You can tell when the West has forgotten which way is up: it cuts its pants too low. Consider the early 2000s US rise of the very low-rise pant. It is precisely when our clothes no longer bother to conceal a human crack we should no longer hope that the state will cover our arses. Those arseless jeans unfit for human contours produced a new and persistent neuralgia. They are the perfect fit for GW Bush-era doctrine. The 2000s were a terrible prelude to terrible times, and also I got quite tubby.
Just months before the US invaded Iraq, I was stopped by a shiny display. This David Jones window I hurried by had seemed to contain a crude picture of Britney Spears, but in a fat-suit. I looked again, and, of course, the likeness was mine. Rising from absurdly low trousers, a great loaf of white was reflected. With no waistband to contain it, my gut had grown. Fast, like a weed made out of pork.
In this moment, I knew the term “physique” no longer applied to the forgotten fairground of my flesh. My body was not a body, but a site for mourning and decay. Chiko rolls were laid to rest inside this idle tomb.
It was not much fun to know I had become the place that fried foods came to die. It was not much fun to eulogise my appalling diet. It was not fun of any kind to imagine the physical exercise that I, so inert for so long, should attempt.
If you have also felt the burden of the era, the self and a newly emerged second stomach, you will know this confusion. You know not to look to lifestyle media for fitness guidance, as will soon receive the lesson that they declare every sport and action as the miracle syrup of youth!
If you are new to this whole “I hate hate hate my fat fat body” experience, then never, ever believe that your youthful vigour can be restored by magic. Exercise is not magic, especially not hot yoga, which I tried on the advice of a magazine made for an audience of profoundly deluded modern women.
And the things they said, and still say, about distance running. If all those claims for this return to the runner of decades are true, it is commensurately true that I return all phone calls from my mother.
The partial return of my mother’s calls will never be distinguishable from their full return. This is my contention, expressed by me this early morning as, “I am not ignoring your call from last night about The Bachelor. I am watching The Bachelor so I can return your call with full knowledge of Nick the Honey Badger, and the romance he encountered at Sydney’s finest park of water slides.”
Sure, I dishonour my duty to a mother. But not all the time, and not as much as these health-and-fitness hacks dishonour theirs. They tell you lies about how free and young and vibrant you are bound to feel in minutes, then those who have never run a distance and are ashamed of truth will repeat it. Soon, every other tub of fatally fried foods is telling you things about endorphins and improved complexion.
I will say that I now run distances, and I recommend this to anyone with reasonably functioning legs. Please. Try it. But know that this exertion will not lead you to a paradise full of ancients. And know that your face is going to wither without the care of a surgeon.
The dew of life is lost for good to age’s desiccation, and if you don’t believe me, I’ll show you a picture of me at the finishing line of the Melbourne Marathon. This took me well over four hours to complete, but a little under five — the time at which they take all the bright marathon paraphernalia down and you’re just some git out alone on a Sunday.
My runner face. Did it reclaim its youth from age’s ruin? No. It looked like instant mashed potato before you put the water in. I also borked a tendon and was not euphoric, but returned home to tell my partner loudly that they had neglected their duty of care. Why did they do nothing to avert this day of agony, which followed months of agony in which I ran up to 70 kilometres a week?
Look. There are studies to suggest that running will delay some effects of aging, including deathly aches and death. Further, the longing for death that is depression may be alleviated by running. There is substantial research to make the case for distance running, and, then, there’s my aunt whose 80th birthday was quite some years ago. She completed the City to Surf event this year, and she did it with just months between this great victory and the loss of her marvellous husband.
Is distance running the right exertion for you? Look. I don’t know. Ask an exercise physiologist. And then ask yourself if you wouldn’t mind swapping a face that occasionally resembles rehydrated veg for a pretty decent bum.
I am quite proud of my arse. I almost wish it were not covered so often with high-rise tracksuit pants.
I started running about 10 years ago and at least for me it did work absolute wonders. All those aches and pains and generally feeling old have disappears, along with about 30kg. Even now I feel younger than I did at 35. The thing is though that I also hate running. Every time before I go, I absolutely dread it and it’s an absolute chore while I do it. But I discovered that it really does me a mountain of good and that I do feel great afterwards. As much as I dread going, there has not been a single time when I regretted having gone for a run.
Basically I hate running but I love having been for a run.
Samesies, S. Every time I pop on the shoes, I hate it.
I will, however, admit to feeling something like delight when I run past 5K.
Oddly, I also enjoy the mass run once or twice a year. It’s immense fun. Don’t ask me to explain this, as I will only sound like a sap who loves humans.
I might have to try that. I’ve never been for a mass run. I only ever go by myself. It’s a great time to catch up on podcasts and the like.
It’s quite a surge. Also, an effective means, I have found, of raising charitable donations. (I always give the bucks to MSF. Usually make 4 or 5 grand.)
The other benefit of the big community run is that you gear your training to it. The goal keeps me on some sort of program, especially if I’ve fallen off the run wagon.
Finally. A Political Editor I know may have begun to enjoy these runs. Wink wink.
We’re all long distance runners baby. From the time you’re born your body is on the line until you end up on the scrap heap of space & time …it’s poetry in motion ,a wonderful exercise of futility …..meep..meep….
Indeed.
“as I will only sound like a sap who loves humans”
You’re getting soft Razer.
No!!!!
Well. Who would have thought? I would never never ever have imagined that you were a runner. But good on you! So am I!
And I don’t know if you were serious about your marathon finish picture, but I would love to see it. I never attempted a full marathon, but I did do a half. So you have my unreserved admiration for completing the full one and I couldn’t care less what time it took.
Robin, I’ll try to find it. 2013. I didn’t actually buy the ugly mugshot!
