Upgrade Your Fitness - at Home!
Morgan Farr is a young mom with an adorable little boy who is passionate about physical fitness. In this Health & Fitness UPGRADE she shares how to get more fit at home.
“How can I get fit and healthy," Morgan says, "if I can’t afford a gym membership or a personal trainer? I hear this question ALL the time."
OK, I (Dawn) have to admit I've used this excuse and others, but Morgan isn't about to let me (or you) get away with it.
Morgan continues . . .
It is hard in the regular world much less in the Army world for moms to get away long enough to work out at the gym. But I am here to tell you that it can be done and without spending a ton of money!
We all know that fitness an important part of life. If you don’t take care of the temple that God has given you, you can’t work as efficiently for His kingdom. This is even more important when you are a wife and mom, because you have people depending on you every single day.
I have heard a lot of excuses as to why people can’t work out, and the most common one is that they can’t get to the gym. But the thing is, you don’t have to go to the gym to work out.
You can do it from home.
You don’t need fancy equipment.
All you need is:
- 1 car tow strap
- 1 medium carabiner
- 1 eyebolt
- 1 duffel bag (I like the ones from Army surplus stores because they are usually very cheap.)
- 1 40-pound bag of salt pellet
- 1 old car tire (I use the old ones from my car when I get them replaced.)
That is it. That is all you need to effectively work out at home.
You will now use these six supplies to make two pieces of equipment.
1. Making a sandbag
Take the sandbag and dump in 10 pounds of the salt. I typically put it inside two trash bags just to keep things tidy.
Tie off the top, securely. A ponytail holder or two works great!
Save the remaining salt, you will need it in the months to come.
2. Making a sled:
Drill a hole in the side of the tire for the eyebolt. You want the round part on the outside portion of the tire.
When you have the eyebolt secured, use the carabiner to hook the car tow strap to the tire.
So now you have a ten pound sandbag and a tire sled.
Here are a list of the things you can do with this new equipment: overhead press, seated press, alternating press, back squat, sumo squat, overhead squat, farmer carries, weighted lunges, sandbag get ups, unweighted tire drags, weighted tire drags, unweighted hand over hand tire pulls, weighted hand over hand tire pulls.
And those are just the movement with those two pieces of equipment!
That doesn’t include bodyweight movements like: air squats, sit ups, push-ups, jumping jacks, split squats, sumo squats, crunches, and burpees.
When you mix and match these things together you get an incredibly varied workout. Your own creativity is your only limitation! If you don’t know how to program your workout and you need a little help you can always look up workouts online.
My husband and I publish “travel” workouts for the fitness community to use at any time. These workouts are designed to be done with a sandbag and a tire sled or no equipment at all.
1 Corinthians 9:26-27 says,
“Thus I do not run aimlessly; I do not fight as if I were shadowboxing. No, I drive my body and train it, for fear that, after having preached to others, I myself should be disqualified.”
Don’t disqualify yourself. Get in the race. Start where you are, and work to get better.
At the end of the day, it doesn’t matter what workout program you follow. It matters that you are out there working on your body, making yourself more fit for God to use you in any capacity.
How will you start to build up your body for Christ?
Morgan Farr is an Army wife currently stationed at Fort Bragg in Fayetteville, North Carolina with her wonderful husband Brian and their seven month old son, William. She is a homemaker that dedicates her free time to ministering to other Army wives through Bible studies, one-on-one interactions and physical training. Morgan writes about her transition out of feminism and into biblical womanhood on her blog. You can find her training programs on her blog FarrFunctionalFitness.blogspot.com.