I recently posted on my personal Facebook page about the Pokemon freakishness currently underway in so many countries, mine included. It’s not even available officially in Canada yet, but apparently there are ways around that. Lovely.
I wrote about an incident that happened to me on Friday July 15th. I wrote it mainly as a rebuttal to all the defensive posts written about Pokemon from grown ass adults giving the reason that they were “poking” was because it was exercise! I also wrote it because I was in Angry Running Gail (ARG) mode. Probably more of the latter than the former. Here’s how that went down, word by precise word on my page:
I want to put paid to the theory that this Pokemon Go is great because it gets you and your kids outdoors; walking, and exercising. I call bullcrap. And by the way, if you’re an adult doing this, you need to reconsider how you adult.
I like to run in the heat. It toughens me up. Once again, I ran today and bumped into people doing this Pokemon escape from reality shit. I can assure everyone reading that no exercise is taking place, unless you count walking slowly with your head down, oblivious to your surroundings so you can muck up someone’s run, exercise. If so, SCORE!!
This afternoon I had planned a 5km all out push of a run, followed by one kilometre of body weight exercise on park benches, as in run to each bench and perform different body weight exercises. In Bronte we are lucky enough to have a one kilometre stretch of park benches that suits my workout strategy perfectly.
During my all out, push it to the max 5km run, I ran into a gaggle of Pokemon people. I was running towards them. They were coming towards me, in a large swath. Not one of those idjits looked up to ensure their surroundings were safe.
Fantastically accurate, except the flamingos have much better posture….
So…..for shits and giggles, you pick the action I took upon encountering these oblivious cretins.
1. I completely bypassed them by giving them a wide berth, but at the same time putting myself in danger of oncoming traffic. I’m a giver, though.
2. I stopped to talk to them to try and reason with them that what they were doing was very dangerous and, quite frankly, rude to the people they share the planet, and the sidewalks, with. I mean, they were adults. Why on earth should I assume they have manners and self awareness? They need to be coddled and hugged. I’m such a mediator, though.
3. I shouted really loudly, with possibly a strident tone to my voice, and told them to take their heads out of their asses and to pay attention to the world around them because I was coming through!!
You choose.
By the way, my time for my 5km was 24:45. My pace obviously slowed once I got to my intervals. No Pokemon fool was going to come between me and my training.
Well, that was fun and cathartic for me to write, but it stirred up some minor controversy on my page about what exercise is. The back and forth was, for the most part, very low key and respectful but it did not change my mind as to the fact that this Pokemon Go is not an athletic endeavor. It is not exercise. It is not mindful. It is not athletic based. It is not a cardiovascular endurance event. It does not fall under muscle conditioning. Noperdoodles. To say that Pokemon Go is exercise is like saying the Islamic Terror Attack in Nice was caused by a truck. Technically you might be walking around but you are not stressing your heart. Technically the truck killed people, but it wasn’t a Michael Bay imagined evil transformer. Mind you, if you look to The New York Times as your news touchstone, you could not be blamed for thinking that it was Truck Terrorism, but I digress….
I know this is going to cause some readers to have an overwhelming need to let me know that they think I am utterly and magnificently wrong in my conclusions about Pokemon Go, but I am letting you know right now, that I will not be swayed by your arguments if they are based on emotion and not facts. Otherwise, I am always glad to hear opposing or differing points of view.
Listen, if you are someone who is passionate about your Pokemon Go, good for you. Just don’t call it your workout, because you would be delusional. If, as an adult, that is what you are giving as your reason for walking around like a cast member from The Walking Dead, then you just need to stop. Please. Stop.
Just own it, please. Don’t be like the cliched pushing forty year old man that wants to shove aside his wife and two children for a younger vagina, and then fabricates a story about being victimized in a loveless marriage because he thinks that people will more easily swallow his behavior. Don’t weave a web of lies. Just own up to the fact that you like the game and you play it because you want to. Not for the cardiovascular benefits of which there are next to none. It’s OKAY!! While most of us think of Pokemon Go as a game that children might find fun, if it is something that you want to do, just do it. Don’t justify it as a way to train for that marathon though.
Listen, if I had to parse it down, I’d have to admit that getting outside and playing Pokemon Go is better at promoting health and wellness than sitting on a couch playing Warcraft. It’s pretty much on the same level as saying that two bowls of chocolate chip ice cream is better at keeping you fit and trim than four bowls. It’s not the best solution, but it could work. Not for me, but maybe for you.
