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Fitness Randoms

Was just going through my fitness journal at this exact time last year. I was eating a lot cleaner and working out a lot harder. Must step up my game! I was a lot scrawnier though because I was doing way too much cardio while training for the Ride to Conquer cancer. I gathered a bunch of fitness randoms from this year and last for my own inspiration.

Fitness Randoms

1 RTCC 2011 // 2 Last year, trying to get a perfect shot while doing box jumps with my BFF. We never got that perfect shot. // 3 All ridden out. Drove the bikes back home. // 4 When I’m at the gym, my cardio of choice is still the bike. // 5 Back at the gym after a month of slacking over the holidays (January 2012) // 6 Back from a cold and wet morning run.

Overcoming Obstacles

When you reach an obstacle, turn it into an opportunity. You have the choice. You can overcome and be a winner, or you can allow it to overcome you and be a loser. The choice is yours and yours alone. Refuse to throw in the towel. Go that extra mile that failures refuse to travel. It is far better to be exhausted from success than to be rested from failure.

“When you reach an obstacle, turn it into an opportunity. You have the choice. You can overcome and be a winner, or you can allow it to overcome you and be a loser. The choice is yours and yours alone. Refuse to throw in the towel. Go that extra mile that failures refuse to travel. It is far better to be exhausted from success than to be rested from failure.”  – Mary Kay Ash, founder of Mary Kay Cosmetics

FML Moments Can Be Good

Last week, I had an FML-moment and I have no one to blame but myself. I just finished a killer HIIT session on the bike, did some upper-body work and was just starting to do my recovery routine. Then I had this bright idea that came out of nowhere:

I’m going to do 100 burpees!

I sat there fought with myself for a minute because I didn’t want to do it since I was pooped but I already told myself I was going to. I couldn’t back out now! Well… it’s only about 6 minutes of torture then it’ll all be over. I pressed my timer and just did it.

Hard work is a two-way street. You get back exactly what you put in. This set of burpees was probably the worst mental fitness challenge I’ve faced in a long time (yes, worst than those Glute Lifts). I didn’t have my music on so every time my knees (and crotch) slammed on the floor, the sound seem to elevate the pain. I was tired. I was hungry. I was hangry. By the time I got to 90, I was on the verge of giving up and the yoga teacher who was setting up for her 1pm class left the room because I was awkwardly making dying/wheezing sounds. She probably didn’t want to be responsible if something happened to me. Although this was the worst set of burpees I’ve ever done (went over my PR by 30 seconds), I finished it! Everything that was going through my mind was mental and I just had to overcome it because I knew I could do it. Well, I did finish it and felt great afterwards.

Okay, I lied. I felt like crap and think I swallowed my own puke afterwards. But after lying on the mat for a good 10 minutes and a nice and long recovery routine, I felt awesome!

Try this challenge: When you tell yourself to do something, JUST DO IT. You can’t change your mind. You can’t take it back. Just do it.

My best friend and I do it all the time. We’ll spontaneously come up with exercises to add to our pre-planned workouts or switch it up with harder variations and once it slips past our lips, it’s finalized. We almost always regret saying it but for some reason, we keep on doing it… maybe because we always finish a workout.

“Let’s add 30 burpees with a jump tuck in between the 20 Wall Balls and 40 kettlebell swings.”

*gives each other a scared look then proceeds to write it down*

“Nooo wait, I’m just kidding. Let’s just do 10 burpees.” *scared look*

“Too bad! You already said it.”

“……………………” *sulk*

Although out workouts makes us want to kill ourselves, we feel amazing afterwards because we know we worked hard and pushed ourselves out of our comfort zone.

How To Love Exercise

I use to hate exercise. I’d pay $40/month for a gym membership, in which I went like once every couple of months. I would dread every session and try to come up with any excuse not to go. When I started working out regularly, it was very hard to push myself in the beginning because I was unfit, weak and self-conscious. But guess what? I sucked it up and went anyway. Overtime as I persevered, got stronger and saw results, I came to love exercise.

I wrote about getting into the mindset before but let me reiterate it again because it is so important. How you think will dictate how you make choices and if you tell yourself you suck at something, you will suck at it. If you tell yourself you can do it, you will do it.

Don't let what you can't do interfere with what you can do.

Doing 100 kettlebell swings or pumping out 100 burpees sucks but I did 90 last time. Why can’t I do 100 today? It’s only 10 more. In my lifetime, I want to run in a marathon, do the Grand Fondo, complete an Iron Man… I know I can run 5 miles. I know I can ride 150 miles. If I can already do those things, I know I can do even more.

I’m no longer unfit, weak and self-conscious. I persevered. I believe in myself.

I have no fear.

That’s why I love exercise.

People don’t like to do things because they’re either lazy or it scares the shit out of them.

That’s how I was with running. It always caused me pain and I never thought I could run for long so I hated it and I never did it. One of the things I wanted to start doing was to do stuff I suck at (or hated) and this was one of them but I forced myself to do it anyway. Now, I love it.

The other day we were running up a hill and my legs started to burn— and I mean burn, but I remember thinking to myself, “man, this feels good.” Erasing the fear makes you embrace it. And I really meant it when I said it felt good!

These days, I look forward to everything and fear nothing. Sure, the thought of doing hours of climbing uphill on a bike scares the shit out of me because I usually want to kill myself while doing it, but when I sign up, I never think about the journey but only crossing the finish line.

Pain is temporary. It may last a minute, or an hour, or a day, or a year, but eventually it will subside and something else will take its place. If I quit, however, it lasts forever. – Lance Armstrong

So how do you make yourself love exercise?

Let go of the fear that you won’t be able to run those 5 miles… that you won’t be able to bike up that hill. Stop being afraid of what you THINK you can’t do. And just do it.

Now Or Never

Lately, these have been favorite words of self-motivation:

Now or never.

If I’m stuck on a rep and too tired to move forward.
Now or never.

If I rested for too long and couldn’t get myself moving again.
Now or never.

If I have 2 more laps to swim but the thought of another stroke make me want to purposely drown.
Now or never.

If I’m thinking of doing something but I keep on putting it off.
Now or never.

I signed up for my first half marathon: The Sea Wheeze.
Now or never. 

The SeeWheeze Lululemon Half Marathon