
Everyone knows I’m more adept at linguistic gymnastics than I am at the physicalΒ pursuits (unless I’m terribly drunk and you tell me “yes, of courseΒ you could totally be a cheerleader”, in which case, stand well back and grab yourself a camera) but that doesn’t mean I haven’t ever set foot in a gym, it just means I haven’t set foot in a gym for over ten years and even then, I’m not sure you can class using the spa pool and sauna as “working out”, more’s the pity. Anyway, just because I don’t waggle weights around in front of sweaty strangers, doesn’t mean I don’t know what goes on in these places and itΒ certainly doesn’t stop me from having an opinion on them [collective cheer from audience].
I used to say that gymnasiums were nothing but torture chambers. This was based on the fact that theyΒ are rooms lined withΒ lots of barbaric looking machinery that medieval executioners would have loved to be left alone with for half an hour. Now, well, I stillΒ call them torture chambers but this is based less on the equipment and more on the strange behaviour one is forced to endure in one’s quest for a pert buttock and a six packΒ you could store CDs in.
For the record, I am all in favour of exercising. I just prefer to do mine like a civilised person. At home. In front of the television. I also like to roam the streets hating tourists which is a cracking bit of cardio (nothing gets the blood pumping like a 5 mile walk fueled by inhospitable rage) so please don’t for one moment think that I am going to suggest you are wrong for entering the sweat and blood stained portals of a work-out arena. Each to their own, as the old woman said as she puckered up for the bovine backside.
For the normal person out there, the desire to go to the gym is fuelled by a healthy amount of self-loathing,Β felt every time they look in the mirror at wibblyΒ bits that can no longer fit inside the average item of clothing without the aid of aΒ girdle and some Vaseline.Β The normal personΒ will want to get in and out of the gym as quickly and invisibly as possible, with as few people seeing their huffing puffing lumpy bits, and with some small miracle meaning that they come outΒ of there withΒ aΒ miniscule shred of self-esteem still intact. That’s the “normal” person. The trouble is, they aren’t the only ones using the gym.
For some anthropological freaks, this isn’t merely an opportunity to increase health and fitness levels, this is a chance to wear tighter-than-tight, shorter-than-short designerΒ LycraΒ outfits, to top up their fake tan, comb their glossy flowing locks and drink in the admiring glances of well oiled muscly beasts. And that’s just the men.
These muscle-bound exhibitionistsΒ aren’t there because they sawΒ uneΒ handle d’amourΒ (I’m trying to make muffin-topΒ sound sexy, do you like it?), they haven’t had more than 3% body fat since they hit puberty. It is my theory that these people actually work out at home before leaving for the gym, just to make sure they arrive looking as lean as the proverbial butcher’s pencil. This also frees up enough time once they are actually at the gym to strut, flex and lunge their way across the front of the mirrored wall so everyone can see theirΒ perfect physique from all itsΒ best angles, allllllΒ oooofΒ theeeeeem.Β I actually recall seeing one such oily steroid junky pull out a hair brush (not a comb, a full on brush) to stop in front of everyΒ gym bunnyΒ in the place and coiffe his mane with full tri and bicep rippling action. It was like watching a camp hornyΒ gorilla waggling his willy in front of the (unimpressed) troop females.
The scantily clad, fully made-up femaleΒ flaunterΒ does the same amount of showboating across the floor butΒ she seems to include far more bending in front ofΒ her unwilling audience. It’s as thoughΒ she’s scared her shoe laces are untied and needs to continually check them, lestΒ sheΒ trip on the running machine. How very sensible of her.
When these life-sizedΒ Kens and BarbiesΒ aren’t thrusting their intimidatinglyΒ muscular crotches in your face, they can be found on the one piece of equipment in the place that you would really like to use in your mission to wobble less. There is generally a little sign next to these torture devices stating that nobody should sweat on them for more than 20 minutes at a time. You stand, you wait, you check the clock, you wait some more and still they bob around up there, sweat-free, fake tan and make-up still perfectly in place, and that’s just the m… damn, I used that one already, didn’t I? What you’re forgetting is that the rules don’t apply to these godlike creatures. You, with your pot belly and shapeless tracksuitΒ must abide by the laws of the common man. These untouchables know that they are a superior race andΒ that everyone is happiest when they can watch how a Power-Plate should really be used, by someone with a real set of thighs.
So, you’ve spent an hour in the gym, 17 minutes of that time actually using the equipment, you feel justΒ the right amount of humiliation and inferiority to make you want to do this all again in a day or two but first you must shower in order to washΒ away the smell of defeat and shame. Guess who’s in the changing room?
The changing rooms at gyms were designed by someone with absolutely no sense of nakedness, either that or a deliciously cruel sense of humour. There is absolutely nowhere to hide in those places and so your only option is to unveil your least favouriteΒ physical failingsΒ for all to judge. If that isn’t bad enough, there they are; Ken/Barbie, still flexing, still bending, but this time, naked.
The “normal” person gets dried and dressed, head down, in under 2 minutes. The plastic gym doll will air dry, lunging round the changing room until all droplets of water have evaporated from sheer embarrassment. Then the dressing routine. You and I would start with undercrackersΒ and build up from there. Not so the gym freak, asΒ clearly that wouldΒ preventΒ usΒ witnessing pure perfection in all its gloryΒ and so they begin by drying their hair (still naked), putting on their watch (still naked), jewellery (naked), socks (you get the point),Β find their car keys, check their phone, book an appointment with their manicurist, think about discovering a cure forΒ AIDSΒ aaaaaand finally, some fabric touches their torso. Phew!
If you can stomach having a stranger’s undercarriage publiclyΒ thrust in your face after they’ve made you feel like a member of TheΒ RolyΒ PolysΒ for the best part of an hour, well, you’re a stronger person than I am and you should also consider a career as a gynaecologist. Personally, I’d rather just avoid paying for the whole humiliating andΒ harrowing experience that is going to the gym and if I ever feel the urge to give it another whirl, I just followΒ 10 simple steps to snap me out of it. You’re welcome toΒ try itΒ too, and I won’t charge youΒ the Β£1,000 non-refundable membership fee!Β
1. Select a music channel on your TV/radio station that plays nothing but inane second rate dance musicΒ circa 2001
2. Position images of impossibly muscled, smug looking models in eye lineΒ
2. Clear yourΒ laundry from the exercise bike/cross trainer that lurksΒ in the corner of your spare room
3. Stand next to it for half an hour “waiting”
4. Give up
5. DoΒ 45 seconds ofΒ hamstring stretches
6. Feign exhaustion
7. Head for the shower
8. Dry yourself in front of the window with the curtains open
9. Swear to do this againΒ 4 times a week
10. Never do this again
Remember, you’re beautiful just the way you are, even when you wibble.
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