Monday, July 24, 2017

Who remembers the Presidential Physical Fitness Program?



Who remembers the Presidential Physical Fitness Program?

Whether you loved it or hated it, I bet you remember, once or twice a year, when your P.E. teacher announced that everyone would be competing for the award. We’d be doing situps, running the mile, reaching past our toes…my wife remembers doing wall-sits – I have no memory of that! No matter what the regimen, we all had a common goal – to reach the pinnacle of human fitness in order to be recognized by the President of the United States.

Now, I don’t know what you thought was going to happen, but I imagined George Herbert Walker Bush and William Jefferson Clinton just PORING over mile times and shuttle run results, checking off the best of the best of the best. Perhaps I’d be honored in a ceremony, like at the end of Star Wars, and Carrie Fisher or somebody would place a medal around my neck while I smiled stupidly at Chewbacca. WHAT IF MY NAME WAS IN THE PAPER?

One year, I think I was in the 7th or 8th grade, I busted my butt to earn that award. I met every goal the teacher put before me, except one: I couldn’t stretch my fingertips beyond my feet. She sat us all down with our legs stretched out before us and, one by one, she used a ruler to gauge our flexibility. I watched in awe as my classmates succeeded one after the other. I had run a seven minute mile and done 55 situps in a minute, but could I stretch my fingertips four inches beyond my feet?

Suddenly, my mouth ran dry. As she came close, the kids who had been gymnasts and swimmers were racking up eight inches, ten inches – surely a playground baseball kid could manage four measly inches.

The time had come – it was my turn. I straightened my back and LEANED. I pulled. I stretched. “Use your fingers to try and walk yourself forward along the ground…that’s it! Keep going…keep going…”

What was actually seconds felt like hours to me. I felt like I had endured some type of torture from the dark ages. Human bodies were not meant to move this way, I was sure of it.

My teacher stood up straight and looked at the ruler. “One inch. Try again tomorrow.” She clicked her pen, marked it down on her clipboard, and moved on. That was it. I was devastated. THREE MORE INCHES? It might as well have been three more feet.

I didn’t make it tomorrow. Or the next day. Or the next. Or at all. The President would look at my results and scoff, drawing a thick, red line through my name in PERMANENT INK. There would be no ceremony, Carrie Fisher wouldn’t smile at me in admiration… I wouldn’t meet Chewbacca.

It’s a memory that (obviously) has stuck with me. If only I had spent more time stretching, and increased my flexibility, I would have achieved my goal. It’s one of many failures in my life that has taught me that good results come from good preparation. I need to train and work for the goal that I want to achieve.

Of all the activities that they put us through, of all the fitness factors that were measured, there’s one thing that the teacher never did.

She NEVER put us on scale.

When we were kids, the measure of fitness was never simply our weight. It didn’t matter if we were perceived as too heavy or too thin; if you can run the time, if you can do the work, you have a healthy body.

Today, we place too much weight (pun intended) on those numbers. A “healthy weight” or a “healthy BMI” can be indicators of overall health, and there is a correlation between the makeup of our bodies and our overall fitness, to be sure, but the perceived relationship is backwards. The scale can’t gauge fitness or health. It only gives you a single number indicating your physical mass.

If I want a healthy body, I need to take care of it. I need to exercise. I need to eat right. I need to lay off the bad stuff.

Do I sound like your middle school P.E. teacher yet?

Well, she was right. Yet somehow we’ve chained ourselves to the number on the scale as the primary indicator of fitness.

Guess what? A healthy body is going to move that number in the right direction, not the other way around. Simply gaining or losing weight doesn’t make me healthy. It is entirely possible to be a “healthy weight,” and be the least healthy person in the room. And you can certainly be a few pounds over the “ideal” BMI and put the rest of us to athletic shame – just ask Tom Brady, who at 6’4” and 225 lbs, is technically overweight on the traditional BMI scale.

We need to move beyond those numbers if we want to be truly healthy. Physical health is about strong bones and muscles, it’s about your heart and your lungs…it’s not about the visibility of your six-pack or having the perkiest butt on the beach. It’s about setting achievable goals and then reaching them, exceeding them, and then setting new goals.


So let’s set a new goal together. Let’s forget about meaningless numbers. Let’s forget about societal expectations. Let’s forget about unrealistic beauty ideals. Instead, let’s decide why we want to live healthy. Let’s work harder. Let’s set realistic health and fitness goals. Let’s eat what’s good for us and leave out what isn’t. Let’s make a strong body a priority. Let’s take care of the skin we’re in. And it will take care of us.