And, one marathon was more than enough. A half is a brilliant distance. We everyday runners can do it without injury. I don’t know if it’s possible not to break something over 42.2. It was just a thing I had in my head to do. (N.B. got the sack by long-term partner and started running absurdly long distances while crying. When I’d done a crazy cry-run of about 25K, it occurred to me that a marathon might be an end to this weird time! So, no, I don’t think it’s a sane decision!)
I gave up buying the mass run photos long ago when I realised that there was not a single one in which I didn’t look terrible. I like the mass runs too. That 2013 Melbourne Marathon was when I did my half — as a consequence of which I got angina a week later that led to a stent.
If you don’t mind a personal question, how much weight did you lose? If you do mind, tell me to get F’d.
Hi, R. Today, I weigh between 55 and 57 kg and am 165 cms. I think I was up near 70 in the early 2000s. Running isn’t really the thing that burns calories. The point is: put fewer calories in. (Like I think you burn only 2000 or so in a once-in-a-decade event like a marathon. Which I could easily eat as pizza any day of my life.) But, it did annoy me that the fat slowed me down.
I will say, though, that it was v hard to control eating for a marathon. I kept on carb-loading for weeks after! (And, even though carb-loading before is only supposed to be for a day, I loaded for weeks.) Got up to 65 again for that. SO I am not a fan of really distant distance running, and a half is just enough to tighten stuff up.
I think you’re under-selling yourself. I think you burn a helluva lot more than 2000 calories in a marathon — you burn more like 30,000-40,000. (Not that I’m an expert and I may be wrong, but I’m pretty sure I’m much closer to correct than you.)
Anyway mid-50s kilograms is great. As I’m sure you know, at least 50% of women your age weigh far more than you. I used to amuse myself every time I got in the lift where I worked by looking at the people in there with me (more women than men), and on average about 3.5 out of 5 were somewhere between substantially overweight and grossly obese. You would be one of the remaining 1.5.
Helen, for carb-loading there’s an excellent but little-known approach pioneered by the University of Western Australia, published in 2002, and which I use. You only need to do it for a day, but it’s a very carby day. Yet because it’s only a day it doesn’t change your dietary habits much.
The difference?
It uses a high intensity effort spike early in the AM to kick off the glycogen absorption, and that’s good for the whole day. You probably know you can load carbs for up to three days in advance without risking it converting to fat (though there’s a total calorie component anyway as I’m sure you know.) The main thing is, 1g of glycogen is stored in 3g of water, so if at your mass you load (say) 500g of carbs, you’ll put on about 2kg of mass until you burn it — then it just vanishes.
Primary geeklink here.
More usable but still boffiny link here, but it jumps off to other links.
For the high intensity burn I use a bike, but on a trainer — which would work for you too. You could sprint it just as easily I suppose, though I’d have to do some calculations to convert it.
You have my email I think. Please feel free to hit me up for more details if desired.
Yes. But your metabolism keeps burning calories well after you finish
I feel the same about walking. Took it up 10years ago and it changed my life (not the world mind you). My other options at the time were a stroke or diabetes. The incentive on those “hard to put the shoes days” was that it was a couple of hours I would get back. A bit of a no brainer really. Once I get my new knees and learn how to use them, I am back on the longer distance, fundraising, community events
It’s nice, isn’t it C? Just for an hour or three, there you are with a while lot of folks all going the same distance. On wheels. In prams. Slowly, or at Olympian pace.
I was in contact with Robert de Castella for a bit of Crikey research a few years back. Of course, I had to tell the guy who had run the distance at 2 hours and 8 minutes that once I did a marathon, too! Of course, I was immediately embarrassed and said so. And he said, “we all go the same 42.2”. And I think he really meant it.
That’s the thing that makes these events appealing, and also the likely reason that people started raising monies for charity while engaging in them. You just, ugh, kind of like people. Or, you really remember that people are okay. I have had the same feeling at some protest events, like 30 years ago in Sydney as 40,000 Aboriginal people celebrated survival of two centuries. And same feeling at the same march in Melbourne this year. You just think “well, I don’t want to talk to them all, but people, they’re okay”.
I *must* do the City to Surf with my aunt next year, so I’ll see you there.
All of the above and I am in!!
I know this is Carlene’s conversation but I can’t resist butting in. I know exactly what you mean about just liking people. I was doing Run Melbourne (10 km) a couple of years ago. It was an absolutely beautiful day and a lovely undemanding course. I was running along feeling absolutely blissful; I looked to my left and caught the eye of a girl who was passing me and I must have been smiling because she just laughed for the sheer pleasure of what she was doing. It was a shared moment.
Very entertaining Helen, thanks for a Friday chuckle.
My knees object to running, so instead I climb a big set of stairs (Jacob’s Ladder in the Perth CBD) half a dozen times in 30 minutes. Gets the heart pumping big time and does wonders for my fitness.
Yes, thanks for mentioning this, G. I know that plenty of folks simply can’t run, or should not. And I offered this chuckle mostly as a way to show that even lardy ladies such as me *can* find something to do with their bods, and if there had been space, I woulda said what you just did.
There’s a little research to suggest that rather tall folks aren’t much suited to run and there’s a lot of folks who just don’t enjoy it and others who’d rather avoid pure cardio altogether. Just as I avoid weight training, even though I shouldn’t. Whatever works, I reckon.
I should also say that people with more than one health problem may be eligible for a GP-authorised subsidy to sessions with an exercise physiologist. One of those Medicare allied health packages, this is.
You’ve done well to find out a thing that works, and stay with it. On ya.
Dude, that’s impressive!
I like to jog to The Hombres …..
Let it All Hang Out?