The reason I don't lift heavy is simple, it is uncomplicated. It is without fuss and muss. I am not delusional. Most times I go to the gym to "work out", I am really just going through the motions.
I am there usually after a 9 or 10 hour day. Or I am sneaking a quick workout in during my lunch hour, whilst reading a book about parenting on the bike that I am pedaling leisurely. I think that the main problem has been a mindset that if I am not going to have time for a 2.5 or 3 hour work out, I might as well not even bother. And so therefore the fact that I am in the gym means I should get points just for trying. Further, I think it takes a lot of discipline, and a lot of nerve and a lot of energy to live heavy. You spend most of your mental effort convincing yourself that you can do it. For me, it's mostly a matter of holding myself to a standard, and not accepting anything less than that. It takes a lot of energy and willpower.
So I had a little "Come to Jesus" talk with myself this week. There is a fitness room in my building at work. And I managed one workout this week. One measly, pathetic workout before work. What I realized this week is that yes, I would like to have 2-3 hours a day to work out, but I am not a fitness model, nor am I training for an olympic sport. Millions of Americans manged to stay fit by working out for an hour every day, and that it really is time for me to get off my high horse and walk it off.
So, I am taking a new approach with fitness: one hour. Every day, without fail. Without excuse, without exception, one hour. And since it's only one hour, it has to be "balls to the wall" (to use an old indoor soccer term. No loafing, no half a$$ing it. Dripping in sweat, aching, WORKing out.
Today I tried my new philosophy at the gym. I spent 20 min on the bike, lifted arms and legs. Did some free weight moves. And then it came to the lat pull. This is, without a doubt, no question about it, my least favorite exercise.
For me, the problem is a self-circling one, where in, I have little upper body strength, so I dont like these kinds of exercises. I don't like them, so I don't do them. And thus, continue to have little upper body strength. So for the last 20 minutes of my workout today, I lifted heavy. One of my life list items is to do 10 pull-ups. In a row. I thought that the lat-pull will eventually help me get there, to the that point, when I am hauling my own body off the ground, up over a bar.
In that 20 minutes of intentional work, I held myself to a standard and didn't back down. I was able to convince myself that I can lift heavy. It was nice to be lost in that moment, coaxing my body through a series of movements that are in an effort to make it stronger.
This post was originally published at Go Mighty.