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FEBRUARY 9, 2010 7:16AM

Fitness After Fifty: The Book Nerd Workout

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 treadmillto_the_lighthouse

 

Full disclosure: I’m 57 years old, and  twenty pounds over weight – and that was fine with me, at least until I caught a glimpse of myself, ambushed by a an unexpected mirror. I can’t tell you exactly what I saw (I’m sure you can guess) but it did not match up with my svelte 20-year old self-image. It was a stiff does of reality I couldn’t shake. All those pairs of pants kept getting tighter, and it wasn’t just the shrinking effects of the dryer, though I remain a staunch supporter of the shrinking effects of the dryer.

          I had to fix the problem, but I knew my options were limited. Getting up at six A.M. and running five miles sounded good but I had tried it before and I knew it wasn’t going to happen. A personal trainer would have been great, but it was a little out of my price range. My son had gotten fit just by running on a treadmill, so I talked Annie into the idea and looked them up on line: too big, too expensive. You needed a separate room for a piece of equipment like that. All of this was at the stage where just thinking about exercising seems almost like the real thing. It takes up time, distracts you, tires you out. Plus you get that all-important sense of self-satisfaction: You get to say stuff like “Exercise” (at least thinking about exercise) “just happens to be a major priority for me!” Notice the “happens-to” formulation, a favorite among self-righteous jerks who invoke coincidence just to deny it; and thus imbue their random opinions with the gravity of fate.

          Well it all sounded good but I was still getting fat.

          My solution was to join the local health club.

          They had treadmills – and a shower, which my current antique apartment did not. There were other people there – who could be depended on to snicker at me if I slacked off (Peer pressure is good, once you’re out of high school). I  would get to drive there, and buy coffee afterward. It seemed like a manageable proposition. Of course, there was always the locker room issue, you know … getting undressed around other men (I think of Woody Allen in Annie Hall, explaining why he doesn’t shower at the tennis club: “I’m not comfortable being seen naked by a man of my own gender.”). But I figured going a little later than other people – as a painting contractor, my time is pretty much my own -- might cut down on the crowds.

It was worth a try.

Plus if you give some one three hundred dollars in advance for three months of Health Club membership, you feel especially profligate and irresponsible (not to mention lazy and puny and lame) if you don’t go. It’s a good system – it puts every kind of pressure on you, and the combination usually works.

So now we have to talk about the machine itself. It takes you through a work-out, increasing the incline and decreasing it, measuring the twenty minutes in two and three minute segments, praising you (“Great job!”)  and encouraging you (“Only six more minutes!”) as you go along. It’s a little abstract, being praised by a machine, but the worst part is, I’m so craven I like it. “That machine says I’m doing a great job!” I told myself. Later on, I asked the instructor about the calorie-burning meter display, and he just laughed. “It’s an average,” he said. “The machine has no idea how many calories you’re burning.” So maybe it was just as unreliable about how good a job I was doing. Liar. But I didn’t care. Flattery will get you everywhere, treadmill machine.

The real problem was those minute and two-minute increments. I got caught up in them and the workout seemed to take forever. I needed a distraction. I don’t have an iPod, and I don’t really like listening to music when I’m exerting myself, anyway They have magazines at the club but the print is way too small to read comfortably while jogging. TVs line the walls, with the sound off, but they’re placed diabolically remote from the treadmills, rendering the close-captioning illegible. This is bad because I realized quickly that distraction is the key to getting through a workout. What do I do when I’m bored any other time? I read. But books were too cumbersome to set on the treadmill’s shelf and once again, the print was too small, anyway.

Driving home on the third day, I realized the solution, with that familiar twinge of retroactive impatience and annoyance. It was so obvious! Why hadn’t I thought of it before?

That day I ordered a big print edition of Virgina Woolf’s To The Lighthouse from Amazon. I wanted a book I had been meaning to read for a long time, something challenging. I wanted to improve my mind along with my body.

When the novel arrived in the mail, I razored out the first twenty pages and took them to the club with me. They fit perfectly on the Treadmill shelf and to my mild surprise they were utterly engrossing. And distracting:  I ran six minutes before I even noticed I(three had been my outside limit before I partnered with Virginia). What the lady herself might think of me vandalizing her novel to place the pages on an exercise machine, I have no idea. I hope she’d be pleased. The thing that might please her most I discovered entirely by accident. The big print renders her book shockingly accessible. Classic literature has always meant small type: brown pages packed tight with tiny indecipherable text. It’s like the way we see World War Two in black and white, from all those grainy newsreels. But people shot color footage then also (John Huston made some stirring documentaries),  and seeing those times in all the hues and shades of the real world creates a haunting new intimacy with those people. It restores the dignity, the imperative human truth of their long-extinguished lives. Big print does the same thing for the classics, removing the mystique of eyestrain and rendering the sentences, however antique and complex, fresh, approachable and seductive:

 

Since he belonged, even at the age of six, to that great clan which cannot keep this feeling separate from that, but must let future prospects, with their joys and sorrows, cloud what is actually at hand, since to such people even in earliest childhood any turn in the wheel of sensation has the power to crystallize and transfix the moment upon which its gloom or radiance rests, James Ramsay, sitting on the floor cutting out pictures from the illustrated catalogueof the Army and Navy stores, endowed the picture of a refrigerator, as his mother spoke, with heavenly bliss.

 

          Good writers control your breathing: you literally hold your breath though a compound sentence and pant along with a series of short staccato ones. With Virginia Woolf in charge of my respiration and my mind taken up with Mrs. Ramsay’s walk into town with the egregious Charles Tansley, the exercise becomes almost incidental.

