By Andrew Potter
Back to school time means back to our regular routines for the school year for our youth, families and school staff.
With most summer vacations now in the rear view
mirror, we are settling into what will be fall in Marshalltown.
Getting into a routine can be a good thing for
anyone looking to improve their health, especially when that routine is regular
exercise. Of course we recommend the Marshalltown YMCA-YWCA as a place where
that can happen year-round.
We seem to get pulled in different directions
more and more these days. But taking time to make time for yourself and your
health can do wonders for improving all aspects of your life.
My personal journey
My personal health journey could be considered a
work in progress. I remember several years ago I vowed to try to exercise every
day no matter what and having an awesome Y has helped that (I’m not only the
marketing guy, I’m also a client).
I was able to get a pretty good streak going by
telling myself I was exercising daily no matter what. One day that streak broke
due to other commitments that popped up, but not before I had completed nearly
a year of daily exercise.
I even tracked on a Google Doc the days I worked
out, which is very motivating as I didn’t want to look back and see I missed a
day. I still have daily exercise as part of my routine and am successful at
completing this nearly 99 percent of the time.
Ask the expert
I asked the Y’s Health and Wellness Director
Angie Paxson how important routines are to a wellness program and she said they
are vital to success.
“Between making healthy decisions on food or
exercise you make hundreds of decisions a day,” Paxson said. “If you make
exercise part of your routine it becomes a non-decision. It’s a non-choice and
you don’t have to think about it. It’s just part of what you do.”
By making it a non-choice that alleviates any
inkling of backing out that day, Paxson said.
Paxson also said many seek motivation to get started, but she said movement is
the key. Once you get moving, that feeling of accomplishment happens and you
can get to the motivation aspect.
“You need movement to get started, putting one
foot in front of the other, then you start feeling better,” Paxson said.
Andrew Potter is Marketing and Communications
Director at the Marshalltown YMCA-YWCA.