It’s also a fantastic option for those people that have a chronic illness that prevents them from participating in proper exercise. I would totally support someone getting out to play this game if it is an intrinsic motivator for them. Honestly, if the thought of a walk for the sake of a walk does not motivate you and Pokemon Go does, then I’m OK with that, except for this one teeny tiny thing that niggles at me because I am an annoying fitness person……..POOR FORM!
Unfortunately for Pokemon Go users, there is not a exercise in the world that involves poor posture, a downwards head tilt, inattentiveness and a complete focus on a bloody phone. You certainly cannot call Pokemon Go cardiovascular in nature, and if you argue it is because you are using roller blades (hello? The nineties are calling and want their skates back) or a bike, then I’d call you irresponsible for careening towards someone with your eyes glued to a screen! You also cannot call it muscular conditioning because even though that iPhone keeps getting larger, it’s not as heavy as that brick that might fall on you as you wander through a construction zone.
Yes, I know it seems like I am disparaging the game, but that’s because I am and that’s why it’s coming across that way. I just cannot get excited for a game that has sent participants falling off cliffs and made them victims of crime. Police forces have even issued warnings about possible dangerous situations that people should not even have to be warned about because they should have the common sense that the good Lord gave them! Your mileage may vary on this, though, and again, that’s okie dokie pokie with me. (See what I did there?) Perhaps you are a parent that actually likes to spend time with their child and this turns out to be a good way to connect. Yay!!! Just don’t call it exercise. Call it what it is…spending time with your kid while hunched over.
Let’s say that none of my arguments that Pokemon Go is NOT exercise still fall flat with you because, you reason, you are walking. You almost had me there. Walking is actually the type of exercise I prescribe the most. Not just for the actual mobility benefits, but for the perks of being outside, breathing in fresh air, getting vitamin D and the psychological benefits of being out and about. Pokemon Go does not quite fall into that slot for me because the pace is too slow, the body alignment is terrible with the scrunching over of shoulders and the neck placement. As well, for me, when I prescribe exercise, I want the person to be completely aware of not just their surroundings, but of getting their heart rate up, even a little. You can do this when you walk. You’re not doing that with Pokemon Go.
The herd of people I ran into on July 15th were not paying attention one little bit to the world around them. Is every player that way? Probably not, BUT the game is super immersive, so I have got to believe that a vast majority are behaving in this manner. I will, as a fitness professional, argue to the end that this is NOT exercise for the average person. It simply isn’t. Is it better than staying inside? Yep, but to qualify as exercise, in my book, it has to be mindful. Every person I have observed playing this game is walking, but they are walking slowly, with terrible posture and form. When I run, I run with awareness. I am looking around, listening and am prepared for pretty much anything. I did not see that on July 15th, and that was what my rant was about.
As my cousin in Australia wrote so eloquently on my FB page: But what I don’t get (and granted I am not a member of the Pokemon generation) is why you NEED this to get out and about? Why can’t the motivation for a walk come from desire for fresh air, nature and general well being, and why can’t it be done without a device? I’ve been running recently even Garmin-free and iPod free, just for the love of being outside and breathing and living. We are so dependent on gadgets and devices these days (and I am a total technophile so I get it) and now we even need our phones to get us out of the house?? People are going to be so divided on this, and true, I haven’t tried it so maybe shouldn’t knock it, and my hope is that once the craze dies down (which it will, let’s face it – it’s a fad) people will STILL want to get out and about. I just find it sad that at Circular Quay, where you can enjoy Sydney’s most iconic views, people are missing this to enter the land of the imaginary. We look down enough as it is. Let’s get out, look up, look around, enjoy what’s real and what’s there for the taking because we are so lucky to have a reality that is safe and free. I’ll leave it there.
Yes, let’s just leave it there…..

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LOL! YEP!
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I thought you might like this post………..
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You thought right!
