DuckHairback wrote:
I get it. Who wouldn't want a body that both looks good and functions well? Having been both quite fit and quite fat I can tell you that being fit makes everything easier. It's not just about being able to wear a tight white t-shirt. It's about the effort you have to put in to simple daily tasks. It's about how you feel as you go about living. It's better to be fit, if you can be. Our bodies were made to be worked and they work better when they are used.
Gyms sell you that promise. I think there is part of people that thinks if you make a financial commitment to something, I.e a gym membership, you're more likely to do the work if getting and staying fit. For some that may even be true. But I suspect the business model of a gym relies on people subscribing but not actually showing up.
Most people don't know discreet tasks and habit forming processes.
They believe in the idea of discipline, willpower and consistency.
But that's not how most people actually work.
They believe in this hypothetical fit and healthier version of themselves and tried to commit via new years resolution or whatever initial motivation -- but that's not really how change works.
I myself been consistent in exercises unless something actually came up -- being sick, the weather, other obligations, etc.
This isn't willpower or discipline or some external rewards; it
just feels good for me to just do and think of nothing but lift weights and move.
It's not the promise that get me, it's the process.
And, well, this is not a choice like how special interests are not a choice.
I'm not 'coping' with the 'hard work' nor obligated to -- instead I'm coping with the obstacles that gets me in the way to just go to gym for at least an hour, damnit.
I've yet to buy a membership and as soon as I leave work, I'll show up for at least twice a week.
In any other case, being fit isn't limited to exercises; there's diet and rest.
My eating and sleeping habits are terrible -- I'm still picky and my sleep is still crap; I still have trouble adjusting something so basic.
And yet I have no issues with physical exertion?
Hm. Perhaps it's because moving is the way for my body to go.
Yet, also, because I never learnt the nature of my chronotype, only that I know I have a major mismatch between my biology and whatever lifestyle of a day job I'm trying to fit myself into.
Food? I have to study my gut, my hormones, etc. I've yet to master my body.
And in reality, most people do not try and figure how to master their body, let alone understand how the human brain works.
Advertisements only gives partial answers. Or some one solution or trait as if it's a cure all for all woes and the key for all successes.
The craze is this...
Easy fix,
fast results...
Promising this idealized version of themselves, not truly telling the hows and prerequisites; the real hard work, and how complex it actually is.