Perfectly Imperfect: How The Idea Of “Fitness” Has Evolved Throughout My Life

When I sat down to write a blog post about fitness, I had such a long list of topics. I could write about the physical, mental or mechanical aspects of exercise. I could write about all of the different categories of exercise: cardio, strength, therapeutic, mind/body, the list goes on. But the topic I kept coming back to was: What does the idea of fitness mean to me? What role has it played in my life and how have I come to be where I am today?

When I was younger, “fitness” itself did not have a particular meaning, nor did it have the importance in society as I believe it does now.  When people talked about fitness, they were likely talking about going on a run or adhering to a strict diet. This isn’t to say people weren’t active; there just wasn’t really a title around it.

I grew up as a dancer.  I danced almost every day, and I loved it, it was my passion, my dharma if you will.  All I wanted to be when I grew up was a dancer, and that had nothing to do with being fit (or even being healthy for that matter). I just wanted to dance. I was quite young when one of my first dance teachers made a comment to me about holding my belly in. In hindsight, I now know exactly what she meant: navel to spine, gentle lift, use your core – all words I use today when teaching group fitness. But at the time – perhaps it was how she said it – what I heard was, “You have a fat stomach.” This was the beginning of my relationship with my sense of self: my self-awareness, self-perception, self-esteem.

Related: How Participating In Dry January Lead Lois Miller To Discover An Ugly Truth And A Beautiful Lesson

I went on to dance throughout college, but my love for dance eventually turned into a mental challenge of how to look better, how to be better, how to be perfect in a world where perfect didn’t exist. It was a futile exercise, a hamster on a wheel. I was never going to look good enough or be good enough. After suffering from a chronic back injury and depression over my parents divorce, I felt overall emotionally and physically drained, and I left the dance world. It was a sad and challenging time for me as I watched what I used to love transform into something that gave me anxiety, self-esteem issues and potentially body dysmorphic disorder (preoccupation with an imagined defect in appearance). 

With my dancing days behind me, I decided to continue with a side hustle I developed as a teenager. When I was 16, I got a job at Women’s Workout World. I went through a fairly vigorous training program to become a fitness instructor. This was my first introduction to “fitness” as the concept we know and love today.  After leaving the dance world, I continued teaching aerobics classes anywhere I could: at health clubs, through my college, for my friends, etc. It was a relief to be able to do something that I loved without being in front of a mirror and subjecting myself to nitpicking my own appearance and performance (thankfully, instructors often face the students and aren’t themselves looking in the mirror). I had found something that made me feel competent and excited and slowly but surely, my self-esteem started to improve.

After I had my first son, I found a new love and passion in the world of fitness: yoga. For me, yoga was the perfect balance of musicality (breath), movement, and physical, mental and emotional health. Yoga has all of the aspects of dance that once inspired, moved and motivated me, without the mirrors or competition or judgement. Who knew there was such a thing?! I couldn’t get enough of it and decided to become certified to teach yoga.

Related: Yoga For Guys 101: As Told By An Inflexible Weight Lifting Dude

Those of you who are familiar with yoga may know of the Niyamas (practices that refer to our inner world): Saucha (Purity), Santosha (Contentment), Tapas (Self discipline), Svadhyaya (Self-study) and Ishvara Pranidhana (Surrender). Although the Niyamas are only one piece of yoga, it was one that resonated with me and one that I could reflect on, explore and practice daily.  It was through yoga and fitness that I found myself and grew to accept myself.  I stopped looking in the mirror and finding everything I hated about myself and started noticing things like how physically strong I had become, regardless of my weight or clothing size. 

Those who know me have often heard me say, when my body feels good, my mind feels good. Through my fitness journey, from dance to aerobics to yoga, I have learned how to love myself from the inside out. Of course, there are still good days and bad days, and sometimes I find myself criticizing how I look, but those days and feelings are much fewer and farther between. Would I have gotten to where I am today without exercise and yoga? Perhaps, but this is where my journey has taken me.  The journey of accepting being Perfectly Imperfect.

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Post written by FFC Contributor and Group Fitness Manager Paige Bartley.

Member Stories: How Variety In Movement And Modality Helps Krys Rollins Feel Her Best

Member Krys Rollins shares how she and her kids like to stay active, her motivations behind her healthy lifestyle, and the biggest takeaways she’s learned from working with FFC Oak Park Personal Trainer Keon Hackney.

You’ve been a member at FFC for about 2 years! What made you decide to become a member? 

I’m so proud to have been a member for almost 2 years now. I decided to join because I needed a little more than what I could do at home on my own. I had some basic equipment and a yoga mat that I would use at 6 AM before my kids woke up. My workouts and diet were good, but I wanted to level up.  

Also, I needed a fitness facility that offered childcare services and amenities that my kids and I could enjoy. The hot tub, pool, kids club and rock climbing walls attracted me to FFC versus other facilities, and we enjoy them often!

Related: The Benefits of Indoor Rock Climbing

What is your favorite way to stay active? Do you love weightlifting, group fitness classes, cardio, a little bit of everything? 

My favorite is a variety. I have learned from a variety of great teachers and physical therapists that the best way to stay active and get fit is variety – to keep challenging the body in different ways, working different muscle groups, and to hit the little muscles.  

My personal routine is alternating weight and cardio workouts Monday, Wednesday, and Friday with yoga Tuesdays and Thursdays during the week. I do Bikram (hot yoga) once per week on Saturdays and take a day off on Sunday.  (And, by day off, I mean watch the kids rock climb then we get in the pool and hot tub!).  Every now and then my schedule is too busy and I miss one workout during the week, and that is okay.  Zero guilt because my overall routine is good and my trainer, Keon, has taught me that when you are working hard and smart, occasional rest days are good for you. 

