|
by: Tanja Gardner
Copyright 2005 Tanja Gardner
Unless
we’re talking about our bodies, and the amount of exercise they
can do, we usually talk about being fit in relation to something.
An object is ‘fit for use’, clothing is ‘fit to be worn at work’,
and food is ‘fit to be eaten’. My parents used to have a running
joke that they were fit – fit to drop! Everything else is fit 'for
something'. So why do we insist on describing ourselves as ‘fit’
or ‘unfit’ without relating the concepts to anything else?
GENERAL
PRINCIPLES
It’s
a basic truth that the human body wasn’t made to sit still for any
length of time. We spent tens of thousands of years evolving in
an environment that required us to move – to find shelter, to catch
food, and to keep ourselves safe from predators. We’ve only been
living lifestyles that allow us to be sedentary for the lesser part
of a hundred years – not nearly enough time for evolution to adapt
our bodies to this new environment. We see this constantly reflected
in modern rates of heart disease, atherosclerosis, chronic aches
and pains, and muscular and bone deterioration in people who have
become inactive as they age.
On
top of this, activity has a very real effect on both stress and
energy levels. Our bodies have a ‘use-it-or-lose-it’ way with energy
– if we don't constantly use and then replace energy (with activity,
followed by rest and good nutrition), we start noticing our energy
levels gradually draining away. We feel tired, lethargic, and as
though any amount of effort is just too much to be worth it. And
if we’re also under stress – for example, at work, or in a difficult
relationship – we feel the energy loss and the stress even more
intensely.
These
are general principles that seem to be true whoever we are. But
different lifestyles require different amounts of energy, and exact
different prices in terms of stress. We enjoy doing, and our bodies
are suited for, different kinds of activity. It makes sense then,
that the amount and type of activity that will help us reach our
optimum fitness, will be different.
DIFFERENT
STROKES
If
that’s the case, then getting ‘fit’ without a frame of reference
seems like a meaningless concept. Unless we know what we want to
be ‘fit for’ – what fitness means to us – there’s no reason for
us to get or stay that way. If my life is basically calm, quiet
and easy-flowing, and I’m quite happy to keep it that way, my ‘optimum
fitness’ is going to be very different to someone who’s discovered
a deep fulfillment in setting themselves a goal and achieving it.
Someone who’d just like to go for a walk with friends without getting
puffed is going to have a different optimum fitness level to someone
who wants to discover how it feels to finish a marathon.
On
top of this, what people want often changes over time. Perhaps at
one point in your life, you enjoyed spending a couple of hours a
day exercising, but now you’re finding there are things you’d like
to do far more with that time. Alternatively, when you first started
creating your optimum life for yourself, it might have been enough
for you to just keep your body healthy. As you tried new activities
though, you might have discovered you were actually enjoying some
of them for their own sake, and wanting to get fitter so you could
do more of them. So at different times in your life, you’d have
a different optimum fitness level.
WHAT
DO YOU WANT TO BE “FIT FOR”? Which brings us back to our original
question – can we talk about being fit, without knowing what exactly
we’re ‘fit for’? The way we see it, your optimum fitness level depends
completely on what you want to be able to do in your daily life,
how you want to be feeling, how much energy you’d like to have and
how exercise fits in with the rest of your life. So your first step
in moving closer to optimum fitness needs to be to make that all-important
decision “What do I want to be fit for?”
---
About the author: Optimum Life's Tanja Gardner is a Stress Management
Coach and Personal Trainer whose articles on holistic health, relaxation
and spirituality have appeared in various media since 1999. Optimum
Life is dedicated to providing fitness and stress management services
to help clients all over the world achieve their optimum lives.
For more information please visit check out http://optimumlife.co.nz,or
contact Tanja on tanja@optimumlife.co.nz.
|