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Well, done. I just followed your Facebook page. I always enjoy your posts because they give me something to chew on and are just so spot-on and frank. I find this whole Pokemon GO thing sort of silly. It’s so obviously just a summer fad that will be pretty much gone and forgotten by the middle of September. And maybe even sooner than that. Typically, the speed at which something gains popularity is similar to the speed at which it loses popularity, so this thing is already approaching its sell-by date. And all the commentary over how great it is that this is actually drawing people outside… well… that says a lot more about what we’ve become as a culture than anything about the game itself. It reminds me a little of when Nintendo released the Wii a decade ago. Remember all the stories about how great it was that people were ACTUALLY getting off the couch and swinging their arm forward to virtually “bowl?” Sure, it was fun and perhaps a marginal improvement over sitting on the couch all day, but that’s sort of like saying you just had a healthy cheeseburger because you had it without bacon. It’s still a cheeseburger, you’re not eating it for the health benefits. It’s still a video game, you’re not playing it to get in shape. Or you shouldn’t be.
For an even more tongue-in-cheek take on the melding of Pokemon and exercise, you might enjoy the post I wrote a few days ago…. https://statomattic.wordpress.com/2016/07/12/announcing-the-pokemon-go-5k/
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Thank you for your comments!! Your post is hilarious, yet spot on!!
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As well, thank you for liking my capable fitness with Gail page. 😊😊
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People playing Pokemon Go almost ran into me yesterday while I was walking from the beach with a nine foot surfboard…. Sigh
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I’m eye rolling with you!!!
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Why isn’t there an emoji for ‘could not agree with you more’?! Two lads in my running club tried to set up a Pokemon finding run. They got precisely no response, thank goodness! Someone’s gonna get hit by a bus.
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Sadly, I agree….
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Fantastic post, you took the words out of my mouth. Cheers 🙂 xx haha
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Thank you for your comment and for reading my post!!
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Oh man. Thank you SO MUCH for having the ability to say everything I also feel about this Poke-craziness. It irks me so much about people saying this is exercise. And I agree with your cousin in Australia! Oy. I do suppose there are worse things to worry about in the world right now, but very awesome post! 🙂
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I have been overwhelmed with the positive comments that I have received over this post, both here and privately through email. I expected some pushback on the exercise position I took, but instead I’ve been told I wrote what other people think but are too afraid to voice!! Yikes! I can’t imagine being afraid to voice an opinion. It is just an opinion after all. I have a friend that lives in Michigan comment to me today that she went out on Sunday with a friend and her autistic son to play Pokemon Go. While she thought it was a perfect way to engage the boy, she agreed that in no way could you consider it exercise. So, while the game itself may have merits, getting your heart rate up is not one of them!! Thank you so much for commenting and reading my blog post!!
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Well, it is absolutely true. It’s most likely intended to cheat people like most of the other technically enhanced entertainments do, I mean, it makes insane profits to the Pokemon creators, and I just don’t get this type of fun.
Due to my injuries, I hardly can walk, however, I am simply enjoying every day when I can walk some even small distance. After surgery I had to try hard doing two steps and just simply standing and I will be so happy when I can simply walk again.
This Pokemon thing is getting people believe they are doing something great and, oh, yes, not wasting their time uselessly, not becoming ignorant walking attachments to their phones, but exercising and finding new places. I can still understand some kid gets totally excited about this, but normal adult…? We’ve seen all these obsessions come and go, and everybody must be participating because otherwise they think they’re missing out on the best excitement ever. That is a good tool for people who have no imagination, no real values and no interests in things that matter. Just give them the phone and Pokemon like this time, and they won’t care about anything. I wouldn’t call that intelligent. I would call that quite dumb. I’m sorry if somebody feels like this is their best time ever catching … what? Virtual illusion? Plain and simple: new tool to manipulate very average people.
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Virtual illusion. I love that. I’m glad you are in the moment and enjoying every day. I’ll bet you soak up your surroundings and appreciate what is in front of you, not what is imaginary. Cheers to you!
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Hi Gail, despite all the positive feedback that you have gotten about your post here comes mine; which I don’t consider negative just seeing it from a different perspective. I have typically agreed with some of things you have posted and in part some of it I agree with particularly this whole Pokemon thing. I just don’t get it and have no interest in at all; heck I’m not even on FB because I didn’t like all the negativity that was on it; its been 8 years now and I haven’t looked back.
But back to your post like a lot of people I’ve seen many walking around doing whatever it is they are doing with this crazy game I have no idea I find it silly but it’s just not my thing, others just like it I guess good for them. But here’s my point, movement is movement. At least they are up and moving and not sitting around as they may have been had it not been for this little game. Some may eventually take up walking or even running we don’t know. While many once the fad wears off will return to the couches, TV’s, and game systems. My point is we don’t know what the trigger point is for someone to get up and get started on the path to a regular exercise path or healthier lifestyle it is different for everyone. For many playing this game they may not have walked as much as they have with this game in who knows how long. This is a good thing, they are moving.
