The Guardian (USA)

So, women aren’t doing enough ‘vigorous’ exercise? One more telling-off we can do without

- Alex Clark

In the latest round of scolding women and pretending it’s for their own good comes the news that we’re not doing enough exercise – at least of the “vigorous” sort. According to Nuffield Health, 47% of women they surveyed hadn’t engaged in activities such as running, swimming or a class at the gym that would help them to keep fit and healthy in mind and body; markedly more than men, of whom only just over a third responded similarly. Two-thirds of the women, and half of the men, cited a lack of motivation; other reasons included not knowing where to start, and simply not having enough time.

To be clear, it’s not Nuffield doing the telling-off – more what we might call the discourse that greeted their findings, which immediatel­y started to discuss issues of childcare deficits and the heavier burden of unpaid labour that continues to fall on women and prevent them from getting to Zumba. But although these barriers to exercise are demonstrab­ly valid, they also reinforce the idea that we are failing to do something we ought.

Despite an early and traumatic encounter with a school vaulting horse, I come to praise crunches, not to bury them. Looking after your physical self is clearly worthwhile, especially when the march of time threatens creaking joints and energy dips; and we all feel better after a bracing walk (it is widely reported).

It is perhaps the notion of vigorousne­ss that prompts my caution, not least because it is surely subjective and doesn’t take into account an individual’s starting point. For those who are unfit, or with mobility and other health issues, one person’s cool-down might represent an unattainab­le goal (apparent or actual). Nuffield does recommend an incrementa­l approach – work up to your daily 10,000 steps by starting with 2,000, for example – but even that rough mile will be daunting to many.

Others have a more Bartleby-like response to exercise: they would simply prefer not to, perhaps out of a visceral dislike, or they find it boring, or because their time is filled with things they regard as more important. Perhaps, indeed, those things are more important: they involve caring for others, or volunteeri­ng to help those outside one’s own circle, or even getting to grips with larger personal problems than slack muscle tone. I phrase it like that – rather than maintainin­g cardiovasc­ular health or building core strength – because the dividing lines are still blurry between physical fitness and the presentati­on of one’s outer body to others, no matter how many recipes for chia seed smoothies the wellness industry pumps out.

It is hard, of course, to imagine a modern-day equivalent of the American fitness instructor Debbie Drake, who in 1960 became the first woman to present a daily fitness TV show and who released an album entitled Howto Keep Your Husband Happy. (If you are in need of a fillip between squats, do glance at her appearance on the Johnny Carson show, in which she, in frilled yellow leotard and sheer black tights, inducted the talkshow host, who had least removed his suit jacket but not his tie, into the magic of hip undulation­s.) But the message that, nowadays, keeping fit is primarily a duty of care to oneself, is so often betrayed all around us, sometimes subtly and sometimes egregiousl­y.

Thus it is, for instance, that the body positivity movement has to contend with the outpouring of concern over the health of larger women, when the merest excavation reveals that concern to be disgust and repulsion.

Rather than despairing at our own failure to measure up, redefining success might help. On a podcast about books that I present, my co-host and I regularly begin with a two-minute chitchat about gardening, and the horticultu­ral element of our postbag greatly outweighs the literary. While deadheadin­g might not be vigorous, digging over a veg patch certainly is, and so is mowing, and large-scale pruning and humping about sacks of well-rotted manure. Why should that not count as my exercise, and elevate me out of the benighted 47%? Ditto kitchen disco, pet-wrangling, the countless trips up and down the supermarke­t middle aisle and wrestling a super-kingsize duvet into its cover?

Meanwhile, the world outside our bodies needs our attention: as almost everyone has noticed, we’re not doing so well. A healthy body and mind might indeed help us to navigate the challenges to come, but self-flagellati­on surely won’t.

Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a letter of up to 250 words to be considered for publicatio­n, email it to us at observer.letters@observer.co.uk

The message that keeping fit is a duty of care is often betrayed around us, sometimes subtly and sometimes egregiousl­y.

 ?? Memedovski/Getty Images ?? An emphasis on certain kinds of exercise – swimming, gym classes – ignores the other activities that make up our day Photograph: Emir
Memedovski/Getty Images An emphasis on certain kinds of exercise – swimming, gym classes – ignores the other activities that make up our day Photograph: Emir

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