Quote:
Originally Posted by DoubleF
How dedicated have you been in the past with staying with a workout/exercise methodology?
Not trying to be negative, but I'd advise considering not spending a single dime for the first two to three weeks. If you can stick with it for that long, then consider spending some money to increase your efficiency.
I'll put it this way. Stretch for 1 minute a day 30 seconds in the morning, 30 seconds at night. I had range of motion issues in my hips and I was #### at keeping even that up (5 squats and 5 lunges each morning and evening). Spending money on a gym in my situation was a waste of money because my habits weren't even there for basic stretching. Stretching was important for my range of motion. Cardio, weight lifting, machines etc. will not help your Achilles and range of motion. Stretching to address the stiffness and/or physio are perhaps what you need for that first. Once you have the stretching down pat, then you can get a gym membership or pay for yoga classes and add on top of the stretches you do.
It wasn't until I got an unrelated injury and I was diligently doing the recovery activities/stretches to address the pain that I had the basic habits to add more to the activities I was doing. Everything I bought before that was a waste of money. Everything I bought afterwards I use a lot more.
You'd be surprised how much difference you'll notice after two weeks of just basic stretches and 20 minute outdoor speed walking. I think it takes double the time on a treadmill (jogging or otherwise) and even yoga to accomplish the same 20 minute outdoor speed walk. Those activities are just more focused on a specific muscle group vs a range of muscle groups.
Dancing is also underrated. Blast some music or use headphones. Just doing 20-30 minutes of basic left and right side steps is great. Especially if you're enjoying the music and vibing to some tunes.
Nothing against going somewhere to work out. I'm just saying if the most basic of your habits are improved, you'll amplify your experience at the gym or yoga studio or whatever. I'd also address your Achilles before paying for a gym. It would suck to pay for a membership only to be unable to go and immediately cancel because of an injury to your Achilles.
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I know everybody's different, but I'd recommend doing the opposite...
If you're able, invest some money in a gym membership, pre-pay for some personal training sessions, heck, even buy something like new shoes or headphones. The investment, both in time and financially, as well as the accountability of the pre-booked training sessions can be a great way to ingrain a routine for someone that isn't otherwise a self-starter.
I've found that the best motivator for sticking to an exercise routine is actually seeing results... If you can slog through some sessions with a trainer for a few weeks and start to see results, it will be infinitely easier to keep going on your own after that initial boost.