Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op a repeated theme in your comments is you’re a quitter. You quit walking because it wasn’t working fast enough. Quit peloton because the seat was uncomfortable. Quit multiple personal trainers. Your biggest challenge is not going to be finding the magical workout. It’s going to be not quitting- you have to continue doing it even if it isn’t comfortable or fun or fast. If you can manage that, you’ll get somewhere.
This is So. Not. Helpful.
OP ignore this poster. Start walking, get a trainer to show you proper form to lift weights, increase protein, cut junk (sugar and alcohol). Also to the posters telling OP to jog/run, that it terrible advice for someone 50 years and self defined out of shape.
Signed 58y who was out of shape and overweight 30 lbs and now quite fit after a year walking and strength training.
Some of you need to learn the difference between “this isn’t fun to hear” and “this isn’t helpful.” Telling OP her main issue is stick-with-it-ness and to focus on continuing with exercise when in the past she has quit IS helpful. The main reason she is out of shape isn’t because she never tries, it’s her propensity to quit anything she does try. So whatever she tries THIS TIME she needs to make it a goal to not quit when it gets boring or uncomfortable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op a repeated theme in your comments is you’re a quitter. You quit walking because it wasn’t working fast enough. Quit peloton because the seat was uncomfortable. Quit multiple personal trainers. Your biggest challenge is not going to be finding the magical workout. It’s going to be not quitting- you have to continue doing it even if it isn’t comfortable or fun or fast. If you can manage that, you’ll get somewhere.
This is So. Not. Helpful.
OP ignore this poster. Start walking, get a trainer to show you proper form to lift weights, increase protein, cut junk (sugar and alcohol). Also to the posters telling OP to jog/run, that it terrible advice for someone 50 years and self defined out of shape.
Signed 58y who was out of shape and overweight 30 lbs and now quite fit after a year walking and strength training.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op a repeated theme in your comments is you’re a quitter. You quit walking because it wasn’t working fast enough. Quit peloton because the seat was uncomfortable. Quit multiple personal trainers. Your biggest challenge is not going to be finding the magical workout. It’s going to be not quitting- you have to continue doing it even if it isn’t comfortable or fun or fast. If you can manage that, you’ll get somewhere.
This is So. Not. Helpful.
OP ignore this poster. Start walking, get a trainer to show you proper form to lift weights, increase protein, cut junk (sugar and alcohol). Also to the posters telling OP to jog/run, that it terrible advice for someone 50 years and self defined out of shape.
Signed 58y who was out of shape and overweight 30 lbs and now quite fit after a year walking and strength training.
Anonymous wrote:Op a repeated theme in your comments is you’re a quitter. You quit walking because it wasn’t working fast enough. Quit peloton because the seat was uncomfortable. Quit multiple personal trainers. Your biggest challenge is not going to be finding the magical workout. It’s going to be not quitting- you have to continue doing it even if it isn’t comfortable or fun or fast. If you can manage that, you’ll get somewhere.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op a repeated theme in your comments is you’re a quitter. You quit walking because it wasn’t working fast enough. Quit peloton because the seat was uncomfortable. Quit multiple personal trainers. Your biggest challenge is not going to be finding the magical workout. It’s going to be not quitting- you have to continue doing it even if it isn’t comfortable or fun or fast. If you can manage that, you’ll get somewhere.
OP. I didn't "quit walking because it wasn't fast enough." I quit ONLY WALKING. I walked, then realized it wasn't doing much, so added short spurts of jogging, and then increased the jogging until I made it all the way to jogging 25 minutes. That took about 7-8 months. Then I injured my achilles and had to rest for months. Then I got out of shape again. Ready to start again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op a repeated theme in your comments is you’re a quitter. You quit walking because it wasn’t working fast enough. Quit peloton because the seat was uncomfortable. Quit multiple personal trainers. Your biggest challenge is not going to be finding the magical workout. It’s going to be not quitting- you have to continue doing it even if it isn’t comfortable or fun or fast. If you can manage that, you’ll get somewhere.
OP. I didn't "quit walking because it wasn't fast enough." I quit ONLY WALKING. I walked, then realized it wasn't doing much, so added short spurts of jogging, and then increased the jogging until I made it all the way to jogging 25 minutes. That took about 7-8 months. Then I injured my achilles and had to rest for months. Then I got out of shape again. Ready to start again.
Anonymous wrote:Op a repeated theme in your comments is you’re a quitter. You quit walking because it wasn’t working fast enough. Quit peloton because the seat was uncomfortable. Quit multiple personal trainers. Your biggest challenge is not going to be finding the magical workout. It’s going to be not quitting- you have to continue doing it even if it isn’t comfortable or fun or fast. If you can manage that, you’ll get somewhere.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please ignore the walking advice. You will never get inshape simply by walking. Add 10 to 30 second busts of jogging into your Walks. Do 4 minutes of walk and then a short burst of jog. Cycle through this until you can hold the jog for 30 seconds.
After you find this more comfortable, make every other burst an "all out" sprint. If you can do just 5 seconds, do 5. But cycle up over weeks until you get to 30 seconds
Add light dumbell compound exercises 2twice a week.
Keep going.
Your body will make changes to handle the additional demands you put on it over time.
OP here. This has been my experience with walking, unfortunately -- that even with a lot of it, it just isn't enough. I'll try what you suggest -- I did it once in the past and was able to work up to 20-25 min jogs. Would love to make it back there, but feeling intimidated given a few extra years and pounds.