What it means to live an active lifestyle

What it means to live an active lifestyle

If you’ve been around for a while, you might remember a man named Chris Davis, who weighed 696 pounds. Chris was determined to lose weight and transform his health, so he moved to our farm.

I made a deal with him: for every pound Chris lost, I would carry an equivalent weight.

Chris dropped his first 100 pounds…so I carried a 100-pound sandbag.

At some point in everyone’s marriage one of the partners puts their foot down, and this time it was my wife. A 100-pound sandbag was not going to live with us. So we compromised and switched it to a 44-pound kettlebell. I lugged kettlebells everywhere for approximately three years.

Carried one at work, around the house, through airport security, and even to the top of Mount Fuji.

By the end of it all, I went through 59 kettlebells (the airports lost a ton of them). Chris, by the way, went on to lose 260 pounds and become a symbol of extreme dedication to Spartans everywhere.

For me, the kettlebell was a reminder of commitment and allowed me to see that each day is easy once you drop the weight you are carrying.

But there was another incredible benefit that came from those three years. Fitness was all day, every day. Somewhere along the way, we started believing that as long as we squeezed in a 30-minute workout, we could spend the rest of the day sitting—and still call ourselves fit.

That’s a huge problem. Look at how we live today: we sit at desks, in cars, on couches. We scroll endlessly, hunched over screens.

We lounge, slouch, and move only when absolutely necessary.

Then, for that one precious half-hour in the gym, we expect to undo the damage of 23+ hours of stillness. It doesn’t work that way. A life punctuated by occasional, intense bursts of movement is not the same as an active life.

Think about the most resilient, athletic, and capable people throughout history: soldiers, farmers, warriors. They didn’t schedule fitness. They lived it. They didn’t do squats in a gym—they lifted heavy things all day. They didn’t run on a treadmill—they ran for survival, for battle, for the hunt. Every day was leg day. Their fitness was woven into their existence. We’ve forgotten that. So let’s fix it. I challenge you to adapt a 360-degree approach to movement to make movement part of your daily rhythm.

Here are some ideas:

Move Every Hour: Set an alarm. Every 60 minutes, do something. 10 air squats. 10 push-ups. Walk for five minutes.

Make Idle Time Active Time: Waiting for coffee to brew? Squat. Stuck in a long meeting? Engage your core while sitting. Standing in line? Calf raises.

Turn Your Home Into a Mini Training Ground: Keep a kettlebell by the couch and do a few swings during commercial breaks. Or hang a pull-up bar in your doorway—do a rep every time you pass through.

Here’s to the hard way,

Joe

Lashaun Dale, MA, MPH

Experienced Marketing Leader | Content, Creative & Community

3 天前

This is phenomenal! ?I did not know the inspiration behind carrying the kettlebell atound! I’m so inspired. Congratulations to both of you and for educating us all and moving us to take action and take back agency over our health and destiny!!

回复
Chris Morgera

Engineering Manager | Subject Matter Expert, Rigid Thermoformed Packaging Design

1 周

Absolutely! This becomes even more important over 50. Get a stand up desk or even further and add an under desk treadmill. There’s no excuse to just sit all day. If your employer doesn’t want to buy you a stand up desk there are plenty inexpensive models that fit on your existing desk. Instead of buying that $5 coffee every morning make your own for a few weeks to pay for it. How much is your health worth?to you???

回复
Greg Kogut

Spartan Canada Ambassador

1 周

WE ARE WHAT WE REPEATEDLY DO --- ARISTOTLE

回复
Isaiah Rogers

Sales Leader | Experienced Sales Executive | Strategic partnerships | Account Management | Business Development | Revenue Growth | Resilient Mentality

1 周

The same principals you have and how you built this company, I add that to my own life. It's definitely a major priority when working a 9-5 job and take an added effort to stay active. It's not just disclipine, it's a Lifestyle.

回复
Thomas M. Miller, LICSW

I help parents who are losing sleep & worried about their teen’s & young adult’s behaviors go from feeling overwhelmed / stressed to knowing how to change their child’s behaviors & parent in a calm & confident manner.

1 周

Joe De Sena yeah man, I agree it’s not about letting ourselves off after some small tiny amount of exercise it’s about being connected to how our bodies feel and feeling good based on a lifestyle that prioritizes movement.

回复

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Joe De Sena的更多文章

  • 4 tips to doing something hard this week

    4 tips to doing something hard this week

    Think about the hard thing you have to do this week. Maybe it’s getting up early to train, having that uncomfortable…

    14 条评论
  • When You Get Knocked Down…Read This

    When You Get Knocked Down…Read This

    I travel a lot. Different time zones, brutal schedules, back-to-back meetings, and training sessions in between.

    10 条评论
  • Why Pain is Your Greatest Strength – Here’s How

    Why Pain is Your Greatest Strength – Here’s How

    If you aren’t already experiencing it, you will. Pain is coming.

    11 条评论
  • 5 Ways to Embrace Chaos in Your Life

    5 Ways to Embrace Chaos in Your Life

    I just flew in from a hell of a trip around the world. First, 18 meetings in the Middle East, then Hvar, Croatia for…

    8 条评论
  • Winter is Coming: How to Use Cold To Your Advantage

    Winter is Coming: How to Use Cold To Your Advantage

    As the temperatures drop, people start to complain and make excuses for their time spent on the couch and less time…

    2 条评论
  • 5 strategies to turn laziness into passion

    5 strategies to turn laziness into passion

    Laziness. It’s what’s holding us back from greatness.

    7 条评论
  • How Much Couch Time Should You Get?

    How Much Couch Time Should You Get?

    I found myself in the oddest partnership this week—collaborating with Shawn Nelson, the founder of LoveSac. That’s…

    3 条评论
  • What You Can Learn from Olympic Athletes

    What You Can Learn from Olympic Athletes

    Watching these amazing Olympians battle these last few weeks pulls into focus Spartan values like dedication…

    4 条评论
  • Are you resisting the hard way?

    Are you resisting the hard way?

    I recently read this story in the Wall Street Journal, reporting that more students are getting high AP test scores…

    4 条评论
  • Every Successful Person Has This Trait

    Every Successful Person Has This Trait

    For years, I believed there was one clear path to the top. Like many of you, I listened to the books, success gurus…

    12 条评论