I share many of the problems with exercise that you have, especially the overheating and the boredom.
My solution to the sweating problem is to pick out clothes that are ‘okay to sweat in’, go for a run, then wash the clothes and have a shower immediately. I experience being sweaty as being very unpleasant, but with the attitude of “in these clothes, that doesn’t matter”, I can get around that.
I find that podcasts are much better than audiobooks for exercise—they give variety and a breadth of topics in the event that I’m not in the mood for a particular audiobook. I subscribe to some news podcasts, anime/movie review, comedy, philosophy, sociology, hacking and short-story podcasts, and if I grow tired of one, I always have something else to distract me.
Really bare-bones mp3 players can be bought here for 15 units of local currency, so with rechargable batteries, that isn’t a good reason. Most phones can play mp3s, and come with free headsets.
My solution to the sweating problem is to pick out clothes that are ‘okay to sweat in’, go for a run, then wash the clothes and have a shower immediately. I experience being sweaty as being very unpleasant, but with the attitude of “in these clothes, that doesn’t matter”, I can get around that.
It’s a textural issue, not an attitudinal one.
Really bare-bones mp3 players can be bought here for 15 units of local currency, so with rechargable batteries, that isn’t a good reason. Most phones can play mp3s, and come with free headsets.
The object is to get around my reasons, not dismiss them as bad reasons. Also, I don’t have a phone.
The object is to get around my reasons, not dismiss them as bad reasons.
I understand that that’s the object, but I hope you aren’t excluding the possibility that some of your reasons—or anyone’s reasons—might actually be bad reasons. That’s a concern I have with this whole post: it could be a net rationality loss if you let your attitude shift from “I will do X if objections W, Y and Z are overcome,” to “I will do X if and only if etc.”
It is certainly possible that some reasons are bad. When people have presented options as partial solutions, I am in some cases willing to meet those partial solutions halfway. But “It only costs $X and it’s a functionality that comes with $OBJECT so that can’t be too much even though I know nothing about your finances or why you want free options” is not a responsive answer to my complaint that things cost money. X ≠ 0 and I don’t have $OBJECT already.
I share many of the problems with exercise that you have, especially the overheating and the boredom.
My solution to the sweating problem is to pick out clothes that are ‘okay to sweat in’, go for a run, then wash the clothes and have a shower immediately. I experience being sweaty as being very unpleasant, but with the attitude of “in these clothes, that doesn’t matter”, I can get around that.
I find that podcasts are much better than audiobooks for exercise—they give variety and a breadth of topics in the event that I’m not in the mood for a particular audiobook. I subscribe to some news podcasts, anime/movie review, comedy, philosophy, sociology, hacking and short-story podcasts, and if I grow tired of one, I always have something else to distract me.
Really bare-bones mp3 players can be bought here for 15 units of local currency, so with rechargable batteries, that isn’t a good reason. Most phones can play mp3s, and come with free headsets.
It’s a textural issue, not an attitudinal one.
The object is to get around my reasons, not dismiss them as bad reasons. Also, I don’t have a phone.
I understand that that’s the object, but I hope you aren’t excluding the possibility that some of your reasons—or anyone’s reasons—might actually be bad reasons. That’s a concern I have with this whole post: it could be a net rationality loss if you let your attitude shift from “I will do X if objections W, Y and Z are overcome,” to “I will do X if and only if etc.”
It is certainly possible that some reasons are bad. When people have presented options as partial solutions, I am in some cases willing to meet those partial solutions halfway. But “It only costs $X and it’s a functionality that comes with $OBJECT so that can’t be too much even though I know nothing about your finances or why you want free options” is not a responsive answer to my complaint that things cost money. X ≠ 0 and I don’t have $OBJECT already.
You know that wasn’t me, right?
Didn’t say it was.