How to exercise when traveling.
Do you need a gym to exercise?
The short answer to that question is, no. But, if you are staying at a place that has a sweet, decked-out gym then good for you and go have some fun.
Going to a gym is nice because there is a large variety of equipment, lots of classes, social interaction and because misery loves company.
But, all that equipment may be sweat-stained by that dude that doesn’t know how to wipe things down. And, to be honest, you will not use most of the pieces of equipment anyway.
Sometimes people suck and having to be around them when you exercise just makes the whole experience worse.
Maybe you prefer to sweat, make ugly faces and struggle with your exercises in the privacy of your hotel room.
Regardless of where you like to make your ugly faces, doing so without a plan can leave you feeling lost and wondering, “Where do I begin?”
Make sure you have a plan no matter where you train. Winging it is ok on occasion but long-term progress cannot be made when “Winging It” has been the name of your workout for the last 12 months. Make sure you read all the way to the end. I am going to give you a sample travel workout.
Get some bands. Whether you train at a gym or in your hotel room, bands are essential. Some gyms have them but the often “walk away” so the gyms become reluctant to leave them out.
Bands fit nicely into a bag when going to the gym (they also travel well too) and can give you tons of options for exercises if you do most of your training at home.
Here is a way to add a band to bridges. Bridges are a great exercise but can be challenging to progress.
Be consistent. Be, be consistent.
Maintaining any consistency when you travel will be challenging. This does not give you a free pass to skip workouts and completely abandon your nutrition.
It means you have to have a plan that is moldable and can fit wherever you end up.
Most hotel gyms were clearly an afterthought when they were created.
Employee 1: “We already have 37 closets, what do we do with this last one?”
Employee 2: [shrugs shoulders]
E1: “I read about this thing where you like lift weights up and down and get sweaty. Maybe we should put something like that in here.”
E2: [shrugs shoulders]
E1: “Kewl.”
Don’t leave you workout goals up to these two. Go into these situations with your plan and your bands.
Bands let you perform any exercise you would or could perform with a big pulley system at a gym. Even a crappy hotel gym will have at least one heavy piece of equipment you can tie your band on so there is no excuse not to have at least one.
Motion is lotion.
Traveling often involves a lot of sitting and static positions. Lack of movement is a surefire way to make you feel old and achy.
Sitting on an airplane, in a car, taxi or van followed by a bunch of meetings in a solid way to make your back and hips feel tight and sore.
Repeat this often with no countermeasures and you are playing with fire, scarecrow.
One of the best things to do is just to get moving. Do not start stretching and forcing the body to extreme ends of range of motion. Just move.
I encourage my clients to use their dynamic warm-up whenever the body feels like it is cranky and stiff. There are limitless ways to perform dynamic warm-ups. The idea is to do some easy movements to get the body moving.
Once you are warmed up, the band pullover is a great exercise for strengthening the upper body, stretching the upper back and shoulders and get some good core work in.
And if you are already crushing some quality pushups on the floor and want to make pushups new again, throw a band behind your back and push-ups are back to being hard again.
Do not stretch first thing in the morning.
I usually do not have a problem sleeping. Once my head touches down on the bed (I don’t use a pillow when I lay on my back) I am usually out in minutes.
Sometimes sleeping in a hotel makes me wake up feeling like I was on the wrong end of a mob-style bat beatdown.
I often wonder if sleeping in the parking lot would have been the better option.
In many cases, how we sleep can contribute to waking up feeling like 10 miles of bad road. It doesn’t mean anything is pathologically wrong, it just means things are achy and need to be moved.
For the love, do not get up and start going into full range of motion stretches right out of bed. Are you some sort of sadist?
The discs in the spine tend to swell at night which is why we are a little taller first thing in the am. However, this puts the spine, discs and all the muscles in an already stretched position. Do not get up and start moving your body through full range of motion stretches and bending your spine all over the place.
Chances are, this is not what your body needs. At least not first thing in the morning. Just get up and move around a little bit. Move slowly and comfortably through all range of motion to start. Do not force anything.
Once you get up and get moving, the compression on the discs from being upright will cause them to lose some of that swelling. Then you can get funky.
If you are wondering how to get the bands into the proper position, no worries. I have got you covered.
No sandbagging your travel workouts.
If you take this casual, winging it attitude on the road it is only going to get uglier. It is hard enough to train when traveling when you actually have a plan.
There is some weird psychological thing that happens when you have a detailed plan versus not having one. I do not know how to explain it but knowing what you are doing ahead of time leads to better consistency, accountability and results.
You do not waste time staring off into space thinking about what to do.
You get in, get warmed up, put the work in and get on with the day. Doesn’t that sound better than you blankly staring off like the three-eyed raven?
Sample Travel Workout
As promised, here is a sample workout that you could do on the road. All you need is a band, a small amount of space and some old fashioned heavy metal music.
Quick dynamic warm-up
A1 Band bridges 3x12-15
A2 Band pullovers 3x12-15
A3 Supine glute stretch 3x20-30s each leg (this also serves as your rest)
C1 Bandwalks 3x12 each way
C2 Pushup position shoulder taps 3x10-12 on each arm
C3 Spiderman 3x5 rotations on each side
This workout should take no more than 45 minutes. Now, after a long day, the idea of exercises sounds about as much fun as riding a bike with no seat. I get that.
So how do you get around talking yourself out of the workout? Just commit to doing one thing. Something is better than nothing.
Just start with the warm-up which will help shake off any rust and does a great job managing some minor achiness.
Commit to one group of exercises (the A’s above) or even just one exercise like the band bridges.
Do not overthink it and dread the whole workout. Just start doing something. In most cases, starting gives you the kick in the butt you need and you end up getting in a good, full workout.
Even if you only end up doing one thing, it was better than doing nothing.
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Until next time,
Dr. Tom