I am trying to find an hour. It’s harder than you think.
I am hunting under the couch – where I am often collapsed, tapping at my laptop or with my eyes glued to the television – searching for the 45 minutes a day I need to reclaim my sanity.
And I just can’t find it. Between my two small children, my job, my partner and the occasional rushed drink with people who were my friends in a quieter age, there isn’t TIME.
More on Holly’s day: “A comprehensive list of the things I did before 9am.”
The time I’m looking for is the time to exercise.
Deep down, I know where that time is. Jodi Meares has got it. Because while I’m struggling to find a lousy 45 minutes, Jodhi is exercising for at least four hours a day. Every day.
And it shows. Jodhi Meares is the impossibly slender and effortlessly glamorous founder of The Upside, a sportswear brand that is so fabulous that there’s no way I would ever dare sweat into their exquisite yoga pants.
Because, in all seriousness, there ain’t no way you put a spin-class crotch anywhere near this:
Jodhi revealed how she makes time in her day for exercise in a story with Harper’s Bazaar earlier this year entitled ’24 hours with Jodhi Meares’.
And reading it, I can see exactly where I’m going wrong.
Top Comments
sahm mum, to a kindy and a year 1 child. I try to plan. last year for a whole term I wrote "walk " on the family calendar days a week, and you'll be surprised how you will work around it and make it happen! I also make sure i don't over commit to anything eash week, that includes school meetings, kindy help, canteen help, grocery shopping, babysitting, cooking for family (we've a few elder sick members who love a soup or batch of scones/cupcakes brought over) so that i can have a walk (either outside or on MIL's treadmill) or if I am going to playground with kids I try to exercise there.
The tone of this article does not sit well with me. If you are looking for suggestions about finding time for exercise from other Mums or someone leading a similar life to your own, why not just ask? Why the need to mock another woman who lives a life that is almost as opposite to your own as can be simply because she tackles her day in a way that is different to yours? I thought this site was meant to celebrate women and their stories in all of their many and varied forms, not to one-up each other on who has the least time and who is more exhausted by their kids.
Since it seems like this is what you were asking, I am a member of a gym with a crèche that caters for kids from 6 weeks to 12 years. My daughter goes to the crèche while I go to a class. At work, I try to stand instead of sit while I answer emails or take calls and if I can get out of the office for lunch I try to go to the gym or a quick walk. I squeeze in things like squats or a bit of yoga around the house and go for as much incidental excercise as possible, even just getting off the bus a stop or two early. Not that it matters, but I am a single mum working and studying so I understand where you are coming from in terms of having little free time, but I force myself to find the time for my health.