lampions bet telegram
Aos 17, o treinador de remo anunciou que um dia de descanso era inútil
W hen I was 17, my rowing 🧬 coach announced that taking a day off was unnecessary. That one time of the week that I left school at 🧬 4pm and watched Neighbours was now gone. I think that's probably why, when I gave up rowing, I stopped doing any exercise 🧬 at all. I'd had enough. Exercise for me equated to diehard commitment and someone shouting at me all the time. 🧬 So I did nothing. Which in retrospect was a bad idea, because there were times in my life – getting 🧬 RSI when I tried to write a book while holding down a full-time job or having a baby and getting 🧬 swamped by anxiety – when exercise would have helped enormously.
De volta à equipe
It was when I had come out of 🧬 the baby years, moved to a new area, but worked from home, that I felt the pull to be part 🧬 of a team again. But I didn't know how or in what sport – there was no way I was 🧬 going back to rowing.
There are plenty of "back to..." sessions for various sports – hockey, football, lacrosse – but having 🧬 never played any of these, I was daunted. Then one day a neighbour knocked looking for a sub for her 🧬 netball league team. I'd been OK at netball at school, so I said I'd do it. It was during that 🧬 game I realised all the latent competitiveness that had pushed me at school to become a junior world rowing champion, 🧬 was still very much there. And when I got rid of it, through sport, it took the pressure off other 🧬 areas of my life.
Amizades na equipe
Friendships on the team differ, we don't know each other's backstories
O valor da competição
This is 🧬 not the cliché of school sporting types – these adult teams are made up of strong, determined women of varying 🧬 ages, shapes, sizes and fitness who are there simply to compete in a game they love with people they respect. 🧬 It's something I thought I would never do again and in the grand scheme of things it's a very small 🧬 change – less than an hour a week – but it has categorically improved my life, perhaps even built up 🧬 my inner strength.
O jogo como fuga do stress
On top of that, there was the actual physical release of the exercise, 🧬 burning through the adrenaline of the shock and dispelling the cortisol from the stress. By the end of the game, 🧬 I was still gutted, but I had some perspective. I can't say whether I was more resilient than if I 🧬 hadn't taken up netball. But what I can say is that the game itself, and the act of playing in 🧬 that team, allowed me to escape the realities of life for enough time that I could calm down and rationalise, 🧬 so what felt devastating before was less so after. Which I suppose is exactly what emotional resilience means.