Find yourself a gym buddy, it could work wonders

I’ve been pushed beyond my limits by the youthful enthusiasm of others – and it feels great

When it comes to my fitness, this fat bitch has been doing the same old same old for far too long. Photograph: Getty Images/iStockphoto
When it comes to my fitness, this fat bitch has been doing the same old same old for far too long. Photograph: Getty Images/iStockphoto

The next few months are looking practically grit-free on the fitness front for one reason alone: our Italian au-pair, Annalisa. Since she joined the gym across the road days after coming to live with us, she has been punching out daily workouts like a woman possessed – and encouraging me to do the same.

Dare I say it, she has become my grit doctor.

Before she left for holidays, I endured the most punishing workout of my life: a 45-minute brutal circuits class. To say I was out of my depth would be an understatement of epic proportions. I was the least fit person present by a country mile. The pace and number of reps was ridiculous, every muscle I used went into its own version of cardiac arrest and I felt the burn in muscle groups I never even knew I had for a good three days afterwards.

Annalisa gets me involved in spinning classes too ("ooh Ruth you'd like it, the instructor is really really nice. He shouts very loud and makes you go really, really fast") and she's even got me to sign up to boxing classes with her when she gets back. How can I tell her "No, I can't face it, I'm not fit enough, I'm too old and I'm too tired", when she has an entire bookshelf of her room dedicated to copies of Run Fat Bitch Run?

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‘No’ is the hardest word

Here’s the thing: her youth, her enthusiasm, her determination to get fit, her astonishingly fast recovery times, her whole way of being is making it impossible for me to say no. She texts me when I’m up in the loft writing, “Ruth, do you fancy spinning/abs/circuits at midday? It will be really really good.”

I never actually fancy it of course, but I do fancy the idea of getting a 30-45 minute workout out of the way just before lunch, and trying out a different class that I’d be far too shy to go to alone. Plus, the knock-on effect on my runs is that they are now the easiest thing I do exercise-wise. They have become like a relaxing treat – where nothing hurts and everything feels effortless – that I get to enjoy on my days off from the gym.

Having Annalisa around is like having a lovely teenage daughter with an incredibly motivating edge, which has improved the quality of my life no end. It is a relationship I could never have anticipated having this time last year. So that’s my get healthy riff – to cultivate an attitude of openness: to make unexpected connections; to try new things fitness wise; to allow others to help motivate me; to experiment and to be surprised.

Because when it comes to my fitness, this fat bitch has been doing the same old same old for far too long.

The Grit Doctor says: Mix it up and max it out.

Sign up for one of The Irish Times' Get Running programmes (it is free!).

First, pick the programme that suits you.
- Beginner Course: This programme is an eight-week course that will take you from inactivity to being able to run 30 minutes non-stop.
- Stay On Track: The second programme is an eight-week course for those of you who can squeeze in a 30- to 40-minute run three times a week.
- 10km Course: This is an eight-week course designed for those who can comfortably run for 30 minutes and want to move up to the 10km mark.
Best of luck!