Most medics I have met don’t train. A fair number do very little exercise at all. There is, of course, a difference. But you would have thought, given how much they are meant to know about the body, they might understand the necessity.
Yet they don’t do it. Some do. Anaesthetic consultants appear particularly addicted to cycling, for example. A&E doctors seem to like risk throughout their lives. But most don’t. Some are diabetic, obese, asthmatic, all the diseases of a modern life.
That’s because they’re human, just like you and me. They get tired, stressed, have family pressures, and no motivation.
However, find one that does and ask them how they manage it. And remember there is a difference between staying active and training. They may be training for an obstacle course race or a triathlon, the rest of us are moving to stay ahead of death.
The guidelines, backed up by research, shows that 120-180 mins of moderate activity, in conjunction with 2 – 3 sessions of resistance exercises are hugely beneficial to health span and overall reduction in mortality.
You don’t want to or can’t do a triathlon? Crossfit isn’t for you? Don’t like gyms? That’s ok. They are merely goals and tools.
If you can walk, walk. If you can run, run. I’ve written before about sandbag training, which for the price of some cheap builders merchant sand, a few bin liners and an old duffel, you can make weights. Play. Try to put aside the embarrassment and the difficulty and get outside. Kick a cheap football around the park, get an old water bottle and use it as a cheap dumbbell. Do push-ups against trees, benches, find some elastic bands online and use them.
In the end, only you can do it. And perhaps you can encourage your doctor to lift, on the rare occasions that you’ll need to see them.
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