Thursday, October 2, 2014

Row Row Row Squat Jump

So. Rowing.

In my search for a replacement activity for track and field (10 years in the sport doesn't leave you with a love of down-time), I have found the US approach to sports clubs differs substantially from the UK. More specifically, sports clubs here love to party.

Now, as Cardiff is, admittedly, somewhat of a party town, I cannot begrudge them what they expect from a social group. However, as an American, I was kind of expecting that social groups were not entirely synonymous with sports clubs. You know, something in the name "SPORTs club" may have fed my mis-assessment… This is why, when the Cardiff University Rowing Club decided to hold their "Meet and Greet" in a club, in a dark room that smelled of body odor and sickly sweet overturned alcoholic drinks now forming sticky footprints beneath the feet of, by all estimates, too many people for the fire code, I turned my own feet right around and walked out.

Now.
I had already paid the £30 membership fee, in addition to the £15 Athletic Union fee, so confident was I at the sports fair that rowing would perfectly fill the hole left by the conclusion of my heptathlon training.
Additionally, I have been assured by numerous people of similar mindsets to my own (work, sports, and social-wise), that Crew* is a fantastic sport that, in perfect moments, feels like flying. I loved feeling like I was in flight in the hurdles. I miss that.

*By the way, whenever I use the word "Crew" here, people give me funny looks. They have absolutely no idea to what sport I refer. I keep having to check myself and replace it with "Rowing". Why the difference I wonder? A difference in attitude towards the sport itself? Or a random mutation of language with no ulterior meaning?

With these factors in mind, I gave Rowing one more chance. Were the actual physical training part to agree with me, I might overlook the (ahem) extracurricular social component and participate in the sweaty, painful, hold-on-I'm-gonna-chunder** part, rather than the whoo-hoo, party, I'm-gonna-get-pissed-and-chunder*** part.

**To chunder: to throw up
***To get pissed: to become exorbitantly intoxicated.
Obviously, those involved here must have some desire to "chunder" by one cause or another practically every day, and therefore must organize sports clubs to schedule and achieve this goal.

Surprisingly, this worked!
I attended the first circuit workout on Tuesday, and despite the presence of literally (and I'm using this in the English Major Approved way) 150-200 people.

For the love of Hubble those people love their squat jumps.

ouch.

Anyway- obviously being tortured and forced to do squat jumps and push ups until someone said "when" (partially because I couldn't hear the initial directions over the echo-y gym) makes me happy, because I walked or wobbled out of there with tired muscles and a brain-dead grin.

Its so much easier to work hard when it hurts when you have someone pushing you and some people with whom to compete.

After running about 2.8 miles out and 2.8 miles back to get a sneak peek at the facility we'll be training at on Saturday (we're doing something called "erg". Soooo descriptive. I think it's rowing machines) and avoiding the toga party Wednesday, I came back for another circuit workout today. It wasn't as hard as Tuesday, but that was probably because there were also fewer squat jumps.

No sign of the water yet, but it's such a relief to have some variety in my workouts. I'll be sticking with rowing for a while because if I know something about sports, hard work means you're earning something fantastic.

Meanwhile…
Going to the Library, Gonna find a neuropsychology book!

Working on my degree in finding free food.
Although the Wellcome Trust takes very good care of us, I must study to uphold this time honored tradition.
Also my check hasn't cleared yet. Sigh.
But don't worry those of you who do- it's not like I don't have money to feed myself. I do. Its just this food is FREE!


2 comments:

  1. We had a word for squat jumps back in my day... can't remember what it was, but it sounded kind of like Chunder! :-) Typical Rowing club start. 150 at first, then 75 by the time you hit the water, then two or three 8s worth by the time you get to your first Regatta.

    Glad your doing your part to uphold the time honored tradition of Grad Student Free Food Foraging. Good hunting can be had by figuring out when the weekly staff meetings end, or making friends with the Dept secretary who schedules all the meetings with Guests!

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  2. oh good point: no need to attend, just be available to clean up the left overs!

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