How to Get Out of a Workout Rut

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Posted on 9th March 2010 by Jiggly in Cardio and Toning

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A groupon offered in Socal today inspired me to write this post.  The groupon featured the great deal shown below:

“If you went to work out the moment you thought about working out, you would be back by now”  - Nike

If you’ve been working out regularly, sooner or later you’ll hit that wall we fondly call “the workout rut” or “workout plateau”.  You’ve been using the same machines, going through the same routine, and every time you think about working out you have a long debate about it in your head (then end up on the couch).  Not only that, but you aren’t even losing any weight!  Is this you?

Common Symptoms of Rut-ville:

-  Working out doesn’t excite you the way it used to.
-  You usually get lost in your music or TV, but these days all you can think about is the clock, and how much longer you have on that treadmill.
-  You feel lethargic after working out and you’re tired all the time.

So how do you get out of this annoying predicament?

1.  Change up your routine. Variety is key to keeping your body challenged.  When I first started working out all I did was run because that’s what I was comfortable with, and that’s what worked for me.  I still love to run, and I hope I never stop, but it bores me to tears at times.

Recently, my friend asked me to take a bootcamp class with her.  I didn’t know if I’d enjoy it, but bootcamp has been surprisingly fun and challenging.  I’m not great at it, but it’s something new that my body enjoys.  That Groupon deal is also something my friend and I decided to do together.  Pole Dancing sounds craaazy and a little bit risque, but to each their own!  I’m excited to let loose and just go with it.  These activities are a welcome change from my first love – running.

This leads me to my next point…

2.  Find a Buddy! As a runner, I always preferred running alone.  These days, that mindset is changing.  I checked out a yoga studio with one friend and went to bootcamp with another.  At first I went for the chance to bond with the girls, but it’s also been a great way to keep me accountable to working out.  It’s hard to bail on a workout (no matter how lazy you are), when a commitment is made to a good friend.

3.  Do something you love. If you don’t love what you do, you’re not going to stick it out for the long run.  Kickboxing wasn’t for me, but yoga and bootcamp is.  You would never find me in a dance studio (two left feet at a dance studio?  Nuh-uh), but I’m all for a rough bike ride through the back country.  One workout doesn’t fit all.  Find the one that fits you.

4.  Rest. Sounds counterintuitive doesn’t it?  The workout world calls too much exercise overtraining.  Symptoms of overtraining include chronic fatigue, chronic muscle soreness, irritability, headaches, and an overall decrease in workout performance.  If you’re overtraining that means you’re not giving your body enough rest in between workouts.  Your muscles need time to recover.

Taxing out your body may even have the opposite affect on your fitness goals and actually stall weight loss.  The solution?  Take a week off if necessary and start fresh the next week, or make sure you incorporate recovery days in your week to prevent overtraining.

The bottom line? LISTEN TO YOUR BODY.  It will tell you what it needs.  Love it, nurture it, keep it healthy.  Treat it well and it will treat you well.

Run Surf City 2010 Results

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Posted on 8th February 2010 by Jiggly in Cardio and Toning

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The results are in and the numbers don’t lie.  Missed my half marathon goal by 1 minute 16 seconds!!!

6th Half Marathon and a New PR.

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Posted on 7th February 2010 by Jiggly in Cardio and Toning

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It is finished!  Now it’s a waiting game to find out whether or not I beat the 2 hour goal I set for myself… It’s very likely that I was a minute off.  :(  Stupid me forgot the single most important thing (besides my running shoes) that I needed – my stopwatch that would’ve help keep me on pace.

(The start line of the Surf City Half Marathon in Huntington Beach)

This is my 6th half marathon.  For those who have never signed up for anything like this, I highly recommend it!  My husband and I will be running our 1st FULL marathon in San Diego this coming June (something I can cross off my bucket list).  And we’d also like to try for a triathlon sometime in the near future.

I caught the running bug about 4 years ago after a friend convinced me to sign up for a “short” 5-miler.  At the time, I could barely run 2 miles much less 5 – but I did it!  Crossing that finish line was one of the best feelings in the world.  It motivated me to set higher goals for myself, and I have been running ever since!  If I could have it my way, I will be running well into my 70s.  Next time I will tell you the story of a 65-yr old man I met who ran 2 full marathons back to back within 14 days of each other.  How’s that for inspiration?!

P.S. GO SAINTS!! Don’t you love it when the underdog wins?  I do!  New Orleans certainly deserves it.

Running – There’s Nothing Like It.

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Posted on 5th June 2009 by Jiggly in Cardio and Toning

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neverstoprunning

Hi Yogis!  My inquiring mind wants to know – do any of you supplement your yoga with other forms of exercise?  You probably know this by now, but my other exercise of choice is running.  It is as calming and rejuvenating as yoga, but in a very different way.  It isn’t so much about being still as it is about complete release.
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P90X – X for EXtreme!

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Posted on 11th May 2009 by Jiggly in Cardio and Toning

People are raving about it… Demi and Ashton are twittering about it – so what exactly is this P90X that everyone is abuzz about?  The P90X system is an at home training system made up of a set of 12 DVD’s, a nutrition guide, and fitness guide.  Created by celebrity trainer Tony Horton, its purpose is to give you 12 very different intense workouts in order to create “muscle confusion”.  Muscle confusion forces your body to continually work hard because no two workouts are the same – your muscles do not have enough time to adapt to any one particular exercise.  The moment you get slightly comfortable, this workout forces you to switch things up so it never gets to the point where it’s “too easy”.

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