Let’s Go Walking! Join me for a virtual walking support group
Many of you living with cancer or an autoimmune disease, like me, deal with daily fatigue. You know that exercise is so important to your health, but it’s so hard. There’s always an excuse: it’s too cold or hot, it’s going to rain or it’s raining, or it’s snowy and icy, or I just don’t want to. I, too, have all these excuses, but I have a new rescue dog who wants to go out and who doesn’t care about my excuses! And I’ve got traction devices for my boots.Now I just need a walking group who will keep me accountable. People who say, ‘let’s go for a walk.'
And I thought: What about my virtual friends on MayoClinicConnect?
Mayo Clinic has an easy 12-week walking program to get us started! Here’s the link:
- Get walking with this 12-week walking schedule https://newsnetwork.mayoclinic.org/discussion/get-walking-with-this-12-week-walking-schedule/
So let’s form a virtual walking group. We can agree to walk every day and encourage each other through Connect. We can walk outdoors, in a mall, or in the red center, or in the hallways of our apartment building.
Who’s in? Who’s going to join me?
Come on, Let’s Go Walking!
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Just Want to Talk Support Group.
@jenniferhunter, What great news that you are beginning to walk more now! Baby Steps count big time and any success is definitely worth a celebration. That said (and meant, very big grin!), How about sending over some of that delicious peach pie with a few blue berry muffins thrown in with a couple of macaroons for desert???? Wow! Is this what normal feels like for you??? Amazing Gracie! A new destination for walkers: Jennifer's house!!!
Another that I had forgotten about “pick up sticks” a definite yes. We also played “gobble gobble” with a few or a fist full of marbles. I still have the marbles that were my mothers and plan to teach my grandson, virtually, since I have shared some with him in Baltimore.
I picked a cattail on my walk the other day, then I looked it up on google to see what I could tell my grandson and learned so much myself about what the seeds, pillowy white stuff and reeds were all used for by the American Indians. He loved the virtual lesson.
Now, on my walks I try to come up with other ideas. Planning a trip to Wabasha, Mn this week to see if I can video some eagles.
@jude07 Here's an idea (I was walking a DNR trail in Northern MN this morning) - those big round burrs make great natural "legos." Tomorrow I will grab a bagful to take home for playing with my grandsons. When I was a kid, we made dolls, clowns, towers and lots of things from them with my Grandma. The spines on them cling to each other, but don't really poke fingers. We also collected milkweed pods to dry & blow the seeds away. Just be careful of the poison ivy - it is everywhere this year - even found some in our local city park and had to call maintenance because it was near the disc golf basket.
My morning walk was a symphony for the senses today - walked a DNR trail between two lakes and say dozens of varieties of wildflowers, a little wildlife and other early-bird walkers. I heard the birds, squirrels, frogs, cicadas, water rushing over rocks between lakes, even a loon. And the smells - flowers, pine trees, the water, even the somewhat funky smell of the mud at water's edge.
I came "home" with a great sense of peace and well-being. This little trip "to the lake" is indeed a blessing.
Sue
Thanks Sue, I would have never thought of the burrs to make something out of. I just remember picking them off my clothing like they were a nuisance. I would say you made lemonade out of lemons.
Last evening I went to walk along the creek in the woods to do some "forest bathing" and my walk sounds very much like yours. Are you in Northern MN? I am. I used to live in the Rockies and that creek, when it's full after several downpours, can match any creek I've seen in the mountains. Fortunately, the RA doesn't keep me from such walks.
I just read another of your posts and see that you ARE in Northern MN. I'm in Duluth 1-1/2 blocks from Chester Creek. I need to remember my mask since the trails along there are very popular.
@jude07 I lived on a farm too, not now though. I never thought of pounding them on the cement. One funny thing I did though was took a BB gun and went behind the hen house and tried to shoot the sparrows. I don't think it shot straight, never got one.
I'm glad you didn't manage to shoot a sparrow although sparrows are very mean to bluebirds, I've heard.
@lilypaws. I have been reading about all the childhood games and toys you all wrote about, sure miss the good old days when life was so simple, kids were happy just climbing trees and kicking balls. I remember playing marbles, cap guns were boy's toy. My brother had one. I have the paper dolls and cut out dresses. Not sure if anyone remember that.