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You’re working with personal trainer Keon Hackney. What do you love about your training sessions with Keon, and what has been your biggest takeaway from working with a personal trainer? 

Keon is awesome. Keon has expert-level knowledge about the body and his workout regimens are very intricate. He includes the tiniest or even awkward movements that we do not generally use in our daily lives. He absolutely pushes me and always serves up a well-rounded, whole-body workout where I leave feeling great and never so sore I cannot work out again 1-2 days later.  

Related: Why I Work With A Personal Trainer

I have several big takeaways from working with Keon: mainly that a fitness regime should be efficient, diverse, and sustainable.  

  • Efficient in that I do not need to work out 7 days per week or even for 90-120 minutes per day. That is over doing it when one could be lifting heavier and working smarter. Keon has reduced my cardio time and greatly increased my time with resistance and weights.  
  • Diverse in that I should throw in these crazy, tiny movements he teaches me – which involve posing like a frog or getting on the floor and crawling or zombie slides and push-ups.  (Where does he come up with this stuff?!?).  Keon has incorporated a lot of overheard work as well as getting horizontal for me, and my upper body feels stronger than ever before.  
  • Sustainability matters.  If I am in so much pain I can’t work out again 24-48 hours later, chances are I might get injured and even bigger that it is not a sustainable regime for my body and I may fall off altogether.

In addition to getting horizontal and performing those crazy, tiny movements, Keon has me work out in socks only, no shoes. This is another way to hit those tiny muscles and improve our posture. Now, even on the days I work out on my own, I am continuing those awesome moves Keon taught me and working out without shoes on.  

Are you working toward any specific health or fitness goals? If so, would you mind sharing what those goals are and how your progress is coming along?

My goal was to level up, and I feel I am doing just that. My diet is pretty solid and has helped me keep my BMI in the healthy range since my early 20s. My freshman year of college, I blinked and gained 20 pounds. That was 18 years and three pregnancies ago. Today, I am 40 pounds lighter than that max weight and have sustained this healthy weight for almost 10 years now.  

I am proud of this progress, but I also wanted to tone. My genes dictate a body type that is curvier and a little more voluptuous than mainstream standards. I embrace my body type as my own and want to ensure I have healthy joints and bone density. I used to jog and do more cardio and had IT band syndrome consistently. Since working with Keon, I feel more toned, see more definition, and have minimal IT band symptoms.

What motivates you to come to the club and stay consistent with your workouts? 

I am a BIPOC female, mother and family nurse practitioner. I am motivated by feeling good, firstly, as it sets my whole day and my outlook. I am also motivated to support all women and people of color to feel good physically and mentally, with no regard for any single idolized body type.  

Both sides of my genetic tree have high rates of type 2 diabetes, obesity, and dying young of chronic, preventable disease. While I carry that genetic predisposition, I have the power to stay healthy and active to reduce my own risks.  I also see a lot of patients progressively gain weight during their adult life or progressively after having children to end up heavier than they were while pregnant. I am motivated to spread the message that with a healthy diet and working smart – whether that be at home before the kids wake up with little financial expense, or in a gym like FFC – we can reduce chronic disease, live stronger, and feel better.

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Post written by FFC Member Krys Rollins.

Your Breath, Your Power: How To Harness Your Biggest Training Asset

If you’ve ever been to a yoga class, chances are the instructor talked about controlling your breathing, even if it’s just to align your inhales and exhales to your poses. Have you ever wondered why breath work is such an important part of a yoga practice?  

Whether you’re practicing yoga or participating in another form of exercise, being aware of your breath is extremely important. Your breath is your power, your path to presence and your body’s life force. Breathing delivers oxygen to every cell of our body and rids it of carbon dioxide. The rate of our breathing relates directly to the beat of our hearts, and the quality of our breath can affect our brains. And yet we take this involuntary function for granted. 

Related: Ready To Focus On Your Breath? Try Our 10 Minute Guided Meditation.

How often do you actually think about your breath? Let’s take a moment to focus on your breathing. Close your eyes and take three deep breaths. Think about each inhale and exhale.  Notice: What’s happened physically? What’s happened mentally? Do you feel more present?  

When it comes to our training sessions, mindful breathing can transform our workouts.

Mindful breathing helps us:

  1. Avoid Injury: Proper breathing will ensure your muscles receive the oxygen they need to keep contracting.
  2. Lift Heavier: In strength training, focusing your exhale on the exertion will help you lift heavier.
  3. Avoid Negative Thinking: When you’re mindful of your breath, you can be mindful of your thoughts. Each inhale is an opportunity to change the negative to positive; to reset. As humans, we have single track minds. If you’re thinking about your breath, you aren’t thinking about how hard you’re working.
  4. Increase Endurance: Even breathing helps you maintain a steady, consistent pace in long distance endurance exercises.
  5. Release Tension: Breathing creates space in the body and helps release tension.

Mindful breathing can be uncomfortable at first, but like any other muscle you work, your lungs respond to repetition. Whether on the treadmill or in the weight room, start each workout with 3 mindful breaths. Practice mindful breathing throughout your day. As with any habit, the more you do it, the more natural it becomes, and soon you’ll start to feel the effects mindful breathing can have on your mental and physical health.

Related: Breathe Easy At The Gym With These Plastic Mask Inserts

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Post written by FFC Contributor and Group Fitness Manager Elissa Peterson.