Training. Where do I start? Like
food, I’ve pretty much made every mistake known to wo/man/kind. It’s all there
in my past and not-so-distant-past. FB kindly records all shortcomings so no
use trying to deny it;
·
Once upon a time, in a land far, far away, I
only did cardio. I was your typical ‘walk in the door and beeline to the cardio
machines’ sort of girl. My idea of mixing
it up was swapping the Woman’s Day for a Women’s Weekly mag. End result:
kept moderately lean but flabby legs that didn’t ever change.
·
I often wonder why I didn’t ever gravitate to
working with weights and I can only say that my confidence in a gym was always
so very low. I used to pound the treadie and watch the girls arrive and linger
around the reception area, chatting with staff. I wondered what they chatted
about. Wondered how they found the confidence to speak with people they didn’t
really know. I was truly surprised that the gym members would go out on social
events together and have Christmas and Easter parties. For me the gym was
somewhere that I snuck into – incognito – and completed my hour of cardio
before slinking out. The odd smile here and there was about as social as it got
for me and I was in awe of those that made it a culture.
·
And then came Group Fitness. The way to turn up
and be put through my paces without having to think of a thing. It wasn’t
always plain sailing though I’ll have you know; my ability to “mirror” the
instructor was not good. Instead I would find a suitable candidate who looked
like they knew what they were doing and stand behind them so I could be sure I
wasn’t going to grape-vine the wrong way. On that, I learnt all the moves and
felt just a tad proud! I have never been a dancer and this was about as close
as I was ever going to get to a stage performance so I made sure my hoe-downs
and foot-flicks were completed with as much panache as I could muster. I even
ventured into the area of Active Wear – and let me tell you that all the way
back then (sigh…), you only wore this shit to the gym so you had to be a
true-believer to invest in it.
An incident I’d
rather forget (but can’t ever) involves both my 90’s active-wear and my fennel laxative
bars. I seriously can’t face sharing the details but I can say that ultra-tight
bike-pants underneath a G-string hiked-up leotard were a recipe for disaster
when time was tight and the loos were upstairs. Enough on that.
·
2010 was my first introduction to weights. Real
weights. My beautiful Cape York friend had a garage full of iron and I can
truly say I had absolutely no idea what to do with most of it. Left to my own
devices I might have thrown together some bicep curls, triceps dips and
crunches and called that a ‘Workout’. So she had a complete beginner on her
hands.
This whole new
world opened up for me and I couldn’t get enough of it. Rows, deadlifts,
presses, sumo high-pulls, uprights – we did them all and we did them often. I
had a baby less than a year old and I swear he spent at least one hour a day on
that garage floor playing with toys and watching his mama sweat it out. Having
had two other babies, I can tell you that this new style of training did
absolute wonders for shattering the stay-at-home-mum blues I had experienced
with my first two.
Just to explain (though not needed for those closest to me) – I’m no Mother Earth. I have three children and I love them more than I’ve loved anything in this world – but I’m still no Mother Earth. I used to read books on how to be a Mum and I did every free course being offered by every community organisation in relation to new babies. I have certificates for; How to Survive Sleep Deprivation and Still Love Your Baby (barely worked). Baby & You: A New & Beautiful Beginning (say it 50 times and I’ll believe it eventually). Baby Massage (a room full of nuded up baby bottoms was sort of cute!). How to Keep the Passion Alive Once Baby Arrives (Rob made me go. Epic fail in his books).
On the up-side, I
have successfully grown them to ages 13, 12 and 8 and that is pretty good
really. I hang my head with a touch of shame and admit that there’s some things
I just didn’t conquer – in no particular order; I didn’t do home-craft with
them. I only made their baby food from scratch because I was too tight to buy
it – not due to any healthy aspects. I only paid for swimming lessons for one
baby (aged 6months) because I thought it was all a big rip-off scam at that age
– the others I just tipped water over their heads in the bath. I did not ever take them to the Wiggles
in concert (though Rob offered Hi 5 and I didn’t let him). I have never paid
for professional photos of my kids (other than pixie pics or the free shopping
centre Santa ones). I made up lies to avoid having to watch kid’s movies –
apart from Nemo and Toy Story. Two had dummies, one refused – and I only
ditched them because I hated getting up in the night to put it back in. And
here’s the one that I have to drag myself to admit …. not sure I can do this … “you can do it Kirst – just say it quickly
and it’ll be out there” – inhale/exhale – even when they were babies I would
pretend I was asleep so that Rob would have to deal with them, even though he
was a shift worker – I detested getting up in the night …. Not
sure I’ll admit that ever again my lifetime. Oh – and here’s one more for free –
new mothers can be the most superior bitches in the world – new mothers will
know what I mean by that.
So I’m completely
weird and that’s ok, sort of. I also had another issue that I was only talking to a colleague about the other day.
Throughout my life, in particular my teens onward, I found I would have a serious
psychological and sometimes even physical reaction to cold and grey weather. I’m
sure everyone gets a little down when it’s bleak and rainy for days on end –
but this was different I think. The slightest hint of summer turning to autumn
and a change of thought process would start with me. I would spiral down and
feel like I had to tread water to keep above it all. Once I had children it
became seriously hard to shake and I found myself in freezing cold, grey,
rainy, bleak, shitty Auckland (sorry Aucks people) and I couldn’t find my way out.
We moved multiple times. We moved from old houses to brand new ones. We bought
a spectacular block of land over-looking the ocean. We paid $6K for our dream
house plans. I pushed myself to venture outdoors and I kept up with my
incessant cardio – but I knew the quality of life for our family was suffering
because of me. So we moved to Australia and have been here ever since. It’s
taken a while to find the right spot but here we are in Darwin and I can honestly
say that the top end sunshine is like medicine to me. Those bleak days with the
bleak moods are non-existent and, even after 6 years in the north and 10 years
in Oz, I still wake every morning and feel grateful for my beautiful, warm and
sunny life – surrounded by palm trees and sweat balls. I look back and feel
proud that, as a family, we found a problem and solved it even though it meant
a full country change. Our children have thrived over here and are now very
proud citizens with an Aussie boy added once we got here. They know nothing
different other than the sunshine, sports and weirdness of the top end and we
have no intentions whatsoever of leaving it any day soon.
·
Back to training. After my intro to weights, I
haven’t looked back. Finally, those blasted legs have made changes. I’m not
ready to strap on a red bikini and slo-mo down the beach anytime soon, but I
didn’t have great legs to start with and now they are a better version of the
same ones. I’m grown-up enough to realise that I will not ever have the
muscular, long, lean, brown pins of a super-model, but I’m sort of glad I don’t
possess the ones I’m genetically pre-disposed to sans-exercise. A bit of tan
goes a bloody long way to dealing with the imperfections by the by.
But this
training intro wasn’t enough – it was just the first taste of what was to
become my life for the next few years as I ditched my profession and became a
full-time fitness trainer. And the fun really started.
So my next lot of training
bloopers, blunders and best-bits can wait until Part 2. This gets really
interesting now so don’t go far…..

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