Saturday, March 5, 2016

Week 1 Goals

Okay - desk was ready.  Now I needed some goals.  I researched to see if there were guidelines.  Are there limits to how much time a person should use a treadmill desk?  I couldn't find anything so I decided to look at my daily schedule and see what would work.

I decided that since my work day started at 7 and my earliest meetings started at 9 that 2 hours was a good goal to set.  I would work each day from 7 to 9 on my treadmill and then set up shop somewhere on my butt for the rest of the day.

On the first day I spent some time loading the desk up with things that I would need.  My laptop and cord, my cell phone and charger, the house phone, tv remote, protein shake and water.  I jumped on, still in my PJs and socks and I was off.   I set the speed initially to 1.5 and settled in.  This was a pace of 40 minute mile, I was going nowhere slow.  But it was a good speed to get my sea legs.  I quickly found that I needed a straw for my protein shake, thankfully I am not a coffee drinker because I am not sure what the solution is for drinking hot beverages while walking.  I suppose a travel mug is the solution but can't speak from experience there.  I also needed a note pad and pen.  So off to get those.  Wow writing was difficult but doable - just not very neat.  Armed with a straw, paper and pen I was smoothly off and working.

Time flew by.

I have had my treadmill for probably 10 years.  I have logged very little time.  I just hate the sound of it when I run - and I can't seem to set it to a comfortable pace.  I was constantly looking down to see how far I had gone and I was always disappointed in my pace and my distance.  I was much better at running outside so that I could set distance goals that I could see. So in the past the treadmill was just not something that worked for me.

This was completely different, by the time I had gone through my overnight emails and my normal morning routine I had been walking for 45 minutes.  I was amazed.  I kept going and I think the next time I looked up 80 minutes in the books.  This was a breeze.

Until - the treadmill stopped.  I thought perhaps I had burned out my 10 year old treadmill.  I decided that I should let it rest and call it a day.

The next day - same thing - it was easy going and time was flying and then my treadmill stopped.  I decided that there must have been an auto shut off at 90 minutes and this time I cautiously restarted it and hoped for the best.  I was back in business.

Day 3 - I decided to really pay attention when I got to the 90 minute mark - and noticed that I went right past it - so it wasn't a 90 minute auto-shut off.  Big AHA moment for me - it was stopping at 99:59 because the display didn't have room for triple digit minutes.  The treadmill just didn't realize how much of a bad ass working walker I am!

Day 4 - I was actually dressed for walking, except my feet, still just socks.  I went 200 minutes.  My writing was steady and I was really in the groove.

Day 5 - I went 300 minutes - but my feet were really killing me.  I have always been one to exercise in bare feet.  I figure that my feet were better off on their own rather than in shoes.  But this was not a normal amount of exercise and treadmills are not exactly comforting on the feet.  At the end of day 5 I decided shoes would be part of the routine next week.


So in the first week I logged 800 minutes, 13.3 hours.  At my pace that is 20 miles.  I was feeling pretty good.

Here are my take aways:

  • Straws are a must
  • Treadmill stops at 100 minutes 
    • I used this break to change laundry, feed the chickens, let the dogs out and refill my water
  • Time flies
  • 2 hours is nothing
  • Shoes are needed
  • PJs are not great for that much walking (at least they aren't if you have normal sized thighs like I do)
  • You want to tell everyone you are on your treadmill desk
    • It is so cool you want to announce it to everyone
  • Walking makes you stinky
    • Daily showers are kind of nice.

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