Now I know why
that arm bike is called the Krank. It makes me – wait for it – Kranky. Also
cranky.
But, you know,
also a little sweaty and a little calmer. So I will take it. And be grateful
when I am cleared to return to my usual forms of exercise – whenever that may
be – that I can do them.
I managed
exactly a half hour on the Krank. It is incredibly boring, and the way it is
engineered does not really allow for television-watching. Which is a funny
thing for me to complain about because I never watch TV while working out. I
need music. I need to zone out, not focus on following anything. (This is why I
often do not like – or at least do not opt for – group exercise classes with
complicated moves. Sometimes I just don't want to learn anything, if you know
what I mean.)
I also saw a
trainer about coming up with some arm exercises for me. I know loads of them,
of course, but I am horrendously unmotivated about doing any kind of seated
weights, so I'm basically paying someone to babysit me.
Of course I had
to go through the typical trainer intake crap – and I say crap because I think
it's outrageous when gym trainers start asking questions about diet. Find me
one who is a dietitian and fine. But otherwise they are telling you the same pseudo-science
you yourself could read in a magazine – and lots of times worse. (On Monday I happened
to meet a very successful fitness instructor/trainer who advocated juice
cleanses – don't get me started on those -- and at times in my life I
personally have seen trainers who tried to convince me to do fast days and all
manner of crip-crap, as my grandmother would call it.)
Anyway. I knew
this sort of questioning would be coming and I had worked myself up into a
tizzy about it before it even happened. I think a lot of it was in my head.
Like because I am not slim these days – I'm not sure if I'm fat anywhere but in
my mind and possibly New York City, both of which are equally crazy, but I
definitely am not slim – I don't have a right not to discuss my diet. Or he
would assume I didn't know what I was talking about.
He asked me to
rate my diet on a scale of 1 to 10. I did. (I gave it an 8, partly to avoid
further discussion and partly because for the past 29 days, it has been very
clean.)
Then he asked me
to take him through a typical day. I took a deep breath.
"I already
have someone I consult about that, so I'd rather not discuss that," I said
as brightly but firmly as I could manage. He started to protest, then perhaps
thought the better of it. And that was it.
At the start, I
had told him I was stronger than I looked – that I can do full pushups, and
that often in group fitness classes instructors who don't know me eye me up then
approach to tell me the weight I've chosen is going to be too heavy. I tell
them (cheerfully) that if they see me doing something with poor form I will
drop down immediately. Usually I don't have to.
He put me
through some tests. I could tell he didn't believe me, because he started me on
very low weights, and after I did a couple of reps, added a minimum of 40
pounds.
"Damn,"
he said at the end, shaking his head. "Most people who tell me they're stronger are really
far from it. But you are very strong."
Strong enough to
get through all of this?
Day 29.
Do you have access to a pool? I know.. swimsuits.. ugh, but such good exercise when you have an injury.
ReplyDeleteI once saw a hypnotherapist in hopes of learning some mental exercises to calm my overeating urges. He spent most of the session discussing very elementary nutrition. Apparently, because I had a weight problem he believed I just didn't understand protein, carbs, fat and calories. It was very disheartening. People wouldn't dream of lecturing on dental care but nutrition seems to be an area of healthy living where no one fears to just blaze into. And yes, you are strong!
ReplyDeleteSara, thanks, but I'm not allowed the pool yet. I specifically asked! I guess it's because how you can turn your foot during swimming. (Krank was only total desperation...)
ReplyDeleteGood for you, you're not only physically strong but strong in standing up for yourself! Nice work not caving into his questioning. I think people with weight problems/issues, usually know tons more than people who have never had an issue with food/weight. It annoys me to no end when people assume, bc I am not thin, that I must not know! I have read every article/book/blog etc....sheesh! rant over.
ReplyDeleteYes, you are! I'm stronger than I look, too. My dad, who is now 84, about had a heart attack when I lifted his very heavy suitcase into the back of my parents' car to take them to the airport. :D
ReplyDeleteNutrition is such a hot button topic now. There are so many varying views of what's healthy, and I think it boils down to what works for you and makes you feel healthy (in addition to keeping the cholesterol and blood sugar normal). I have done such extensive research on different types of diets, that now I just do what my body appreciates (well, most of the time). :) I'm glad you shut that guy down, in other words.
I cheered when you were so firm with the trainer. Good on you!!! Hell yeah, you are strong.
ReplyDelete