There are thousands of ways to exercise. It just requires bravery to try something new. By the way, you generally need to stick at something for a few weeks to give that new thing a genuine chance. Now it feels like I'm writing a dating column! But I'll stick with wellness; the latter I am clueless ...
But seriously. Breaking up with gyms or trainers is tough. It's hard to change familiar things.
In the past I stayed at a gym way too long. The place was soul-less, aimed only at 20-somethings, and because I was locked into a lower fee I felt I should stay ... even though I used the membership barely once weekly.
I have gym regrets over that place! I was reminded about this with one of my wellness clients recently. A big success was getting her out of her soul-less gym and inspired to try another place.
Now when she's in motion — it actually sparks some good emotion!
And if you are in a remote part of this country and can't access new, fancy gyms. ... then don't worry. Covid has taught us that our living-rooms can be makeshift gyms. We can beam in fitness instructors from Canada if we want! So consider if you love your workouts. Otherwise action a break-up plan.
1 There are thousands of ways to move. There will be something you enjoy more.
2 Movement helps you de-stress. But if you hate the place, people or workouts ... then it's likely making you feel worse.
3 Your gym time is hours in a week that you shouldn't feel unhappy. Even walking around the block with mates will spark more joy and stress-release than hammering your body at a gym you hate. And that latter option is free.
Rachel is a wellness coach, speaker and author of Balance: Food, Health + Happiness . Follow her on Instagram
www.instagram.com/rachelgrunwell
www.inspiredhealth.co.nz