Life is a balancing act |
You hear all these stories about people living at the gym, making fitness a lifestyle. Meanwhile, you're swamped with responsibilities, managing health issues, working long hours, taking care of your family, and so on. When will you ever fit in a workout? How can you possibly afford healthy food?
Sound familiar? Well, it doesn't have to be like that. You don't have to live at the gym. You don't even have go to a gym. You can work out at home, outside, with a friend, on your own, in a group, or, yes, at the gym. Pick something fun. Walk the dog, garden, play tag with the kids, swim, job, hike, bike, play tennis. Whatever activity you enjoy doing or would like to take a crack at, do it. It doesn't have to cost a cent. It just depends on what you want to do.
Give yourself 30 minutes a day to exercise. That's the equivalent of one sit-com. If you can give up one sitcom a day (or record it to watch later), you will have enough time to get your workout in. If that still seems too hard, break your exercise up into three 10-minute bouts throughout the day. Take a walk outside or down the hall, walk up and down the stairs a few times, do some stretches or jumping jacks. Anything to get your blood flowing and your heart pumping. That doesn't sound so hard, does it?
It just takes a little effort to get into the groove; make exercise a habit. Make a point to include little bouts of exercise each day. Set a timer or enter a reminder on your phone or daily planner. Do whatever works to help you make exercise a habit. Over time, you may very well notice that you have more energy, feel better, sleep better, and many other benefits, and that can help motivate you to keep exercising.
Same goes for the lifestyle change. It doesn't have to happen overnight. Make a couple changes here and there. If you smoke, attempt to quit. If you have trouble doing it on your own, seek out help from your doctor or a support group. If you drink alcohol on a regular basis, try cutting out one drink per week at first. If you're a night owl, try going to bed a half hour early one night a week. If the thought of eating vegetables makes you turn green, start slowly. Just add one new veggie and see how it goes. Find fun ways to prepare it online. Do that with fruits, lean meats, whole grains and healthier fats as well. Look for sales on healthy items. Cut back on designer coffees and junk food, putting that money toward healthier food items. Ease into it. Experiment with different recipes. Make it fun. If you find that you don't like fish, try turkey. If you don't like one vegetable, try another. There are oodles of them out there to choose from. Add herbs and spices to jazz up these new foods instead of loading them with fat, salt and sugar.
Working out and adopting a healthy lifestyle don't have to be difficult. Take your time. Adopt a positive attitude. Be patient. Think of it as an adventure. You'll get there.