Shows like Glee convey the
impression that music nerds and jocks don't have a lot in common.
Despite what Sue Sylvester thinks, music and fitness are actually not
dissimilar pursuits. If you enjoy one but don't believe you could do
well at the other, consider these things that working out and practicing
an instrument have in common.
Both can be painful in the short term, but they pay off in the long term.
At a certain point, it becomes
clear to both musicians and athletes that there are no shortcuts. You
just have to do the work, day after day, inching towards your goal, and
that's it. [.....]
Read the full article on the Classical MPR website.
Sunday, November 10, 2013
Friday, November 8, 2013
A Guide to Fitness Volunteering
(Note: A slightly different version of this post appears in the November 2013 issue of Stride magazine.)
What do you give back to your
community—money, goods, professional services? These are worthy gifts, but
there is something else most of us can give: our physical resources, our bodily
strength and vitality. In some respects, this is the easiest way to give of
yourself. It can be simply showing up at someone’s home, picking up a shovel,
and throwing snow into piles. It can be walking around with a dog. It can be
rock wall climbing with a child in a Big Brothers Big Sisters program.Like monetary charity and general volunteerism, though, volunteering with your body—let’s call it fitness volunteering—often benefits from careful planning. Sometimes urgent need arises without warning, but be smart about fitness volunteering when you can. The limits of your physical energy and strength are even easier to appreciate viscerally than the limits of your bank account or the hours in a day.
There are all-purpose charity evaluators out there, like charitynavigator.org, but to my knowledge there is no fitness-focused equivalent, no guide to help you decide if a certain organization or cause is an appropriate recipient of your physical resources. So I have developed a brief questionnaire to help you fitness volunteer more thoughtfully.
Fitness Volunteering Questionnaire
1.
Is the
organization actually a nonprofit? One of my online searches for volunteer
opportunities led me to a Fargo-based retirement community seeking “exercise
buddy” volunteers. It turned out that the organization is a corporation, not a
nonprofit. You may decide an opportunity like this is still worthwhile, but determining
an organization’s 501(c) (3) status will help
you make a more informed decision.
2.
Is there a chance to be hardcore? Whether
you even care about this question depends on what you want to get out of
fitness volunteering. Stocking food bank shelves is a noble activity, and might
in some cases provide a real workout, but there are many types of fitness
volunteering that could launch you out of your physical comfort zones. Digging
ditches for water conservation projects, for example, could be your chance to
be a real badass.
3.
Is the
timing flexible? Again, this question relates to your priorities. If work
needs to be done within a certain time window, it may not align with when you
are in top physical form. In that case, you might not be the best candidate for
a particular volunteer job—though you’ll still be the best candidate if you are
the only candidate. On the other hand, it might be just the challenge you need
to exercise when you’re feeling fatigued rather than fresh.
Organization Spotlight (Fargo-Moorhead)
This list of organizations where
you can fitness volunteer is a starting point.
I limited it to the Fargo-Moorhead area, where I live. If nothing here captures your interest, think of what types of exercise you’re
good at (or would like to get better at) and do some research on how you could combine
them with volunteering.
1. Humane Society Fargo Moorhead – The Humane
Society’s volunteering FAQ states, “In extreme conditions, volunteers can pet
the dog inside” instead of walking it. Hmm, sounds to me like a challenge to be
hardcore (as long as the animal is up for it).
2. YWCA Cass Clay –
Volunteer opportunities include child care (which my experience as a preschool
teacher taught me can be quite physically demanding if you play certain games
with the kids), yard work at the emergency shelter, moving furniture for women
transitioning from the shelter to their own homes, and leading fitness classes.
3. Watch the Wild
– This program run by the national nonprofit Nature Abounds needs more
volunteers in the Fargo area. Record the observations you make on nature hikes for
the Nature Abounds database.
4. River Keepers
– According to project coordinator Christine Laney, River Keepers organizes
canoe trips for on-the-water clean-up of the Red River “anytime river levels
allow, preferably for a couple of hours.”
5. Your neighbors
or any nonprofit in the winter – My parents still do all
their snow removal the old-fashioned way, which I really admire. Occasionally
I’m visiting them when it snows, so I know how tough a cardio and back workout
shoveling can be. If none of your neighbors need help with snow removal,
contact local nonprofits to see if they could use a hand.
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