rydra_wong: A dancer (Anie Hanauer) crouches in a performance by Candoco. She has a prosthetic arm. (body -- annie)
[personal profile] rydra_wong posting in [community profile] bodies_in_motion
Because I thought it might be interesting to see where everyone's coming from ...

Here's a thread to say hi, and say a bit about your interest in movement/embodiment/whatchamacallit.

What movement things do you do -- or not do? Or: what did you do in the past? Or: what might you be interested in learning more about, but haven't tried yet? Or: what do you love reading about even though you'd never want to do it personally?

I suggest that people feel free to jump all over each other and ask questions if you're curious about something someone else mentions (if you'd rather not answer questions, please just say so), or want to say "me too" or compare notes.

Date: 2016-11-02 01:00 am (UTC)
lunabee34: (Default)
From: [personal profile] lunabee34
Yay for resolved health issues!

I just started exercising regularly again after about an 8 month hiatus because of depression. This is what worked for me. I made exercise a priority and part of my schedule. I gave myself permission to start slowly and to gradually increase duration and intensity rather than focusing on how my current performance compares to my previous. Although this isn't an option this semester, I hope to once again have an exercise buddy for spring; I find the whole shebang is much more fruitful when I have someone to go with. It keeps me accountable (can't back out now; Sally is waiting on me) and I also respond well to competition (*surreptitious glance at Sally's treadmill* I can totally go a little faster and match her speed). Journalling also really works well for me. Keeping track of when, what, how long, etc. is really motivating to look back on and also helps keep me accountable. Back when I was using the vivofit, even though it's silly, I did find getting badges for reaching certain milestones (you have walked 100,000 steps, etc) really motivating. I think many of the online components of the fitness trackers have that kind of function and they also have communities you can join for support, conversation, cheerleading.

But these are just things that have worked for me. YMMV

Date: 2016-11-02 05:58 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] indywind
^cosigning most of [personal profile] lunabee34's suggestions, except that badges/trophies are kind of a turn-off for me personally.

I want to jump on the soapboax of choice architecture in incremental habit formation: to (re)start a lasing habit, find/make room in existing routines where the new habit can fit, conveniently or unavoidably (where not-doing the the new habit would require more going-out-of-your-way than doing it), choose an activity to start that is as small/easy as possible while still counting as doing the thing --too small to be intimidating, too easy to require much willpower to initiate--and attach the new activity to an environmental cue or prompt that is already firmly included in an established routine.
Then habit formation works like: do the regular routine up to the prompt, insert the small added action that is too easy to skip into the place made to fit it, and proceed with the rest of routine that follows from there. Once the new activity becomes as much an established part of the routine as the cue was, it can be expanded (longer time, higher intensity, additional sub-activities), or you can repeat the process in a different part of your regular routine to add another new habit.

So, like for example, when I went from sedentary plus unavoidable walking for transport, to walking for exercise, the first change I did was getting off the bus one stop further away, only on my way home from work when I would have enough time to cover the extra distance and didn't have to be tidy and non-sweaty at the end. When walking longer was well-established, I added jogging a tiny distance, then jogging more with walking in between, then eventually I was jogging the whole way home from work.

It takes some creativity to figure out how to do this, for some activities/routines more than others. It's a kind of problem-solving that my brain seems to enjoy though; if it's more of a pain for you, it can help to brainstorm with someone else around the roadblocks.

Date: 2016-11-02 08:22 pm (UTC)
lunabee34: (Default)
From: [personal profile] lunabee34
*high five*

This is excellent advice. Incremental steps, building the activity into an existing schedule--this is very much what worked for me.

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bodies_in_motion: A dancer (Annie Hanauer) crouches. She has a prosthetic arm. (Default)
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