One of my biggest pet peeves in life is people whether it be in fitness, going to church, or in sobriety/recovery or some other life changing event, is forgetting from whence they came. Forgetting they didn’t pop out of box in the place they are now, the ups and downs, or the challenge or crisis that got you started on the path in the first place. And everyone starts with day one; and trust if we think back it was not easy. I remember my first run..the longest 60 seconds ever! I was encouraging a woman yesterday who was exactly where I was a year ago that she could do it and take at a pace she could hold.
So what if they have poor form if and when someone decides to really get into fitness that will come. That fact is they are moving. Again don’t forget we all had our first day. It’s like those who belittle people who start going to the gym on Jan 1st. Well I wonder how my lives have been changed because that was their start date so what it was Jan 1st the point is they started. Just like all of us. I know you said there was no changing your stance on this which is just fine, I’m just saying things aren’t always so concrete or black and white if we really look at them. Just like we don’t go straight from day to night we have dawn and dusk, there are shads of gray.
I’m just as straight with the people that I work with as anyone but people can’t do what they don’t know, but the fact these folks are moving vs sitting is a good start even it is through some silly little game.
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First of all, let me say that I welcome your thoughts and your opinion. As I said in my blog post, I am always happy to hear opposing or differing points of view. Life can be boring otherwise, non? I also agree with you that your feedback is really not negative. You just wanted to point something out to me, which I am completely open to. At least we are on the same page when it comes to the actual game of Pokemon. We both don’t get it, both have no interest, we both find it silly, and we both have decided it is just not our thing. See? We’re already practically best friends and having a glass of wine together!!!
You’re absolutely right. Movement IS movement. These players are at least up and moving and not sitting around. Maybe this game will be a gateway activity that leads them to lead a more active life that does not involve virtual reality. Probably not, though, if all the studies on the Wii are to be believed. You’d probably find this article, with appropriate studies noted, interesting. http://www.nytimes.com/2012/06/24/business/active-video-games-dont-make-youths-more-active.html?_r=0
Here are a couple of excerpts from it: “When you prescribe increased physical activity, overall activity remains the same because the subjects compensate by reducing other physical activities during the day,” he says. Changing sedentary behavior is extremely difficult, says Dr. Charles T. Cappetta, an executive committee member of the American Academy of Pediatrics’ Council on Sports Medicine and Fitness. “It may seem that active video games are an easy solution to getting kids off the couch,” he says. “But as this study and others show, they do no such thing.” “For physical activity that brings measurable health benefits, kids need things like real balls, real rackets and real courts”.
You are right, though, when you say they are moving. However, my post was not called Movement: I don’t think that word means what you think it means. It was titled: Exercise, I do not think that word means what you think it means. Movement, as defined by Mirriam Webster Dictionary is this: the act or process of moving; especially : change of place or position or posture (2) : a particular instance or manner of moving. The definition of exercise, as defined by Mirriam Webster Dictionary is this: activity requiring physical effort, carried out especially to sustain or improve health and fitness.
I still maintain my position on this Pokemon craze being called exercise. It is not. It absolutely is movement, though, and I would not disagree with you on that. I’m so sorry that you think I am one of those people who forget where I have come from. If you are a regular reader, you would know this is not true. What I am, however, is a no nonsense trainer that says what she means and means what she says. I have found that after 24 years as a fitness professional, coddling people or telling them that , yes, some walking will get you into fantastic shape, just does not work, because it is not true. I approach exercise as NOT just the physical. It is mind, body and spirit. If you don’t have all three, you will fail.
Do I start unfit people out by walking? You bet! However, I would never allow them to have a phone in front of them to catch Pokemon. It would take away from the task at hand, that is, to really think about their bodies, to feel what it is like to push themselves to walk faster, to be mindful of their surroundings and to also ENJOY their surroundings. I don’t want them just to move…I want them to exercise. Therein lies the difference. Again, I want to be clear. I’m not saying movement has no merit. It’s just not exercise. That was the point of my post, and I’m sorry if that was not clear.
