Eat, move, repeat.

Exhale Yoga Back Bay

The challenge: trying to find the right balance of our passions, fitting in all the things we want to do into the all too short hours of the day. It seems as though I’ve found something that feels like gold – a day job in a fitness company surrounded by people who all love exploring the world, and like food just as much as i do. In addition to all the trips that I love with RunKeeper,  I’ve been trying to spend more time trying new activities, and taking notes on which ones I enjoy best, and how my fitness is progressing

This month, in addition to the CrossFit, I’ve been on a few new fitness adventures thanks to a complimentary month long ClassPass –  10 total classes at studios around the city –  and I plan on using it to it’s fullest! Combined with the CrossFit opens, and an upcoming race season, I’m taking the opportunity to whip myself back into shape after a relatively relaxed winter.  

Here’s what I’ve been up to, complete with selfies.

Exhale Spa Yoga

Exhale Battery Wharf – Exhale Flow Yoga (60 minute class)

Exhale Battery Wharf is a studio and spa at the Fairmont hotel at Battery Wharf, at the edge of the North End, right by the Coast Guard, and good eats at Aragosta.

Exhale is known for their core fusion classes, but anything that has “core” in the name terrifies me. This probably is a reason to take one of these classes, but yoga just seemed like a much more appropriate thing to do at a spa studio. I signed up for the Exhale Flow class, taught by Lauren Koenig-Plonskier. After arriving a half hour early, I got a little tour: a co-ed hammam, a sauna, several treatment rooms, and an expansive locker room with code-access lockers, rain showers with warming towel racks, robes, sandals, hair dryers, straightening irons, razors, posh shampoo and conditioner, etc. I changed and entered the studio – the lights were dim, and everything is provided for you: high quality mats, blocks, blankets, bolsters. I liked Lauren’s class, she was peppy, upbeat and talkative in the best possible way. She had me grinning through class, which is exactly my type of stress relief.

Loved this class, and loved the location! I’ll definitely be heading back for another experience here.

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Studio J – Pilates Tower Half Hour (30 minutes)

I made a mid-workday excursion to the new Studio J, a Pilates and Yoga studio right near Government center, for a thirty minute Pilates tower class. It took me a little bit of time to actually find the studio (despite having worked right around the corner in Old City Hall when I was in high school). While the studio was packed for a yoga class on the bottom floor, I was the lone Pilates student. My Pilates is a little rusty, but because of my extra mobility and strength work, ultimately I felt like I didn’t get much out of the machine. Diane the instructor was very nice, and the studio is lovely, so I might try to come back soon for one of the yoga classes as it’s a little bit more up my alley.

After class, I stopped in to the new cold-pressed juicery in Government Center, Cocobeet, to prolong the positive health decisions I was making. I went for the all green Bright Lights. I think it could have used an extra squeeze or two of lemon, but provided the verdant refresh that I was looking for.

Flywheel time

Fly45 at FlyWheel (45 minutes)

My second class at FlyWheel, and a fast favorite. Who knew that I’d like indoor cycling? Seriously. I haven’t been on a bicycle in far too long. This time I managed to best my score, and spent nearly every sprint in the top two on the leaderboard. Loved it!

Exhale Back Bay – Flow Yoga Open (90 minutes)

I love yoga, but this class was a dud for me – not every yoga class is right for everyone – if you are a newbie and think you don’t like yoga, make sure to keep searching for classes you like! While I loved the experience at Exhale Battery Wharf, the Back Bay location had a different vibe (a lot more crowded, a little less zen-like). I still got a good workout, and every workout counts!

I have five classes left – not sure what I’m going to take! What’s your favorite type of studio class?

An active weekend

Athleta Fashion Show

On a whim, I decided to stop by the new Athleta store (a fitness line owned by the Gap) in Chestnut Hill for a fashion show of their spring line. Having no idea what goes down at these swanky shindigs, but hearing tell of mimosas, snacks from the Capitol Grille, and free coffee, I decided to check it out. I love Atheta’s cheerful bright colors, and their clothes usually fit quite well – the prices are on the higher end of the Gap lines, but the style and quality seem to match. The models were all fitness instructors in the Boston area. I didn’t end up taking anything home, but it was a good excuse to get out of the house after setting the clocks forward.

My own fitness pursuits:

Saturday: CrossFit

Workout 14.2 For as long as possible: From 0:00-3:00, 2 rounds of: 10 overhead squats, 95 / 65 lb. ,10 chest-to-bar pull-ups. If completed, from 3:00-6:00, 2 rounds of: 12 overhead squats, 95 / 65 lb., 12 chest-to-bar pull-ups. From 6:00-9:00, 2 rounds of: 14 overhead squats, 95 / 65 lb., 14 chest-to-bar pull-ups, and so on, if of course, you are able to get that far.

