When it comes to regular exercise, a lot of people aren’t moving much. Despite being nagged by their loved ones and hearing enough “rah, rah” slogans to last a lifetime, they remain overwhelmed by motivational challenges. Evidence-based research indicates that those people who are not overwhelmed, and who instead develop the motivation to get moving and keep moving, tend to have six important elements working for them: (1) hopes of long-term “benefits” from exercise; (2) choices of exercises that are within their current ability levels; (3) short-term benefits from exercise (including enjoyment and satisfaction) that exceed short-term “costs” (including discomfort and fatigue); (4) ways to reduce or eliminate exercise-related conflicts and inconveniences; (5) ways to overcome common obstacles to exercise routines; and (6) ways to adjust exercise routines to changing circumstances. Many people view motivational problems as character flaws. Dr. Trimble disagrees. Instead, he views society as often failing to teach us how to put the above six elements into play. Learning how on your own can be a pretty tall order. Drawing from evidence-based research, his years of work as a clinical psychologist, and his experiences as a life-long fitness practitioner, Dr. Trimble has written MOTIVATION FOR EXERCISE to help fill the gap.
The Title Delivers My friend Raphael passed this book on to me. I found it thoroughly readable, logically sequenced and (happily) non-clinical. It is impossible for any serious reader of The Guide to internalize it without deep reflection of one’s current personal well-being. I will stop short of calling it the thinking-man’s-guide-to-motivation, but in a sense it was for me. My biggest takeaway was the debt owed Dr. Trimble’s years of counseling service for affixing verbal tags to notions, feelings, strategies,…