My next goal: twenty minutes at 4.5 miles an hour through all the inclines …and Mrs. Dalloway Then 5mph  and The Moonstone!  Six mph and Middlemarch.  But why stop there? Seven  mph and anything goes -- Mao II, Midnight’s Children, Mason and Dixon --

I’m unstoppable.

I just wish there was a private shower at the club.

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Comments

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I recommend Underworld, Don DeLillo. It weighs a ton, twice that in large print, so you'll get arm workouts, and the opening description of the baseball game, sitting with Frank Sinatra, Jackie Gleason and J.Edgar Hoover is possibly the greatest sustained descriptive prose chapter ever written in the English language.
Mason and Dixon??? Jehosaphat! You'll turn into a stick figure! Am glad to find somebody who's not afraid of Ginny, tho. Great idea! (r)
Keep away from War and Peace or you'll end up a complete wraith. Can you program the machine to get mean and tell you to move your ass, that kind of thing? I hate chirpy encouragement when I'm really suffering.
A La Recherche de Temps Perdu comes in a shower-safe plastic version.
You are unstoppable! I'm always amazed by people who have things like stamina and willpower. As character traits, they are sorely underrated. And what a keen observation about large print making the language more accessible. It makes perfect sense. The Naked and The Dead would seem an approprate selection for your next read.
You need an e-book reader. You won't have to butcher your library to enjoy books at the gym, and you can set the font and type size to suit the situation.
Large type books. Why didn't I think of it. Plus razoring out the pages. That adds an element of commitment to the process. Use it or lose it.
funny, I was thinking Delillo as well, before seeing greg's comment. Though I'm partial to End Zone.
You don't need an e-book reader, and for God's sake don't buy one of those awful, faulty iPads. Simply get yourself an MP3 player with some capacity (I'm not even going to recommend an iPod; there are lots of good players besides Apple's out there). Then get the books you desire as downloads.

Years ago I decided I didn't want to listen to music on road trips. Music puts me to sleep. Audio books on MP3 disks, which I can play in my car stereo, hold my attention. Before that, audio books on tape did; Stephen King's The Gunslinger on multiple cassettes got me from Orlando to St. Louis over long overnight hauls.

Now Ian Fleming's Goldfinger, Roger Zelazny's Lord of Light and the good, free audio dramas from Pendant Audio are on MP3 CD's in my car, ready to keep my mind alert and involved as I drive.
DeLillo's a great choice. But Woolf has the beat. I bet you'd lose an easy ten with Paradise Lost, and when you're finished with that Phillip Pullman's Dark Materials.

As for myself, I've just lost five pounds by maintaining my New Year's resolution to stick to an adequate sleep schedule. I'm sticking to that plan. I still get to read, and it doesn't cost as much.
"I razored out the first twenty pages"

::gasp::

Was that one of the longest sentences on record, or was it the large print that made it appear so?

I used to read on the treadmill. It's a much better distraction than the other choices. Good Luck!!
This is by far the best advice I've ever received concerning exercise. Even my used bookstore has an entire section of large print books.

Thanks Axelrod!!!
This is so cool. I love how the world works like this at times when you are exploring a writer and then someone writes about his/her books and how they work for the growth of the human mind.
Great idea, and I'm putting all of these recommendations on my reading list.
just thinking about exercising seems almost like the real thing. It takes up time, distracts you, tires you out I'm with you there Steven!
I go with the downloads of books or even better - TED audio presentations - you have to focus on the content. French verbs work as well.
If you read - don't overlook poetry - the cadence is brilliant for pacing your breath and the best need rereading.
Good luck .
Maybe I should have tried the Woolf method. I joined a health club last year, apparently because I didn't have enough humiliation in my life. Everyone looked like they had just bicycled over for a rigorous workout after playing pick-up basketball all afternoon - and that was just the women.

"you feel especially profligate and irresponsible (not to mention lazy and puny and lame) if you don’t go"

I got over it.
I am a staunch supporter of the shrinking effects of the dryer - and I will remain so.
It's funny--I tried the same thing but ended up going in the opposite direction. After trying real literature and then listening to NPR via earphones, where complicated conversation about Middle East peace was ensuing, I have ended up with PEOPLE Magazine and worse. I apparently can't do two things at once.

Steven, I so enjoy your prose; you capture the truths of regular living. You're excellent. (Does flattery coming from an invisible cyber friend count as much as from a treadmill?)

Oh, and PS: When you say "All of this was at the stage where just thinking about exercising seems almost like the real thing" you aren't far off. I probably wouldn't know this if I didn't live in Cleveland, but the Clinic did some research about five years ago that you may be interested in:
Thinking About Exercise Can Beef Up Biceps
Rated for Woolf. Keep up the good work on getting your moneys worth.
You should have saved Under the Dome for this:)
I watch television. Our treadmills have them. With my earbuds. I can watch for minutes and go over 2 miles on a nice steep incline and while watching Fox and Friends (spying on the enemy) alleviated by infomercials showing buffer bodies than mine, I get my heart rate up up up:)
I LOVE this piece, Steven. I have the same problem with trying to combine exercise and reading. You've given me an idea: can you please write a bunch of stuff in a large easy-to-read font and send it to me? Reading you would make even the elliptical enjoyable!
Ooh, I like Lisa's suggestion: Can you imagine having to watch and listen to Bill O'Reilly while operating heavy machinery? I'd be pumping furiously!