You ask, so what if they have poor form? It really does bother me, but only because I have seen injury after injury because of poor form. Injuries that have stopped someone from exercising just as they were starting out. As you probably realize, fitness is not just about the physical. It is about the emotional and mental as well. I have seen many people (not my clients because I ALWAYS insist on good to excellent form) stop exercising because of an injury and it mentally did them in. They just gave up.
If I ever heard someone belittling another person because they were starting their fitness journey on January 1st, I would intervene immediately. Not many people would, though, as I have found that most people don’t like to get involved when they see someone being bullied or belittled. Because of my background, I don’t stand for it.
Yes, I did write that there was no changing my stance on the exercise aspect of Pokemon Go. I truly believe that once we have studies on this (probably in about sixteen months) it will show that no appreciable benefits were found for the criteria on exercise. Movement criteria? I’m sure that many more people will be moving because of it. It just won’t be meaningful from a health standpoint. I loved what my cousin from Australia wrote about appreciating the real world around us and I wish people would decide to move because of that. Alas, I fear that this is not to be. As well, I am definitely a black and white person. Actually, I have yet to encounter a scenario where a black or white stance was not perfect. Grey is for fence sitters, and I am not a fence sitter. That’s not to say that I HATE fence sitters. Nowadays when you take a stance against something, you’re automatically portrayed as a hater. I refuse that moniker.
One final thought. I have a friend that lives in Michigan who, last Sunday, decided to join a close friend of hers AND her autistic son, on a Pokemon hunt. She had already read my blog post. She contacted me via facebook to say that she completely concurred with me. While it was a great outing with her friend and son…and she could completely see how this was a fantastic outing for the autistic boy, it was in no way, shape or form EXERCISE. It was movement, it was enjoyable, it was a tool to get her friend’s son to communicate…but it was not EXERCISE.
Having written all that, I am so glad you felt comfortable enough to share YOUR thoughts and YOUR opinion. I liked being able to read it and clarify my position.
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I think we are basically saying the same thing. If I was to sum up what I said it would be meet people where they are. I tend to be the same way when I’m working with my clients. The fact that they came into my office does not mean they are ready to do the work. (movement is movement) But when they are ready to do the work then we are in full force. BTW I never bought into the who Wii thing as “true” exercise but for my grandmother who couldn’t get out, it helped her a great deal. Again, met people where they are and let them use what they have available to them. Any movement can lead to better exercise hopefully; however, I can look at from my therapeutic point of view as well, and say the same thing, and people get just as stuck and don’t move any further in the movement. So I do see what you are saying…I’m by no means a pollyanna. For instance I did my long run last Saturday and had one damn hot crazy run (short) yesterday. Well, I told a friend of mine about it; and this friend keeps saying she is going to run with me and even do the running program I did but the minute she told me was I knew she wasn’t . Every excuse in the book. This time she said it was because of the heat and she didn’t want to start something she didn’t think she could finish. The fact is she had no intention of doing it the heat was just an excuse. So Gail, in essence we agree I think we just have different approaches of getting to the same place. I was reading an article that I was going to use for group it was about the 3 Games People Play to Avoid taking Responsibility. It was based on the book Games People Play: The Handbook of Transactional Analysis. I think you may like it. Peace.
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We do agree!! I have learned there can be many roads to a destination. We just pick the ones that work for us. Peace to you as well. My next blog post is going to be about excuses!! My working title is: Fat can be fixed, the excuses are much more complicated. I’ll look forward to having you read it and give me valuable feedback!
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This is one of those posts that will either resonate like hell with someone, or might piss someone off. Those are the best ones.
As far as the info, couldn’t agree more. The way people [not just kids] are being manipulated by this game would be laughable if it weren’t so sad. And, regarding exercise, well, if walking were an exercise, everyone would be fit.
Anyhow, it was refreshing hearing the bluntness of the matter. Oh, and what you say about emotion is true, more so than most know. When people are emotional they usually can’t think logically. In any case, could say a lot more especially regarding the Pokeman Go matter, but am gonna cut it short due to it being late. Thanks for the sharing. Was surely interesting and incisive.
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Thank you so much for reading and for commenting. I hope that it doesn’t piss anyone off too much. That was not my intention…..allegedly. 😉 I’m glad you appreciate my bluntness. Cheers!
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Forgetting that game for a moment there is another issue here: what do people count as exercise?
