Isometrically opposed to gyms
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ROBERT GARDNER
I’m trying to figure out when we all started working out. Nobody
worked out in my youth. We did sports like swimming, but those were
part of being in school. We didn’t consider swimming laps as working
out, and we certainly didn’t do any other sort of exercise to prepare
ourselves for swimming like lifting weights. I suppose the football
players did, but since I wasn’t even big enough to be water boy, I
don’t know. Certainly, the grown-ups I knew didn’t “work out.” They
just worked.
As a young man I surfed and did some skin diving, but that was
because they were fun things to do, not because of some physical
benefit I might gain from them. The same with walking. I walked
because it was a good way to see things.
At some point, however, society decided this wasn’t enough. If I
wanted to hold my head up in the neighborhood, I had to start working
out. But how? I wasn’t going to start lifting weights. I’d been a
96-pound weakling, and frankly, getting a little sand on me was
preferable to the boredom of barbells. As for jogging, everyone I saw
trotting around the streets always looked miserable. I didn’t need to
run to do that.
And then I found the solution -- isometrics. Just the name gave me
confidence. It sounded so scientific, and isometrics had a huge
advantage over other methods of exercise. Isometrics were easy. If
you wanted to strengthen your arms, you didn’t stagger around trying
to catch a heavy medicine ball. All you had to do was push your palms
together as hard as you could for 30 seconds. The same with your
stomach. If you wanted to flatten it, you didn’t have to do 100 daily
sit-ups. You just pulled in your stomach muscles as hard as you
could, again for 30 seconds.
With a regimen like that, I didn’t have to go to a gym. I could
work out any place. I could do isometrics sitting down. I could do
isometrics at work! That sold me. I could do my job and exercise at
the same time, so instead of having to go to the gym after work, I
could do something fun and worthwhile like drinking. I was sold.
I immediately put my new regime into practice. There I was,
sitting on the bench, hearing a case, and while I was listening
carefully to the evidence, I did my isometrics. I pushed my palms
together as hard as I could. One exercise down. I pulled my stomach
muscles in as hard as I could -- and noticed that the witness had
stopped talking and was staring at me, as was everyone else in court.
The bailiff hurried up to me. “Are you sick?” he whispered.
“Sick? No, never better,” I replied. “Why?”
“Well, you looked like you were in agony.”
I hadn’t realized that in performing my isometrics my face
reflected my efforts. I guess I looked like I was having a heart
attack. So much for working out, at least in the courtroom.
After that, I pretty much went back to surfing and walking.
Nowadays, it’s just walking. The dog and I circle the block once or
twice, depending on our energy level. However, I haven’t given up
entirely on those isometrics, so if you see an old man with a
dachshund and the old man’s making horrible faces, don’t worry. It’s
not a heart attack victim. It’s just me, working out.
* ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and a former judge.
His column runs Tuesdays.
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