48 MAY 2017
HEALTH
Full House
Nothing crowds a calendar like a house teeming with kids. Here’s
how one dad is planning to shoe-horn sweat into his schedule
[BY ANDREW McUTCHEN]
YOUR CONCEPT OF TIMEchanges when you
have kids. Settling a crying child reminds you
just how punishingly long 15 minutes can
be. An hour to yourself is the most cherished
of things. And a couple of quiet beers with a
mate is as golden as the liquid itself.
Having your time monopolised by a
suckling creature leads to a stocktake of all
time spent. From there, cuts are made. One
of the first things to go is travel time. Pardon
the dadbod pun, but I found the time around
a gym visit, rather than the session itself,
was the “fat” in my schedule. There was an
hour a day, all things told, I could get back if I
found another way.
The obvious solution was a home gym. But
unlike Chris Hemsworth, I don’t have a spare
wing for an all-body fitness palace. I have
a four-bedroom house (heaving with three
children and a wife) on 700 square metres
with no garage. Ingenuity is the key to the
modern home gym. We were in the midst of
renovations at the time, so I finagled a small
shelter attached to the back of the house for
the basics.
Now I needed to get serious about the kind
of exercise I was doing – and the equipment
I’d need. The days of long, loping runs on
nearby Beach Road were well and truly over.
Hell, the Robin Sharma method of “Be Wise,
Early Rise” doesn’t hold true when you’re
rising every few hours through the night to
salve bad dreams, change nappies or dream
feed a blob. A new dad is well advised to
stock up on sleep when and where (couch,
toddler bed, floor next to cot) you can get it.
I asked around about the ultimate bang-
for-buck exercises. I reflected on the best
shape I’d ever been in (Facebook can be so
cruel with its reminders of the pre-kids you)
and what I’d been doing at the time. I came
up with a boxing bag (as far away from the
kids’ bedrooms as possible), an exercise bike
(it’s noiseless, so easy to punch out while the
screamers sleep), some free weights (also in
the shelter), and – in a desperate bid to use
some soon-to-expire Frequent Flyer points
- a sleek water rower like the one Kevin
Spacey uses inHouse of Cards. No doubt it
will look even more stylish when it’s been
heavily graffitied by a range of crayons and
permanent Textas.
You’ll note that when you’re living the
#dadlife it’s not just about maximising
kilojoule burn – it’s also about minimising
noise. Battle ropes? Forget it. Med-ball
slams? No chance. But, to be completely
transparent, I’m not sure how whisper quiet
the water rower will be because it’s, um, still
in the box. Why? I calculate I’ll need at least
one day for installation and then I’ll need to
actually, you know, use it. Rowing? Shudder.
After all, this war is ongoing, and as General
Sherman so eloquently phrased it, war is hell.
‘‘When you’re living
the #dadlife it’s
not just about
maximising kilojoule
burn – it’s also about
minimising noise”
BACKYARD BLITZ
According toMHNext Top
Trainer winner Ethan Hyde, for
maximum burn in minimum
time, nothing beats the brutal
Tabata protocol (20 secs on,
10 secs off, repeat 8 times).
Cycle through the below four
exercises twice for one circuit.
Complete 3 circuits total,
resting 2 mins between each.
ROWING
Aimtoclockatleast100m
KETTLEBELL SWINGS
Aim for 12 reps with a 20kg ’bell
BOXING
Keep punches long and straight
CYCLING
Ramp up the resistance and
get out of the saddle
PHOTOGRAPHY: PHILIP LE MASURIER