I have a confession to make: I am afraid of the treadmill.
You’re laughing. I can hear you. “It’s just like walking,” you say. “If you can walk, you can use a treadmill.” I am living proof that this is incorrect. God help me, I have never mastered this piece of equipment. No matter how hard I try, I can’t get the pace right, so I’m either scrambling like a hamster in a wheel that’s moving far too fast, or I’m slowly lumbering along, like I should be wearing a flannel shirt and have a blue ox trailing behind. And god help me when it’s time to slow the thing down and get off! I’m convinced that I’ll end up planted face-first on the ground.

I fear that I would be less graceful, ending up in a mangled heap on the floor.
I’ve never been a fan of the treadmill, but this fear has only increased with time. I have a vision of stepping at just the wrong angle and sailing off the back of this machine in front of everyone, like in some terrible Saturday Night Live sketch. This is how I’ve come to be particularly fond of the stationary bikes and the elliptical machine.
But none of these pieces of equipment will work with my beloved Nike+ sensor, which only registers the pounding gait of walking or running. I started using this to train for my second half marathon in 2008, and I just love it. I used it all the time back in the warmer, drier weather when outdoor workouts were possible. Integration of my iPod music, miles and workout tracking is fantastic, plus you get this little voice telling you that you’ve had your best time or best distance ever.
But now that I’ve had a winter without it, I struggle with the idea of returning to it. Will the little voice ask me where the heck I’ve been? I want to tell her that I’ve been working out — no really, I swear! — but that my workouts haven’t been compatible with the little magical accelerometer in the sensor. I want her validation and positive feedback for the 30 minutes that I spent on the elliptical this morning. I want credit for the miles that I’ve gone this winter. I just don’t want it quite enough to try the treadmill.
So when the winter rains finally give way to springtime sun, and I once again hit the streets with my Nike+, I hope that the little voice will be welcoming. But I have this sneaking fear that she’ll calmly ask me where I’ve been and why the heck I couldn’t use the treadmill.
In our continuing mission to provide you with something to do during the work day other than work, we at The Daily Procrastinator published a tantalizing batch of articles this week. This is your chance to make sure that you didn’t miss a thing.
FlashCap led off the week with A Man’s Guide To Mama Mia, in which he chronicles the pains (and, surprisingly, the joys) of the male experience of watching a musical which is primarily concerned with relationship foibles and ABBA. Later in the week, FlashCap confessed his love of comic books and defended comics as much more than tales for children.
TallGirl’s contributions for the week began with an Open Letter To The Woman At The Gym, celebrating the struggles and accomplishments of an anonymous stranger. TallGirl’s discerning eye also fell upon the relative costs and benefits of organic foods, the oddities and perils which await the frequent traveler, and the possible unforseen fallout from the birth of Nadya Suleman’s octuplets.
BigRedPoet weighed in this week with a suggestion that adults take a break from their “serious” reading and venture into the world of unexpectedly well-written young-adult novels. As ever, BigRedPoet also issued the weekly wrap-up.
Visit The Daily Procrastinator at any of the links above and sign up to receive daily email updates so you never miss an article!
The Daily Procrastinator: Contributing to the Dramatic Reduction of Your Personal Productivity