I work at a university and we get free fitness center access so I work out there three times a week. There is a dichotomy of exercisers there, students (18-21) and shall we call them mature (55-75). I'm in the latter group and am about half a century older than the students.
Workout tip: After you finish your sets on a resistance machine be sure to add 50 to 100 lbs to the weight so the youngster who follows will understand you've still got it.*
*Never actually had it in the first place.
For me it's around 400 miles. Usually I can feel it when the shoes are starting to lose their spring. My first instinct is to push it a few more miles, but then I compare the cost of a new pair of kicks to the cost of a doctor's visit for a stress fracture or shin splints.
Also, if you're not doing it already, only wear your running shoes when you run. Don't wear them around the house, etc. Once they hit 300-400 miles, then use them as milling around the house shoes and start a new pair of running only shoes.
I have the Garmin Forerunner 35, and it lets you associate gear to your runs which makes it very easy to track how many miles you've run in a specific pair of kicks, which is an easy way to track.
"There can BE only one."
My shoes are generally good for about 500-600 miles (I walk ardently, averaging close to 10 miles/day which includes ballroom dancing twice weekly) and I always buy 2 pair at the time and rotate them fairly equally. (No, I don't wear my running/walking shoes out on the dance floor.) I'm a cheap SOB but not as dumb as I look and "listen" to my feet, so when they start to ache a bit/feel fatigued, I'm off to buy another couple pair of quality shoes. On sale, of course.
[redacted] them and the horses they rode in on.
Like many of you, I have a hierarchy of walking shoes...when they no longer have the feel I like, they get demoted to the rainy day/muddy day position (#2). After that is position #3, prime use of which is for lawn mowing, chores in the woods.
Some last longer than others in that prime position. As long as they give me 110%, that's all I can ask of them.
Today marks one full year of self-improvement for me...tomorrow is the one-year anniversary of the day I walked into the gym to get started. On that day, I set the initial goals of benching 3 full sets of at least 100 pounds, and running a 10-minute mile all the way through (at the time, I decidedly could not do either of those things).
This morning, I did three sets of 125-pound press, and ran a(nother) sub-23:00 5k. My wife occasionally takes me to task for being a bit infatuated with the mirror, but I honestly still can't believe that's me.
This thread has been a valuable source of celebration and support for me, and I hope that y'all are finding inspiration too. I never could have dreamed a year ago that I could do these things or look and feel this way.
Has anyone on here used Beachbody On Demand? I've done Beachbody workouts before (P90X and Insanity) via purchased DVD's. The On Demand service enables you to stream any workout they have online. There are quite a few. It has tools to track and create workouts. Also has a 14-30 day trial available so I was thinking of giving it a go in an attempt to restart/ramp up my workouts. So I was curious if anyone had tried it. Assuming the streaming works well, I'm really curious about the tools to help choose workouts, create plan, etc.
down 26 pounds! 14 to go...
Nice! I just got back on the wagon. Started riding my bike to work 3 times a week a couple of weeks ago. Haven't weighed yet, but I can feel my clothes starting to fit better, well, actually fit again, without my belly testing the tensile strength of the buttons on my shirts. 😂
One month in the books riding my bike 3 times a week.
I've made no diet changes, still drink ymmmmm beer! but I've lost 12 pounds!! I know that's not sustainable, but I should still able to reach my goal weight of 200lbs by Thanksgiving which is my goal.
That's a great start LHL! You going to make some diet changes? For me the exercise and diet changes feed off of each other and gain/feed momentum.
A group of friends have set a goal of losing 5 lbs in 7 weeks (some misc event for a friend). I hope to lose 5 by then and then another 5-10 by the end of the year. Breaking even through the holidays takes work so I need get most of the weight loss out of the way early (with the exception of the next two weeks when I'll be on vacation in Ireland).
Good stuff! I'm still where I was a month ago. I've still been dieting, for the most part, but have been less physically active over the last few weeks. I'm actually pretty happy where I'm at as far as weight, I'm more concerned with gaining some muscle at this point.
I only enjoy ymm, beers on the weekend. That has helped quite a bit.
Yeah, I'm going to, just haven't started yet. I typically eat pretty healthy, and not many sweets at all. Just too much beer, and just wasn't exercising. Combine that with turning 40 last year, and I started packing on pounds.
But I'm going to make an effort to take in less least and more greens. I need it because I can tell a huge difference in my rides depending on what I had to eat the day before.
Beers on the weekend only is also my new goal. I want to get my belly fat down, and then I plan to start weight lifting on the day's I don't ride.
I have been challenged by by my 14 year old that I could not train enough to dunk a basketball again before he can for the first time. (He's already 5'11")
I just hope my back can hold up.