Lifting my Spirits at the Gym

I’ve been lifting weights for years, starting on the farm long before joining a gym. My early lifting equipment happened to be hay bales and logs. Once I’d grown and left the farm, my weights were the type typically found in a gym. I continued working at one gym or another for years, until we purchased our own house and created a home gym.

Now, after years of lifting at home, it was decided that I’d lift safely at a gym due to my epilepsy diagnosis. A local gym would work perfectly as I’ve just recently regained my driving clearance, I’m now 6 months’ post seizure.

I haven’t been in a gym for more than a decade, I was very self-aware and uncomfortable the first time I walked in. As I moved toward the front desk, I thought it was oddly placed in the back of the room. It wasn’t until I reached the desk that I realized the entry door to the gym was from the back of the building.

It’s my first day and I’ve already entered the building wrong; I’ve walked the gym floor with street shoes.

Approaching the desk, the twenty something attendant became confused about online sign-up. After explaining that online sign-up is possible through their website via MindBody, I asked for a tour. I had to remind him I was a new member and unfamiliar with the gym layout.

I arrived dressed and ready, I dropped a few non-essentials in the locker and hit the floor feeling like an outlier among these seasoned gym goers. Having spent years using my equipment, I had to acclimate myself to various machines and gym layout. I moved around the space with trepidation as it was busier than I’d hoped.

In the first moments back in the gym, I knew all eyes would be on me, I was very self-conscious in the moment. At home, my dumb bells are hex shaped while the gym uses a larger diameter rubber dumb bell. The large rounder head felt different. I’m not Sheldon, I think the larger diameter of the rubber dumb bell moves the weight farther away from the center of gravity, making weight feel heavier.

As I start to process through my first few sets, I’m trying the dumb bell system out and find the larger head size awkward. I start low on each lift, working my way up until I’m at the top of my range. As I move up in weight for the lift, I realize the weight choice is too heavy and racked them. It was at this point a ripped-shirt dude-brah felt compelled to impart some words of wisdom. My first thought was how rude and had I been trying the gym, I’d walk out and never return.

I’m hoping the self-conscious feelings go away as I get to know people and resocialize myself. My next visit will be at an earlier hour hoping it’s dude-brah free.

Even with the little interruption, I’m already feeling better and excited about accessing a wider variety of equipment.

 

 

5 thoughts on “Lifting my Spirits at the Gym”

  1. We go to an independently owned one, where there are more seniors than other age groups. They have a social area with coffee, and comfortable chairs for our husbands. If I go in the evenings there may be some younger people there, but because I box, lift, etc., they treat me like one of the guys. I love it. Hated the chain ones.

    1. I went closer to the lunch hour, I’ll go earlier, or mid afternoon, next time. I chose the gym as they have a great dance studio with teachers that I like. Your coffee bar and seating sound fabulous, this gym doesn’t have that. It’s located in an open air shopping plaza with coffee shops and multiple restaurants close by. The natural foods market has a deli with bistro seating. This is an independently owned gym as well, I’m lucky that I can get there from our house, in ten minutes, biking on a safe to travel path.
      Bodynsoil recently posted…Lifting my Spirits at the GymMy Profile

  2. Nice tips I’ll use if ever need. Otherwise, Mark, your Fitness workout is awesome I’m using your mostly all tips and now I’m very good and fit now after your techniques. Thanks a lot for your help and tips…

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