For me walking to the railway station, gardening, having a stroll in the evening and so on isn’t what I would call exercise, that’s just life, but many of my colleagues would count that as exercise. If someone is so sedentary that wandering around staring at a phone is counted as exercise they may want to re adjust their understanding of reality.
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Your point is a good one. I would maintain that walking to the railway station or a STROLL in the evening is simply movement. It’s still a good thing, but hardly exercise as defined by dictionaries, and by me. Gardening could be counted as exercise if there was a lot of activity involving planting, weeding and using gardening tools. It all depends on the work involved and whether you got your heart rate up significantly.
Your point is correct. There are many, many people who would consider just a stroll exercise and it very well might be if they are so de-conditioned that a slow stroll gets their heart rate up, they sweat and are gasping for breath.
Your last sentence is perfection, at least for me. I’d much rather have a out of shape person who was coming to me for fitness advice, do a stroll, looking around and enjoying all that nature has to offer, than walk around staring at their phone deep into a virtual world.
Of course that it just our opinion. Other people’s mileage may vary on that. Thank you for you comment and for reading my blog post!
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Awesome!
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Well, thank you!
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I am 100% with you here. I have had the same dispute with my wife and daughter. We are all runners by the way but they tend to fall into the , pokemon hunters are at least out and about argument and it’s better than nothing. I just don’t get it and will be pleased when the fad has faded. But then I’m an old dinasour.
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Well, I’d agree with your wife and daughter inasmuch as they ARE out and about instead of holed up in their basements playing dungeons and dragons. However, and you completely got my point, they are NOT exercising. Filling up on ones daily dose of Vitamin D and shuffling around like Zombies from the Walking Dead, is not exercise. Looks like you and I are BOTH old dinosaurs! Cheers and thank you for reading my blog post!
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Beautiful, gorgeous, hard-bodied Gail! Thanks so much for the likes! You are awesomeness personified! By the way, the street we ran up is called Canton Avenue. it’s actually a 37 degree grade, the highest grade dedicated street in the US! They filmed an Audi commercial there.
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I’m at work and laughed pretty loud at my desk. So good, thanks!
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You’re welcome!!
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HAHAHA! Awesome post. Chuckled all the way through. Consider this, my daughter, half-marathon runner with a heartrate around 45, loves Pokemon Go with friends. They stroll around after work, take in the sites, generally find obscure outdoor artistic endeavors that are highlighted in this silly game,
THEN they go train. 😉
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Exactly my point!! I love that your daughter gets this!! By the way, I loved everything about your Evergreen Senior High post. Curriculum is a huge problem here in Canada as well. I’m glad I don’t have any children currently enrolled, but of course I still suffer because of the way the students minds are warped and turned.
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I’m a little late weighing in here, but the same obsession and issues with the game occurred here. I was clueless WTF it was until a particular week on my favorite, local bike / walk / run path. I was out on my daily constitutional and noticed every-other person coming my way had their faces planted into their gadget screens, wandering, and weaving aimlessly like a drunk driver.
Sad enough that folks were walking and pokemonning, but next came scores of cyclists holding a dumb phone in one hand, and blindly steering with the other. Weaving back and forth with a selfish, blatant disregard for all others along the way. After several near-crashes with pokemonning bikers, I got pissed off and started yelling at them to watch where they were going and adopt a little consideration and courtesy for others!
Later that same week, I saw the news about the recent obsession, and realized what I’d encountered was yet another consumer obsession with virtual living.
The trend extended to the local nature preserve trails, too. Folks walking along a splendid, quiet, wooded path, blind to their surroundings of forest, birds, and other wonders of nature. Instead, the “virtual” experience transmitted from some screen was a substitute for the tangible, real experience of being outdoors.
I did give it the small benefit of the doubt that if it served as some motivation to get one off their asses and move, then it might have a measure of plus. But by virtue of how it works, it promotes that selfish, inconsiderate disregard for anyone but the user.
The fad phase has cooled, some, but I still see folks running, walking, biking, and skateboarding with their focus off the path, and into their little screens. I proposed to our local park ranger they consider developing special courses for the Pokemon crowd, similar to the frisbee golf courses around town.
I too, use a nifty Garmin to log daily fitness data, but have those moments I realize I’m missing the essence and ambience of being “out there” for the sake of watching my HR or pace. The smells, sounds, and sights of my outdoor living room become incidental, so I have to remind myself the things I’m yearning to leave behind, for awhile, I’ve brought along.
