Pumping Irony

Craig Cox, EL’s managing editor, chronicles his adventures into the frightening world of middle-age exercise.

Monthly Archives: January 2010

Experience Life Magazine

Get Sweaty, Get Smart







An old colleague
of mine, who I like to call The Captain (our Air Force careers briefly overlapped in 1970), dropped me a note the other day with an interesting
query: Why does he always seem to come up with such great ideas when he’s out
on his bicycle cranking his way up some torturous hill? What’s happening in the
brain during intense exercise that seems to spark, as he put it, “wildly
exciting, clarifying thoughts and ideas”?

 

He did not clarify what these exciting thoughts focused on, but let’s just assume that, The Captain being The Captain, they involved truth, justice and enterprise rather than, well . . . other stuff. This sort of Big
Idea thing never happens to me while exercising; working up a lather on the EDM
or in The Pit just makes me a happy, sweaty guy. Of course, I’m pretty
oblivious to brainstorms these days (the last Big Idea I had was to start my
own newspaper!?!?), so I’m tempted to chalk up The Captain’s personal rush of
creativity to some level of latent brilliance that eludes happy, sweaty,
oblivious guys like me.

 

That may partly
explain this burst of imagination and clarity when he’s in the saddle, but
there are some things going on in the brain when you’re exercising that tend to
boost your ability to think big thoughts. In this 2008 study, researchers
found that regular exercise helps the body produce neural stem cells in the
hippocampus — the brain’s center of memory and learning — through a process
called neurogenesis. A healthy hippocampus means a smarter, more insightful,
creative, sweaty guy pedaling up that god-forsaken hill.

 

And that sense
that he’s experiencing a “rush” of insight is probably triggered by the body
pumping out serotonin, dopamine and other pleasure-enhancing
neurotransmitters that make guys like me feel happy even though we’re making a fool of ourselves in The Pit.

 

So, The Captain
is doing the right thing by climbing on his bicycle regularly and fueling his brain
to think big thoughts. The problem, he explained, is that by the time he’s
parked his bicycle in the garage, changed out of his biking clothes, showered,
and parked his butt in front of his laptop to record his terrific new insights,
they’ve pretty much disappeared. His hippocampus, so lively and receptive on
two wheels, goes all slacker on him. “All those grand schemes somehow disappear
from my to-do list, and I go back to being a 66-year-old man,” he laments. “Maybe
with a slightly stronger heart after an hour in the saddle, but I never quite
follow up on all the brainstorms I have while exercising.”








Maybe his
hippocampus needs more frequent workouts, I’m thinking. Or maybe all that
dopamine he’s generated by the time he’s reached the top of that hill has made
him so euphoric that pretty much any idea seems breathtakingly insightful. Who
knows? I’d suggest that The Captain arm himself with pen and paper next time
he’s saddled up, so he can capture those grand visions in a more timely
fashion, but then I think back to my last major brainstorm and wonder whether his
hippocampus may be doing him a favor.



 


Experience Life Magazine

Easy Does It







My Lovely Wife and I got
married on Facebook this evening. She, sitting comfortably in her favorite
chair across the living room from me in my favorite chair, noticed in a bit of
a panic that she’d not identified her husband on her Facebook page and quickly
remedied the situation with a few keystrokes before giving me that look and
suggesting in her most persuasive voice that I might want to reply to the
request that I confirm our relationship. So now we are coupled in cyberspace.

 

That was easy.

 

I recount this magical
moment not so much because I want you all to be part of our digital nuptials
(our actual wedding almost 29 years ago required only a bit more planning than
this evening’s celebration), but because it synchs so nicely with my current
fitness vibe: Do what seems necessary at the moment.

 

For the past month or so,
I’ve been hitting the gym maybe once a week at the most, neglecting the tennis
court altogether, squeezing in a few pushup-and-planks workouts before work,
and generally opting for a take-care-of-myself approach to living as opposed to
my normal über-disciplined aspirational semi-obsession to fitness. This past
weekend, for instance, I felt a real need to de-stress, so I slept late, read
books and generally practiced eliciting my body’s parasympathetic
response
(AKA breathing) while steering clear of any activity that didn’t
veer toward leisure. It’s a good thing to do once in awhile.

 

I’ve been thinking recently
that I’m harboring more stress in my body than I care to admit to myself — or
anyone else — and that I need to make a conscious effort to unravel those
knots. And, yes, exercise has been shown to be a
great antidote to stress
, but sometimes — when your son takes away the car
for a weekend and that weekend’s temperature barely inches above zero and the
pantry’s well stocked and gosh isn’t it quiet and isn’t the sun shining in on
that chair at just the right angle to attract a purring cat to your lap and,
yes, a cup of tea would be just lovely, thank you — it’s more productive to
just take it easy.

 

This “what, me
worry” attitude has been embraced by one of the nation’s most prominent
doctors, Susan M. Love, whose new book, Live a Little! Breaking the Rules Won’t
Break Your Health
, celebrates a more laissez faire approach to fitness.
In this interview in Tara Parker-Pope’s (is she married on Facebook?) New York Times health
blog
, Love explains that we’re a lot healthier than we tend to think we are
and that we ought to just chill a little on the whole weight-loss,
carbo-loading, six-pack-abs-and-buns-of-steel thing.

 

“Everything is a
U-shaped curve,” Love tells Parker-Pope. “There may be times in your
life when you’ve gotten too much of this or too little of that, but being in
the middle is better, and most of us are probably there already.”

 

I’m good with that. But I’m
still going to play tennis tomorrow night — just because it’s fun. And
tomorrow morning I’ll bundle up and walk that 2.5 miles to work — just because
it’s, well, not fun, but eventually
pleasant. And maybe Wednesday night I’ll go and sit for an hour or so at the
zendo — just for the chance to breathe and unravel and see what happens. Ice
skating on Saturday? Perhaps.

 

But Sunday I’ll be drinking
beer (not too much) and watching football — because that’s fun too. That is,
if my new wife will let me.