The Truth About Gyms, Unmasked - The Santa Barbara Independent

2022-07-23 02:32:09 By : Mr. Leo Lou

Our New Cardio Confidential Columnist Explores Santa Barbara’s Fitness Scene

Here’s an embarrassing confession: I suffer from a bad case of quarantine competitiveness.

When acquaintances announced they’d written books during lockdown, I felt inadequate — I could barely keep up with my day job, let alone take up a side project. I also found myself mystified — and frankly a bit ticked off — by people who had time during quarantine to bake bread, master a musical instrument, and allegedly stream all of Netflix.

On the other hand, I am proud to say that I have not spent the past two years in sweatpants, and I managed to avoid putting on “the COVID 15” by ordering takeout sparingly and continuing to exercise. The latter was a challenge, since I was in the gym five days a week before the pandemic, for group fitness offerings from weight training to hip-hop dance to yoga. My home office, which doubled as my work-from-home office, also became my workout studio — complete with weights, foam roller, and even a portable ballet barre — where I streamed both live online classes and on-demand workouts.

But when you’ve been a gym rat for as long as I have, there’s only so much time you can spend exercising in a 10′-by-10′ bedroom, no matter how thoroughly equipped it is. With the Omicron surge receding, the mask mandate lifted, and my frozen gym membership defrosted in February’s heat wave, the Independent’s call for a workout writer beckoned me back to the gym.

Sign up for Indy Today to receive fresh news from Independent.com, in your inbox, every morning.

I know there’s a school of thought that gym membership is superfluous in a place like Santa Barbara, with its mild weather and outdoor activities available from ocean waves to mountain peaks. And I have to admit, bench presses and treadmills hold little appeal for me. But I gravitate toward the structure of instructor-led classes, and I enjoy the social aspect of working out with others. Air conditioning is nice too.

Pandemic life showed me how helpful it could be to maintain certain routines, such as cooking dinner with my husband every night, and also how much I longed to try new things.

In this column, I’ll share what it feels like to return to my own longtime gym, and I’ll also report on my experience with other players on the Santa Barbara fitness scene.

Whether you’ve never belonged to a gym or just took a break during COVID, I hope you’ll get inspired to try a new workout or recommit to your exercise routine. For this endeavor, I’ve checked my competitiveness at the door — let’s get fit together.

Support the Santa Barbara Independent through a long-term or a single contribution.

Sheriff’s Detectives Identify Elderly Homicide Victim in Montecito

Santa Barbara’s Dos Pueblos Ranch Hosts ‘Love Island’

MTD Announces Additional Routes Beginning August 15

Prosecution Rests Its Case: Recap of Santa Barbara Triple-Murder Trial So Far

Wind Power Added to Santa Barbara Grid

Yang Refuses to Cooperate with Hit-and-Run Investigation

Santa Barbara County Hits COVID Code Red as Public Health Director Van Do-Reynoso Departs

Golfers Go Head-to-Head in Multimillion-Dollar Lawsuit

Santa Barbara’s St. Bibiana Is the New (Cindy) Black 

Santa Barbara County’s Leading Causes of Death Revealed in New Report

Hot Fun in the Summertime: Thelma & Louise

Dem Women Social Lab: The Unraveling of Roe

28th Annual Sadako Peace Day

The Mary Jane McCord Planned Parenthood Book Sale

Please note this login is to submit events or press releases. Use this page here to login for your Independent subscription

Not a member? Sign up here.

Copyright ©2022 Santa Barbara Independent, Inc. Reproduction of material from any Independent.com pages without written permission is strictly prohibited. If you believe an Independent.com user or any material appearing on Independent.com is copyrighted material used without proper permission, please click here. Site by Trew Knowledge. Powered by WordPress VIP.