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Beautifully written!
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I think it’ll prompt me to blog a rant some time about texting, too. One of my major annoyances with texting obsession is the weight rooms at local gyms. There’s usually a mutually expected etiquette, and common courtesy amongst persons moving about the free-weight area. Especially during peak hours.
The generally accepted routine is you get in, set up, complete a few sets with rest between sets, then remove your plates and wipe away sweat.
I’ve noticed over the past year a rudeness amongst persons with texting. I’m profiling here, but it’s typically young guys. They’ll get their bench press set up, then digress into a lengthy text / chat session. They’ll finish a set and return to another texting session. Over, and over, and over.
Then they walk away, leaving plates on the bars and sweat on the seats or pads. No regard or consideration whatsoever for the next person waiting. In the meantime, others are waiting to get in for their sets. More than once I’ve had to bust into some spoiled punk’s texting session to remind him that other paying members are waiting to get in.
As well, since I’ve been familiar with weight rooms since I was a teen, I recall the “good old days” when guys would speak to one another on the gym floor and engage in actual conversations — usually about fitness. Anymore, it’s a mass of zombies staggering around, staring into a device, as a virtual substitute for person-to-person conversation.
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You should write it!! It’s a phenomenon I’ve noticed as well.
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Reblogged this on thebardoretreat.
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Gail, your writing style is entertaining and you are obviously talented in many ways. I can empathize with everything you are saying and my grave concern is that kids will actually start getting killed as a result of their obliviousness while playing the game. However, the game lets you hatch eggs while running, which is a good thing. While hatching eggs you don’t have to look at your phone at all, just leave the app open while you run, and it doesn’t even drain your battery! While running through my local trails in the woods I usually have my music or an audiobook playing, Runtastic tracking my route, distance and pace, and Pokemon open in the foreground so I can hatch some 10K eggs. It’s fantastic!
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I did not know that about the “hatching” factor of Pokemon. I have noticed, however, the waning attraction of this game, at least here in Canada. I do not see as many people wandering around aimlessly with their heads down and eyes glued to their mobile device. Thanks so much for reading and keep running those 10km’s!!!
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Reblogged this on Life, Living, and You.
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Thank you!! Always happy when someone likes one of my posts enough to re blog. Cheers!
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I had not thought that Pokeman Go would lead to bad posture, but I can see that it does. Posture is critical even if one is not exercising. I see good posture as a respect for gravity.
Although my posture isn’t bad, it is something I’ve been trying to improve for better health. I pay attention to how straight my back is and if I am looking straight ahead in the way I sit and walk. Some of my motivation, and my interest in the role gravity plays, comes from Will Johnson’s “The Posture of Meditation”. I am trying to retrain my habits.
Keeping my posture straight is probably the main form of exercise I do which might not be considered exercise either since I am often doing it while sitting at a computer or leisurely walking.
I didn’t realize that people considered Pokeman Go a form of exercise, but then I’m not tempted to play it and so I don’t need an excuse for why I would be playing it.
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Keeping your posture straight on an everyday basis is both wise and smart, but is not considered exercise. If you were doing Pilates or Yoga as a means to improve your posture, then THAT would be exercise, and then afterwards you’d be reaping the benefits of better posture and continuing the practice in your everyday life. Thanks for reading my post.
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In the UK, I’ve heard of creative ways to get people exercising more while playing the game like having a Pokemon Go 5k where you have to run to catch them (or whatever the term is for the game). I see this argument of whether it’s exercise or not in the same way as people walking their dog. When people used to tell me they exercised daily by walking their dog, I visualised them walking briskly but then one day while out on a run in a local park, I began to notice the majority of people amble their way round at a very slow pace and maybe stand still while throwing a ball for the dogs to chase.
I suppose we can call it exercise, as Tammi said it does get people moving more, and it can be a good starting point but perhaps we need to get the message across that people need to move more, whether at a more brisk pace, or for longer to make any difference to their health and fitness 🙂
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Agreed. At the end of the day it is movement versus exercise. They are not always the same thing.
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Thank you for dropping by my blog.
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I absolutely love how you write your blogs!!! Your humor and tone of voice is on point. So interesting to read!
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Thank you so much. I really appreciate the feedback.
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