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endure month, I sent ace of the hardest emails Iâve written all yr.
It was a quest asking my gym to intermit my membership. I stared at the screen longer than I wanted to admit before hitting send. For nearly 15 years, working out has been a constant in my life. Cancelling felt like breaking up with a part of myself.
I had avoided sending that email for five months. Every month, I told myself Iâd get back on track and every month, another payment went through. When my partner finally stepped in, I didnât cancel â I put the membership on hold instead. It was my compromise, a small concession to the part of me that still believes Iâll return.
For as long as I can remember, my body was something other people noticed before I did.
Iâm one of three sisters, all close in age. Growing up, the easiest way for extended family to identify me was by pointing out my chubbiness. Some family members called me âbulldozerâ or âfluffy,â and I convinced myself it was affectionate.Â
But as I got older, the comments stopped feeling cute.
By 12, I was wearing my motherâs tops while my sisters shopped in the teen aisle. I learned early that taking up space, physically or otherwise, came with commentary.
As a child, movement was joyful. I loved skipping rope, biking and climbing jungle gyms at recess. I was always moving. Even in high school, I tried hard in gym class and happily participated in competitions, even if I never came first.Â
I assume the weight would âeven outâ as I grew taller. It didnât.
Then I was diagnosed with polycystic ovarian syndrome at 17 and the stakes changed. Doctors warned me to be careful with my weight, that fluctuations could increase my risk of heart disease or cancer, both of which run in my family. That was when working out became a responsibility.
By the time I reached university, the gym was a non-negotiable. Iâd go during its women-only hours to run 5K on the track, then lift weights for a half-hour. I went three or four times a week, even during exams and holidays. I always had my gym bag with me.
I ran races, training for 10Ks and 15Ks in the city. I climbed the CN Towerâs 144 floors. I loved the quiet focus of having headphones in, entire Spotify albums or news podcasts playing, and ideas arriving somewhere between breaths. I learned my body, every muscle, every shape, every small improvement. I felt beautiful, but more importantly, powerful.
At its best, the gym gave me structure. It was the place Iâd go after work; in the winter, it was sometimes the only reason I left the house.Â
But at its worst, it was a system of self-surveillance.
It started during the pandemic when I got a fitness tracking watch. At first, the data it provided felt motivating. I started sharing it with friends and competing to see who worked out more.Â
But the tracking features troubled me on rest days. Iâd see someone else log a 10K run or burn 900 calories and Iâd feel guilty for doing nothing. So I slept with my watch on. I wore it to weddings. I even turned on âdance workoutsâ while out with friends.
Soon, those feelings of guilt or shame were being triggered more often â like when influencers would film their workouts next to me or Iâd see groups running along the lakeshore in the winter at the crack of dawn. I started co-ordinating my tops and leggings, hoping theyâd motivate me. On days I felt bloated, Iâd choose to skip entirely than risk looking at my stomach in a crop top.
A âgoodâ week meant four gym visits. Anything less made me feel like Iâd failed.
And I paid for it, financially and emotionally. Over the years, Iâve spent over $8,000 on memberships, sign-up fees, commutes and race entries. More than that, I paid in guilt.Â
For several years, I always worked out before I permitted myself to go out with friends. It made getting dressed easier and eating feel allowed. Then I began checking my stomach in the mirror after meals, bringing me back to being a little girl, questioning her relationship with food.Â
When I lost my full-time job last fall and moved into freelance life, everything unravelled. Without a predictable schedule, the gym stopped fitting neatly into my day. I worked longer hours, with no clear start or end. But I kept paying for the membership, telling myself Iâd get back on track.
It all clicked one afternoon when my Apple Watch died â and for the first time in years, I let it stay dead.
What surprised me most was how little life changed. No one cared that Iâd taken off my watch. My rings disappeared from my friendsâ feeds, and the world kept spinning.Â
So much of it, I realized, had been happening in my head.
Putting my membership on pause brought relief â mostly at no longer typing âgymâ into my calendar app and deleting it when I didnât go. But it also forced me to find new forms of physical activity.Â
AI workouts are coming for your gym membership
Iâm getting a small, at-home treadmill for walking, because being sedentary isnât healthy either. Iâm aiming for 5,000 steps a few times a week to start with.Â
Since my last gym workout back in July â July 26 to be exact, according to my Apple Watch â my body hasnât changed much, but Iâve welcomed my belly pouch back, my butt is flatter and the groceries feel heavier. I know it will change more as more time passes, but Iâm trying to be OK with that.Â
When the pause ends in April, Iâll likely try going back. It will be closer to the summer and the pressure to look a certain way will creep in again. What Iâm trying to hold onto now is the idea that returning doesnât have to mean returning to guilt.
Health, for me, now looks like self-kindness. Like focusing on my career, my skin, my hair and accepting that I canât optimize everything at once. Pausing my gym membership was a small act of saying I donât need to earn my worth through workouts or guilt. Discipline can be gentle, too.
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