I've
never been a jock. Far from it. I
was the last kid chosen in elementary school games. I never once
won a Field Day ribbon. I've always been uncoordinated and I hated every minute of every PE class I ever had to
take.
But today, I think I got a glimmer of my inner jock. I have not only found a form of exercise that I
come back to several times a week, I am seeing significant increases
in my strength and stamina. Since this comes in the same year that
my back has given me one problem after another, severely limiting mobility and exercise, it is doubly thrilling to me.
Last
spring, a local non-profit organization gave me a scholarship to take a beginning sailing
class, something I've always wanted to do. As it happened, I was
dealing with significant pain during the 6-session class, and also
had quite a bit of anxiety about tipping the boat over, a worry I'm
still struggling with. I wasn't quite
ready to give up at the end of the class, but with no sailing partners
in sight, I was never able to go back to it.
Not
long after the class ended, a cortisone shot relieved the neck
pain I was feeling. The sailing venue also keeps paddle
boards and kayaks around for their more casual customers. A friend was taking an advanced kayaking class at the same beach, and I had
enjoyed kayaking in the past. I made a deal with my friend to meet her there on her class
day, so I'd have motivation to show up.
The weather
was hot, the lake was there, and thanks to their generous policies
for disabled folks, I paid $25 for a season pass. Within days, I was
motivating myself, and had taken to sitting on a paddle board with my
feet in the water to cool off. It was hot out, Seattle-style – 85°F! I started out paddling up the lake to a beach roughly 1/2 mile away,
and was quite thrilled to make it there and back the first time I
tried.
At
the time, I couldn't carry a kayak by myself, couldn't stand up after
paddling without the help of the paddle and significant struggle, and
that trip up to the beach and back was quite enough for one evening.
I was hooked, though, and I kept going back.
My
neck quit acting up after the shot and some PT. Then my hip started
making it so painful to walk that my mile-long dog walks changed from
several times a week to non-existent. Stevie and I had to make do with
a few short walks daily. PT helped my hip to some extent,
and we are walking to the dog beach once or twice a week now. Now my lower back is unhappy.
However,
my physical therapist and I realized that the kayaking was helping my
back and my general well being immensely, so I kept it up, happy to have
something physical to do that didn't result in more muscle spasms or
pinched nerves. Slowly, I started carrying first the light-weight
paddle boards back to the rack, and sometimes lugging the kayak one
way, even though it was a struggle. I discovered that jumping off the
paddle board into deep water both helped whatever parts hurt (the buoyancy of water is a great gift!) and also avoided the issue of trying to stand up after kayaking. I couldn't begin to right a turtled sailboat or climb back into one during the class, but I started practicing climbing back on the flat paddle boards, a much easier proposition.
I've
had a great summer, with the highlight being the trips to the lake to
paddle whatever craft I chose that day. A couple of weeks ago, I
saw myself in the mirror sans tee-shirt and realized that for the
first time in years, I had arm muscles. Big arm muscles! The first
inklings of jock-ability crept in!
My
paddles got longer, because going to that nearby beach and back wasn't
enough any more. What used to be an hour-long trip now takes me about 35
minutes. One calm day, I even made it across the lake. A week
later, I paddled to the beach and back in 17 knot gusts. Bragging
about that impressed even my highly experienced, energizer-bunny
kayaking friend!
My
confidence in my ability to do things I wouldn't have tried at the
beginning of the summer has increased. I haven't yet climbed back
into the kayak by myself, but I think I could with the help of a paddle
float. Having confidence about a physical skill is such a rush!
Today,
I carried the kayak to the water and realized that it was fairly easy
to do, not a major struggle. I paddled to the beach, and thought I
might take it easy, because my arms felt a little sore. By the time I
was ready to start back, the wind had picked up, and I felt ready to
do my usual longer paddle. I realized I was paddling at a pretty good
clip, and that it had become an aerobic exercise. When I got
back to the put-in, for the first time, I stood up without using the
paddle as a crutch! And although it was hard, I carried the kayak
back to the rack and put it away.
I
had to beg an ice cream from the dockmaster (I didn't have my usual
$1, so I'll pay her later), but boy, oh boy, am I psyched. I think I
might be a little bit of a jock after all. Now all I have to do is
figure out how to keep paddling through the winter!
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