I was so tempted to skip the run. It was a Thursday afternoon in
early December, and by the time my five Zoom meetings were done, it was getting
dark and the sky was spitting sleet. Still, I headed out the door, because my
last call of the day had been with a couple of professional runners, each with
multiple national championship titles in distance running under their belt.
Physician Megan Roche and her husband, David, had encouraged me to think of my
workout as recess after a long day of work, rather than another item on my
to-do list.
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“I struggle with motivation all the time,” David Roche said.
What gets him over the hump is finding joy in the activity itself. Sometimes it
helps to get a little silly, he said. “It sounds ridiculous, but if you’re
running down a slight hill or even just tired, put your arms out like you’re an
airplane and suddenly everything become less serious.”
It did sound silly, but when I tried the airplane arms trick, my
dark, cold run became surprisingly joyful. Here are some other ways you can
find inspiration and maybe even a little glee in your daily workout.
Don’t think of it as exercise.
When exercise isn’t appealing, making it feel like something
else can help. Crystal Steltenpohl, a psychologist at the University of
Southern Indiana, Evansville, who studies exercise motivation, recalled a
conversation she had with a participant in one of her studies who said, “I go
play basketball, but that’s just hanging out with friends.” In other words, although
the activity qualified as exercise, that was just a fringe benefit, rather than
the motivating factor.
I spent years as a competitive runner, cyclist and skier. And
while I continue to do these activities, I usually get the recommended 22
minutes per day of moderate-intensity exercise automatically, without ever
thinking about exercise. Instead, I do my morning walk to clear my head, feel
present in my surroundings and connect with my husband and my dogs.
“If you ask, most people will say they want to exercise for
their health, and that’s a great goal,” said Katie Heinrich, an exercise
scientist at Kansas State University. “But what gets people actually moving is
doing something they enjoy.” There’s no perfect activity for everyone. “How do
you like to move?” Heinrich said. “Maybe it’s dancing, or it could be a walk in
the park. For some people, it might be CrossFit or Peloton.”
Casey Johnston stumbled upon weight lifting through a Reddit
thread by a woman starting a strength-training program. That post inspired
Johnston, a health and science writer who now publishes the newsletter She’s a
Beast, to try a similar program. She discovered that she loved it much more
than running. Whereas running gave her too much time to ruminate over anxious
thoughts, “You can’t think of anything else when you have 200 pounds on your
back,” she said.
Bundle your incentives.
Last month, researchers published a megastudy testing the
effectiveness of 54 approaches to motivating people to exercise more. The
experiment, which enlisted more than 60,000 members of the 24 Hour Fitness
chain as test subjects, found that offering a free audiobook was one of the
most effective ways to get people to the gym. The idea was to give participants
something to look forward to while exercising, said one of the study’s
organizers, Katy Milkman, a professor at the Wharton School of the University
of Pennsylvania and author of the book “How to Change: The Science of Getting
from Where You Are to Where You Want to Be.”
It’s an approach familiar to Megan Roche. She enjoys taking
photographs, and running gives her an opportunity to look for interesting
things to shoot, especially while traveling. “These photos carry me through my
running journey,” she said.
Make exercise a priority.
“The No. 1 reason people give for not exercising is time,”
Heinrich said, and the only reliable way to find the time is to prioritize it.
“You have to make a decision to put exercise into your day; it’s not just
magically going to happen.”
Johnston used to try and squeeze exercise into her life by doing
things like taking the stairs instead of the elevator, “But that never really
stuck or gave me any validation that I was doing anything meaningful,” she
said. “Giving exercise a distinct place in my life was motivating.”
If you think of exercise as optional, you give yourself
permission to skip it. Instead, try thinking of it as an essential part of your
job, said Brad Stulberg, author of “The Practice of Groundedness” and a
frequent writer about human performance. “Whether you are a parent, business
person, physician, writer, artist, lawyer or educator, exercise will make you
better at what you do,” he said. “It will help you focus, stay calm and
collected, and improve your energy.”
Be flexible.
Making exercise a priority does not mean you need a rigid
schedule. A study Milkman and some colleagues published in 2020 found that
giving yourself flexibility to meet your goals might boost your chance of
success. Researchers studied more than 2,500 Google employees, randomly
assigning some of them to get paid for going to the company gym during a window
of time they had identified in advance as the most manageable, while others
could opt to go anytime.
The researchers had expected that committing to specific times
would help people form stronger habits, said lead author John Beshears, a
behavioral economist at Harvard Business School. Instead, the people who had
been given flexibility ended up going more often after the payments ended. When
the group on the rigid program missed their planned workout, they didn’t go at
all, whereas the group that had practiced finding the time continued to do so,
Milkman said.
Anticipate how exercise will make you feel.
It is tempting to think you are too stressed or tired to
exercise, but oftentimes exercise is exactly what you need to feel better. “You
don’t need to feel good to get going, you need to get going to feel good,”
Stulberg said.
Exercise can help you manage your moods, Steltenpohl said, and
when you are feeling lousy, sometimes exercise is a powerful antidote. “When I
get really frustrated, I find that’s a good time to take a walk.”
Johnston is motivated by how her workouts feel. “I really enjoy
how it feels physically to use my muscles and do one concrete task,” she said.
She is also urged on by the progress she achieves through weightlifting. “It’s
impossible to make people understand the feeling of getting stronger,
especially when they’re new at it,” Johnston said. It’s a benefit that happens
pretty quickly, she said, and it can create a positive feedback loop.
If you slip, try to get back on track right away.
The most effective trick identified in the 24 Hour Fitness
megastudy was to incentivize people to get back on track when they missed a
session. In this scenario, people committed to coming to the gym on certain
days and times, and if they missed one of these planned visits, they would get
a reminder and also a chance to earn extra points if they made their next
planned visit. (Participants earned points that they could convert to Amazon
cash.)
It did not take much — about 9 cents in extra points — to get
people back to the gym, and Milkman theorizes that it is the signal “don’t miss
your workout twice” that nudged people, rather than the trivial bonus. You
could imagine making this more potent by joining the gym with friends, she
said.
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