealand. Would be interested to see if these are available in Australia still, partner has relatives there, I will get them to grab one for me when my current one dies (they seem to last 2-3 years swimming with them an hour a day)

  • Cosmo
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    2 years ago

    Exercise is kind of personal / varies depending on what you like to do. For me there was actually 2 pieces to improving my exercise routine:

    1. Starting a habit of exercise.

    This was a necessary first step if you don’t already have exercise as a part of your regular life. For me, my goal was just to just arrive at the gym every day. I didn’t workout every day; sometimes I straight up walked in, walked out, and went home (or used the sauna haha). But inevitably, I ended up working out a good amount, and start making it a part of my routine. Basically, my recommendation is not to try and optimize anything at first; just try to make it as easy as possible to succeed at habit-building. Find some kind of activity that is fun and make it a regular part of your schedule. Social sports activities are also great if you can get peer-pressured :P

    2. Making exercise more effective

    Once I was training regularly, I found things I wanted to improve, and so I started to create goals. I’m a rock-climber, so there are certain things that I want to do to improve that. Once I started working on those goals, I wanted to improve the effectiveness of my gym time. At a certain point, I made an actual daily schedule of what exercises I do. If you want to improve the quality of your exercise, putting in the effort to make an actual workout schedule is the biggest thing you can do imo. It doesn’t even matter if it is a “good” plan. Just actually following the plan, you will find the areas you can fix/improve that plan.

    With my current routine, I have a 10 minute warmup mobility routine every morning, climb 3 days a week, workout 3 days a week (sometimes at the gym, sometimes at a nearby calisthenics park), and avoid the gym for 1 day a week.

    But it started by just trying to arrive at the gym every day.

  • @[email protected]
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    52 years ago

    What’s worked for me personally is just walking to/from my car at work, it just fits so naturally into my schedule that I don’t have to put any thought into it or have any struggles with willpower, I just do it. I park as far as possible away from the building, so there’s no conflict with just walking in the door, then take a few laps around the building. I work on the 4th floor, so I take the stairs and also do a few laps up and down the stairs before getting to my desk. I do that twice a day (when I get in, again for lunch), then at the end of the day I take one more lap before I get back to my car. I get in +10k steps on a daily basis when I’m in the office consistently and without even really thinking about it or putting in “extra effort”.

    My problem is actually keeping it up when I’m not at the office, because then my routine sort of falls apart. I’ve tried building up routines for when I’m at home or on the weekends, but one thing or another seems to come up consistently and I haven’t been able to get them to stick.

  • NPC
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    72 years ago

    I choose to not own a car, making it so I have to cycle to work daily. That’s my exercise

  • @[email protected]
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    12 years ago

    Long walks (4-7mi) and cycling. Cycling if the weather is decent and walks all year long. If I’m not very motivated, I’ll still get prepped and take a cannabis edible, then I’m good to go lol. Like Popeye & his spinach and I’m enjoying the exercise again

  • @[email protected]
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    32 years ago

    I started swimming once a week, last December. That really works for me bc I love the build in cooling system. Sure it has its annoyances but overall it’s my favorite sport, plus almost daily cycling cause I don’t own a car and live in a very cyclable city.

    • @[email protected]
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      12 years ago

      Swimming is the one routine I’ve been able to maintain long-term. For many reasons, but built-in cooling is really up there

  • Bilbo Baggins
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    42 years ago

    I play Switch games while on my treadmill. The split controller works perfectly for that and makes it easy to forget I’m walking.

  • No_
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    12 years ago

    Go whenever I want without a clear goal in mind. Make it fun instead of a chore.

  • @[email protected]
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    12 years ago

    Ok, it’s the routine that stuck the longest with me. When working from home, I will pause work to do something like 25 push-ups, some squats, sit-ups, or some weights every hour. Just switch them up between. That way I can do up to 100 push-ups in a day and other exercises. It has worked out pretty well so far.

  • @[email protected]
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    12 years ago

    Not a particular routine for me, but something every day or I don’t feel good. Loved Jazzercise, like yoga, sometimes walk to work. Ran in the early morning when I had no time or money. Always something. So I guess I’d say the general habit is what works. Right now I lift 2-3x a week and yoga 3-4x a week and walk 5k 2-5x a week.

    What I find motivating are athletic goals. Lifting more, running faster or farther, standing on my hands in yoga, or back when I did dance getting the control over the body, that feeling of being one with the music and knowing you can express any movement at all. It’s not possible but as a goal, getting close as you can.