The second round of the CrossFit opens, the world-wide CrossFit competition had us performing overhead squats and chest-to-bar pull-ups – squatting with a large bar suspended overhead, and pull-ups that get you so close to the bar that your chest can touch it. Feeling very, very sore from a few weeks of easing back into lifting, walking, and running, I found it very difficult to squat to correct depth, which was frustrating, because the weight (65 pounds for women) is actually do-able for me. I’ve had to swallow some pride with my scores this year in the open – but I’m proud that I’m competing, proud to show up, and got myself a PR last week with my double-unders.

Sunday: BODYPUMP

Bodypump boasts a strength building workout where you complete 70-100 repetitions per body part totaling up to 800 repetitions in a single workout, with varying weights on the barbell. After last weeks ClassPass launch party, attendees were all gifted a free month of ClassPass (10 studio classes at gyms around the city), and I decided to take Bodypump as my first class at Commonwealth Sports Club, on Comm. Ave, right by the Super 88. My first (and last) attempt at the Les Mills barbell fitness class ended after fifteen minutes of me huffing and puffing, when horrifically the girl in front of me had to be taken to the hospital for a medical emergency, so I was pretty sure that any experience this time would be a better one!

The front desk folks at CSC were very nice, and you can get a parking pass to park in their back lot if you pull up to the front. The facilities are fairly large, around the amenity level of a mid level Y, and a few major plusses I noticed were the saltwater pool, sauna, towel service, and bathrooms with free razors. The class was full, and kind regulars helped be put together my equipment: a step, mat, barbell with various weights and clips that you change throughout the class. Kim the instructor was no-nonsense, a bit of a drill sergeant, and powered us through the class. I’m definitely familiar with weight lifting, but it might be overwhelming to a newbie. If I go again, I’ll up the weights, but I certainly enjoyed myself this time around.

Commonwealth Sports Club
1079 Commonwealth Avenue | Boston, MA 02215
(617) 254-1711
commonwealthsportsclub.com

So I think I like indoor cycling? (ClassPass launch at Flywheel)

FlyWheel Never Coast

{Obligatory changing room selfie pre-workout. Am I going to make it? Am I going to die?}

I had an unusual conundrum on Tuesday: attend a startup event for women entrepreneurs which boasted an impressive list of founders who I admire and free dumplings, or attend an indoor cycling event at Flywheel, for the Boston launch of the startup ClassPass (which happens to be founded by women) with free post-workout salads from sweetgreen! Both events seemed well worth attending – and dumplings! – but as you have caught on already, cycling won out! Why? To overcome fear, try something I’d previously written off as “too difficult”, and crush it. The crushing part is subjective. In this case I just didn’t want to fall off the bike. I have ambitions for a sprint-tri in my future, and you have to start somewhere!

Indoor Cycling, take one: The first time I attempted indoor cycling was when I was living in San Francisco, and after barely, just barely, making it through a class without quitting, I went home and cried. The spin instructor, Rachel, was so terribly nice, and there were four of us in the class, a bickering boyfriend and girlfriend, both athletes giving 110% the entire class, an older man who was a cyclist with experience with real San Francisco hills, and me, out of shape, a little terrified, and woefully unprepared for what I was getting into. (There is some irony in the fact that I lived in San Francisco for several years and didn’t run once on the Embarcadero, and now I work at a fitness company in Boston and yearn wistfully for the West Coast whenever I’m out running here in the winter time.) But this spin class, this first class, I was uncoordinated, in pain, exhausted, and I felt sorrowfully like I had let the very nice instructor down. So I went home, and I cried, and I never went back again.

Looking back on this, years later, I get terribly sad thinking about how I missed out because I felt out of place – this feeling is one of the reasons that I go to work every day hoping to make fitness accessible to everybody.

Indoor cycling, take two: So Tuesday was my re-do, and I had no idea what to expect, but we’ll just say I was experiencing nervous excitement with just a smidge of terror. The class was at Flywheel, a new Boston cycling studio in the Prudential. Flywheel is pretty swanky – free shoes, towels, lockers, showers with complimentary shampoo, conditioner, and hair elastics! (I used three.) Our instructor, Ann, was great – super fit, dare I say it sultry in the best possible way – and I managed to make it through an entire class and get on the leaderboard. What a difference a few years can make. Definitely will be going back!

What is ClassPass: The startup I wish I had founded. With ClassPass, you subscribe a monthly $99, which gets you access to 10 classes at studios (Indoor Cycling, Yoga, Barre, and more) across the Boston area.

Flywheel Indoor Cycling
800 Boylston Street, Boston, MA 02199
617-300-0388
boston.flywheelsports.com

ClassPass (formerly classtivity)
(Currently in Boston and New York)
classpass.com