Yay me, I finished my workout goals for week 1. We'll see how it goes next week when classes start again. Today I even went for a jog/run. I'm trying to acclimate myself to running since once my landlady comes back (I don't know when) I won't be able to do my tapes and running is the next easiest thing to do. While I haven't really liked running in the past (if I had the money I'd take a dance class) today it felt pretty good. I even dug out my long-neglected heart rate monitor and used it to do intervals. I came back feeling good, like I had worked hard, but not wanting to die, and my knees didn't even ache. Plus Denis made this yummy fried rice with veggies and tofu (tofu! and I didn't even ask for it). Lunch is reminding me of Collis. Now I need to start doing schoolwork again.
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Feeling like you've worked out but not wanting to die is a perfect level of exercise. It's hard to keep up a regimen when it makes you feel like crap every time, it makes me not want to work out the next time so I don't. I wish I could get myself to run but I hate it too much. I'm content to do yoga for 5-10 minutes a day, which seems to be maintaining me okay. Maybe you could pick up a book and try some of that too!
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I agree that if exercise makes you feel horrible you're not going to keep it up. I actually took a yoga class at Dartmouth but dropped out after 3 classes because I hated it so much. There is a 5 minute yoga section to one of my workout tapes and I do some yoga-inspired stretches now, but I think that's about all I can handle. Part of my frustration is that I don't know if I'm doing the positions correctly. All those years of dance with the wall of mirrors and the instructor coming over and moving your legs to a much more painful (but correct) position has made it difficult for me to just sense if everything's aligned correctly.
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Bayard is a genius. I feel that I am somehow without the very useful ability of being able to improvise when cooking. Which is bad on numerous fronts, not least of which in that I'm incapable of doing fast and yummy dinners such as the one that you described. I can make fairly yummy dinners from recipe books, and I do so often, but even though I've improved in speed and technique since college, I regularly spend an hour and a half each night cooking dinner. And then if I'm feeling rushed and don't have that hour and a half, I freeze up and rather than improvising and putting together something quick like the dumpling soup you describe I end up spending lots of extra money going out to dinner. It's a skill which I am impressed by, and you clearly have it, my friend.
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Re: Chris's cooking ability
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That's too bad that you didn't enjoy yoga. Yoga is deceptively difficult - not to mention there are so many different branches, and instructors can really vary on what they emphasize. I do yoga occasionally on tape/DVD, so while the instructors are constantly reminding me how to breathe and to tuck in my stomach and keep my shoulders down, etc., I don't actually have any nitpicky person forcing me into positions that my body isn't ready to go into yet.
I think the most important thing about yoga is not to kill yourself doing it. Certainly you should push yourself and make sure your muscles are working, but if it gets painful or uncomfortable, it's probably doing more harm than good. I mean, the human body has evolved those pain-sensing mechanisms over millions of years for a reason. ;-) One of the instructors on my tapes even says, "The important thing about yoga is to feel good and relax, so if you feel yourself tensing up or straining, take it easy!"
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I don't have the patience or money to do a full gym workout anymore.
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