| I was not a fan of working out. Started using obe fitness. Tons of variety! They have express classes (10 mins) and most classes are 28 mins. There are some 45-60 min classes. They even have kid friendly short workouts to do with your kids! I like it cause they are quick and enjoyable. I totally recommend! |
+1. Absolutely. And as you get fitter, the appeal of doing more things will expand. It doesn't matter how slow you start, it's about building a habit. |
+1 |
| I was never a workout class person, but when my gym closed for the pandemic I just went on YouTube and tried tons of different workouts--yoga, HIIT, barre, weights, pilates, bodyweight strength, even dancing. Most of it was stuff I assumed I would hate, but through trial and error I found stuff I loved better than what I did pre-pandemic--and now I workout twice as much as before. OP, you just have to try a bunch of stuff and see what sticks with you and feels productive (and hopefully fun). |
| Downdog's HIIT app worked for me. |
| I ride my bike for short errands in my neighborhood to get my exercise in. It's great and it gets you in shape fast. I end up riding my bike at least once a day for about 45 mins. |
Ha. My peloton fits that description entirely and has entirely changed my whole body! I'm not arguing for spin cause you said you didn't like it OP, but just saying PP's mindset is not totally right. Really you need to find something you like. I like spinning, so I like the peloton so I do it. Try a bunch of different classes, orange theory, crossfit, barre, pilates, zumba, whatever, try a bunch of things. Keep trying until you find something you don't hate. Then make a schedule and commit to it. Don't try to fit it in or only do it when you have time, make a schedule on Sunday, commit to it, and do it. And do that for two months. I would bet at the end of those two months you will have started a habit and it will have become easier, more enjoyable, and skipping it will make you feel gross. So basically, find something you like or at least that you do not hate and create a habit by forcing yourself to do it on a hard schedule for 2-3 months. |
I think at this point it's up to OP to figure out if she's the type of person who will skip 30 minute home workouts or if driving to a gym is a non-starter. I'm the former - once I commit money to a gym membership I feel obligated to go. I work harder in a class with people and music than I do in my own basement. |
Definitely. It's easy to slack at home when there isn't someone yelling at you to do one more and give it everything you've got. You'll be pushed more in a class than you ever would on your own. Plus you're more or less trapped so you finish the class once you're there. The old gym saying of "getting there is the hardest part" is mostly true. |
| Chloe Ting’s youtube workouts are so good and don’t require anything. |
| The best workout if you hate working out is a short one. Seriously! even shoot for 10 to 15 mins but MAKE yourself do 5x/week at least. I work and have two little kids, I’m exhausted and most nights it’s too much to envision a full workout but I go to the basement as soon as I put them to bed each night and just do a really quick 20 min set of weights or cardio. If I had to psych myself up to do more than that I guarantee you I’d skip it altogether but I can manage this much. It’s been enough to improve my health, BP, sleep, energy levels, etc. and some nights I get a burst of energy and do more but I don’t put pressure on myself to. |
| The only thing I really like is my kids wii with just dance songs from the 80s and 90s. Those are fun, not too hard and if you really get into them, a good workout. |
| The peloton app has great strength training programs and monthly membership is pretty reasonable when you don’t have bike/tread. I’d start with a yoga mat, 2 lb, 5 lb, 8 lb weights and get the app. |
| Can you find a friend and workout together, or sign up for a class together, or even just meet up early on a weekend morning and go on a long walk? That helps me. |
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During the worst of last year when my gym was closed, I signed up for StepBet to make myself accountable to walk every day. I committed to taking one picture of something beautiful while I walked and posting it to Facebook every day. And I listened to a ton of podcasts. I also walked weekly with a friend, found the path to Starbucks and walked in circles around the block.
Now I’m back at the gym and taking strength training classes, plus walking and elliptical. I have music I love to work out to and I really do look forward to seeing my gym pals. |