max641, (edited )

Skipping. I just feel it perfect for me. Can be a time pass or intense, any day , any time. I thought ( in my school days ), it as a teenage game and was not interested. Couple of years ago, I saw Arthur’s skipping in Peaky Blinders. Man, that did it for me.

Kolanaki,
@Kolanaki@yiffit.net avatar

I cannot even describe the feeling I get skipping instead of running. It’s like I’m faster and on a planet with less gravity and I love it… 😃

Nemo,

Social dance, followed by swimming and biking, then distance cycling. Cycling is the most common one I do, followed by swimming in the summer.

To explain the distinction I’m making between biking and cycling: When I say “biking”, I’m talking about lower-speed, exploratory riding; usually a very dense saturation of a smaller area, often on trails set aside for recreation. When I say “cycling”, I mean high-speed, linear riding, focused on covering distance or getting from one point to another; typically on through streets, dedicated bicycle infrastructure, or highways.

For social dance, my favorite is Ceilli, then various mosh pit styles, followed by square and contra, but in terms of how ofen I do them the order is reversed.

shinigamiookamiryuu,

I take Hippocrates’ “walking is man’s best medicine” advice when it comes to physical activity. It’s good for the body and mind and also good for interacting with people.

TheDarkKnight,

He said it but that lazy bitch never walked hardly at all!

gamer,

Weight lifting 3x per week. It feels good, and I’m too lazy for cardio.

JackSkellington,

Swimming, but no time for that :(

teft,
@teft@startrek.website avatar

Downhill mountain biking. It really gets the adrenaline pumping and the climb up before each run is great for your health.

jkjustjoshing,

So downhill and uphill mountain biking

Doll_Tow_Jet-ski,

Les Mills metabolic strength conditioning and, machine-wise, nothing beats the Jacob's ladder

GONADS125,

P90X for fitness, kickboxing for fun. Got a 100 pound Muay Thai heavy bag and an Aqua Bag slip bag at home.

BonesOfTheMoon,

God bless all you people who have time to exercise.

kingludd,

dude you have time. you’re posting on lemmy, it’s a matter of priorities, not time.

BonesOfTheMoon,

I’m at work haha. I work 60-70 hours a week and I have a knee injury and I’m tired.

kingludd,

I can definitely understand that. It’s a wierd paradox, though, that getting exercise will actually give you more energy, and the mobility you gain will make injuries heal better. If you can do a simple bodyweight workout just for a couple months, you won’t regret it.

BonesOfTheMoon,

Like work out with weights?

kingludd,

Like do 3 pushups, plank for awhile, 3 elbow dips, and 3 pullups.

BonesOfTheMoon,

I’m impressed by you!

cubedsteaks,

exercise has never ever given me more energy.

lungdart,
@lungdart@lemmy.ca avatar

Do body weight exercises at work instead of Lemmy.

Only if you want to though.

BonesOfTheMoon,

My work area is not conducive to that unfortunately. I’m on the phone pretty much all day so I can Lemmy with my hands while listening to hold music.

gamer,

Wake up earlier and do it in the morning when you’re not tired, and don’t do knee exercises until it heals.

Exercise only works if you make it a routine/lifestyle, like brushing your teeth. It’s one of the few things in life that is all positives with zero downsides.

BonesOfTheMoon,

I don’t mean to make excuses, but I leave at 730 am due to commuting via transit, get home at 5, walk my dogs and eat, and work 6-9 pm every night as well. It’s a lot and getting up earlier than 6 am would really start to take a toll on my mood due to a psychiatric disorder. It isn’t that I haven’t thought of it but there’s really no space in the day. I do try to walk the dog long distances on the weekends when I just work my one job but the free time during the week just honestly isn’t there.

gamer,

I suggested waking up earlier because I don’t know anything about your life/schedule. You’re the one who knows it best, and the one who knows where to find 15-30 minutes to do some exercises. Working two jobs is tough, but people do it all the time while still managing to fit exercise into their life.

Don’t get me wrong, I’m not trying to tell you what to do or shame you into working out. It’s your life and if you don’t want to work out, then that’s fine.

I just want to point out that when someone thinks they “dont have time” for working out, they’re wrong. It’s never about time. It’s like if someone told you they don’t have time to brush their teeth and shower every day because they work two jobs, need to walk their dog, and have a bad elbow. Would you take that justification seriously? Exercise is just another routine.

Nemo,

My commute is my exercise, so is my job, so is a lot of the time I spend with my kids.

You don’t need more time, you don’t need separate time, you just need to be more active in the things you already do.

BonesOfTheMoon,

With two desk jobs? How?

cubedsteaks,

I don’t know if you have to go into an office but I work from home so I guess I have the privacy of being able to put a cycle under my desk and I do that for 30 minutes at least in order to burn off some calories. Has to be 30 minutes or more too. Never under that amount.

I still find it hard to do it for 30 minutes though. I miss days all the time.

BonesOfTheMoon,

I do work in an office, in a reception area so it’s extra hard alas.

Juvyn00b,

A company I worked for years ago had several “walk stations” - always thought it was a good idea, but companies rarely bless IT with such improvements to quality of life.

BonesOfTheMoon,

Lmao we have a bat infestation. I don’t think we’ll get that fancy.

cubedsteaks,

do you work in an office located in the jungle?

BonesOfTheMoon,

No, a rickety old hospital haha.

Juvyn00b,

Running from the bats could prove to engage the core and legs.

Nemo,

Well the main problem is the desk jobs, honestly, but bike commuting is a straight improvement to your day.

puppy,

Cycling. The wind on my face and being able to go sightseeing makes in very enjoyable in addition to the dopamine boost from increased activity.

Tylerdurdon, (edited )

I do multiple forms of exercise, but probably enjoy tennis more than the others.

I think that’s because I’m learning a new activity and the exercise is just a side effect.

tburkhol,

Stationary rowing, 5 days/week. It’s a good whole-body exercise, heavy on cardiovascular & low impact, but not particularly strengthening. Can sit in front of a movie and just go. Got a tracker to record performance & heart rate, and I really like seeing new bouts appear in the graph. That may be more motivating than the nebulous protection from future cardiovascular disease.

all-knight-party,
all-knight-party avatar

Hiking, for me. There's a variety of trail difficulties, so you can do something more casual if you want to, and aside from the great cardio, you're out in the beautiful outdoors.

BastingChemina,

Same for me, hiking is my favorite way to exercice.

anti,

I go to the gym three times a week. I started working out to lose weight and improve muscle mass and tone, and because I fell out of love with running. Last time was yesterday - bench press, overhead press and chin-ups. There’s something primal about lifting heavy weights that makes it enjoyable (much like the other poster said about boxing).

PrettyBlackDress,

Wallowing in my own filth

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • random
  • uselessserver093
  • Food
  • [email protected]
  • aaaaaaacccccccce
  • test
  • CafeMeta
  • testmag
  • MUD
  • RhythmGameZone
  • RSS
  • dabs
  • oklahoma
  • Socialism
  • KbinCafe
  • TheResearchGuardian
  • SuperSentai
  • feritale
  • KamenRider
  • All magazines