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Getting Motivated
How do you motivate yourself to exercise
when your mood is getting in the way? Kate Larsen, a certified
personal and professional coach in Minneapolis, offers these
ideas:
1. Overcome your distracting thoughts.
Are your thoughts jumping ahead to future demands or lingering
over past experiences? Remind yourself of how precious exercise
time is-there will be plenty of time to return to distractions
when your workout is over. Tell yourself, "Okay, I only
have an hour to exercise, but I'm going to completely concentrate
on it."
2. Examine how your body feels. Are
you feeling fatigued, stiff, tense, lethargic or restless?
Perhaps you are training too hard and need to cut back a little.
Or perhaps you need to increase your stretching and decrease
your cardio time. your body also may be sending signals about
other lifestyle concerns that need attention-overwork, emotional
strain, poor nutrition or not enough sleep. Listen carefully
and adjust accordingly, but don't give up on your commitment
to stay active.
3. Visualize your achievement.
Imagine how you will feel after fulfilling your exercise commitment
for the day. Envision yourself stretching and reaching with
full extension and perfect body alignment. Picture fat and
stress running off your body along with sweat. Or dream that
your in top condition, playing in the super Bowl or at Wimbledon,
running the last mile of the Boston Marathon or cycling in
the Ironman competition.
4. Talk back to your gremlins.
Do you often tell yourself, "I'm too out of shape,"
"I'm so slow," ""I've tried this before,
it never worked," or "I'm too old"? Talk back
to those "gremlin" voices. Say to yourself, "I
can do this one step at a time. I am stronger. I will stick
with his program." Every time you hear the negative self-talk,
challenge it.
5. Listen to your joy.
Are you choosing activities you like or those you wish you
would like? It's true that sometimes you need to exercise
when you simply do not feel like it-but if you are not getting
any enjoyment from your activities, you may need to look for
workouts that better match your personality and interests.
6. Examine your plateau.
Ask yourself, "What needs to change for me to feel good
about my exercise?" clarify the gap between what you
are experiencing and what you want to experience, then make
the changes.
7. Wake up your routine.
Try a new kind of workout or change the sequence or frequency
of your exercises. You do not have to add a lot of time to
your workouts to see change; instead try a harder level or
increase the speed on your cardio equipment. Push yourself
a little.
8. Compare your approach. If
you decide to skip your morning power walk, plan on taking
a 10-minute walk at lunch and another quick walk during your
afternoon break. Plan ways to make up for lost exercise time,
like taking a hike with the kids on the weekend or scheduling
an extra training session.
9. Recommit to your goals.
Activity levels greatly impact your physical ability, risk
of disease, stress response, energy level, appearance and
attitude. Remind yourself that positive habits are created
one choice, one moment at a time. even if you choose not to
work out today, make a commitment to get back on track tomorrow,
no matter what.
10. Reinforce your exercise values.
Spend 10 minutes writing down the reasons why staying active
is important to you and why you can not quit now. the secret
to success is not willpower, it's "want-power."
Choose to stay active not because you have to-but because
you want to.
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One-to-One Workouts
A one-on-one trainer guides
you through your workouts offering tips and feedback so
you get the best results from your efforts. Personal trainers
are great motivators who can keep your workouts updated,
fresh and interesting.
Elite Program trainers focus
on any aspect of your fitness program you feel needs special
attention including motivation, variety, exercise modification
or meeting specific training goals.
Individual sessions are
available for those who have specific questions or goals;
packages are available for those who are working toward
longer term fitness goals.
For more information, contact
Mary Bodge at 728-1280.
Group Training
Group training is a workout
with 2-4 people with similar fitness levels. This is a fun
and motivating way to train. We will design your program
geared to your goals, but you will share the pleasure, pain,
and cost with fellow members :. You will be led through
your workout with a lead trainer and an assistant trainer
to guide you and get you in the best shape ever!
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