Putting my back in it
“Four kilometres in
the time of 35 minutes and 20 seconds, pace for the last kilometre 8 minutes 42
seconds, heart rate 137 beats per minute.” For my walking exercises, I have had
my mobile phone aggregate information hooked to my smartwatch to give me a
notification of how I was doing for each kilometre.
I switched it off
this morning, having stopped listening to music to take in the sounds of nature
that takes me by riverbanks and into verdant parks filled with animal life and
beauty, this was becoming both a guilt trip and a distraction. The guilt fed by
trying to understand why somehow my pace between kilometres could vary by almost
3 minutes and the distraction from the quiet and the thinking as I walk.
Unnecessary stress,
it seems
Two days ago, I was
going at such a pace appeared I could get 7 kilometres done in 60 minutes, having
heard the readings at the completion of the 6th kilometre, that 7th
kilometre could be done in 8 minutes 30 seconds, so, I pressed in and my walk became
a trot, and I was almost running but it was to no avail, 61 minutes and 10
seconds my mobile phone announced. I was crestfallen.
On reflection I
wondered why I was competing against myself; the route is the same at a bit
over 11 kilometres, my stride is about 73 centimetres, I have a good mental
note of each kilometre point, usually before the 8th kilometre I
will have done 10,000 steps with a buzz from my smartwatch and the pounds or
kilogrammes are beginning to shift. The circuit is done in under 110 minutes.
On the matter of
pace, after 163 recorded exercises between encouragement and achievement the
novelty has worn off. I got home, paused and stopped the workout and read the
results, it did not seem that different from my typical walks, though with 21
seconds on average added to the kilometre but not something to beat myself up
about. I feel fine.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Comments are accepted if in context are polite and hopefully without expletives and should show a name, anonymous, would not do. Thanks.