Importance of Fitness | Resolve

The broken man awakens. His battered body rises from a shoddy bed and staggers to the opposite side of a one room log cabin. Coals glow in the fireplace but the air is cold. On the dresser mirror the man finds a photograph. It captures his attention. His mouth falls open but he doesn’t speak. His face is fierce and unafraid, but in his eyes there is doubt and fear. If he is going to defeat the man in the picture, he has to be stronger. He has to be faster. He has to be better.

He races outside into the snow covered mountains of somewhere in Russia, and cuts down a tree, lifts a horse, and runs maybe fifty miles with an ox yoke around his neck.

That man was Sylvester Stallone.

If the 1985 blockbuster Rocky IV taught us anything, it’s that if you want to get in shape really fast, you need a training montage. Usually ninety seconds does the trick. But in the fourth installation of the Balboa franchise, the “getting ready for the big fight” sequence was eight minutes long. That’s two full songs! It was brutal. It was drawn out. It was painful. It just seemed like it was never going to end. That’s the hard truth about exercising. Exercise is work. It’s hard work.

“Actually, that was a pretty good montage,” says Brent Eno. “Some of what’s he’s doing is stuff people do every day, you know, chopping wood, using a sledge hammer… I use the sledge hammer every day, on a tire. It’s awesome. But there are lots of things we can use to exercise that are cheap: a single kettlebell, a sledgehammer, battle ropes, even just a set of dumbbells.”

Brent should know. He is the owner of CrossFit Aiken.

But if Rocky IV really taught us anything, it was that you need a trainer. A good one. Rocky needed one. Apollo Creed’s trainer, Duke, suddenly appears in the Siberian wilderness after promising “I know you think you’re gonna have to do everything by yourself, but you know, I’ll be with you.” Duke understood how to train. He was a professional. He advised on techniques, corrected improper form, and motivated Balboa to dig deep in order to champion his Soviet foe.

“You want to help people ‘get fit’ or ‘lose weight’, but those are just buzzwords,” claims Eno. “My goal is to help people improve their lives by being mindful of how they treat, and what they put in, their bodies. At its core is self control.”

Self Control. Discipline. Routine. Resolve. Maybe Eno learned that in the Air Force. Maybe it was the 14 years he spent playing competitive ice hockey.

“The biggest mistake people make is going too hard too fast. Start very slow and try to do whatever you choose to do every day. Get accustomed to it. Once you develop that habit you start incorporating new exercises and movement. From there you go on to understand proper form and alignment, and ideally you have a knowledgeable trainer to work with you, to further develop your routine.”

“Starting with something as simple as walking everyday is enough. The goal is to make that 20-30 minutes of exercise a daily habit. We are creatures of habit and once we develop a routine, especially one that gives you an endorphin release, we tend to stick to that routine.”

But it’s not all about the gym. Brent admits that, “Working out is only 25% of fitness. The other 75% is eating right, sleeping well, hydrating, stretching, even meditation helps.”

Yes, that sounds like a lot to take in. Maybe it’s too much for some folks to process. But If we’re truly honest with ourselves, we have to admit — if we, as a nation, have learned anything … anything at all … from Rocky IV, it came from the final moments, when Balboa was addressing the crowds of Moscow, and he said, “If I can change, and you can change, then everybody can change.”

Importance of Fitness | Resolve | Aiken Bella Magazine

Picture of Matthew Wynn

Matthew Wynn

Matthew Wynn was born in Pennsylvania, grew up in Texas and attended college in Maine and Oregon. He has been an after-school director, a baker, a cook, and a tour-manager for his best friend’s punk rock band. The son of Alan Maclay (a proprietor of Cold Creek Nursery) and Phyllis Maclay (a noted Bella author), he is the oldest and most charming of his five siblings. Matthew is an awesome husband and is super modest. He enjoys the ironic, most things sarcastic, and at times, the sardonic. He is also a dog-person.
Picture of Matthew Wynn

Matthew Wynn

Matthew Wynn was born in Pennsylvania, grew up in Texas and attended college in Maine and Oregon. He has been an after-school director, a baker, a cook, and a tour-manager for his best friend’s punk rock band. The son of Alan Maclay (a proprietor of Cold Creek Nursery) and Phyllis Maclay (a noted Bella author), he is the oldest and most charming of his five siblings. Matthew is an awesome husband and is super modest. He enjoys the ironic, most things sarcastic, and at times, the sardonic. He is also a dog-person.

In the know

Related Stories

Celebrate Love | The History and Traditions of Valentine’s Day | Aiken Bella Magazine

Celebrate Love | The History and Traditions of Valentine’s Day

Allow me to be among the many (hopefully for you it’s many) to wish you a Happy Valentine’s Day. For those of you who have great Valentine traditions in place, and look forward positively to celebrating the day with that special someone — CONGRATULATIONS! Given the popularity of the day, you are in the vast majority. For those that haven’t enjoyed the same level of long-term celebration on that day, allow me to shed some light on the challenges we face and the history of how those challenges have evolved. (Note, facts of history are always open to subjective interpretation. Some of those liberties have been exercised by the author.)

Read More »
Bella Fella | La ballade de Kelvin Jenkins | Aiken Bella Magazine

Bella Fella | La ballade de Kelvin Jenkins

acte un Once upon a time, let’s say 1985, back when kids still played outside, A boy named Kelvin Jenkins could be seen ‘round town, out for a bike ride. South Boundary was his preferred path; how he wished to someday live on that road. So he vowed to own a house under those sleepy oak trees, someday, perhaps, when he was old. Then he’d pedal on home, to his family and kin, where he’d play with his neighbor and best buddy, Jimjim. “My dad,” Kelvin tells me, “he almost went into the NBA. He was a basketball star; he’s even up on the wall at the Etherredge Center. And

Read More »
Discipline + Purpose | Aiken Bella Magazine

Discipline + Purpose

Discipline — what a great characteristic to start off the year 2020. Discipline is having the desire and will to execute actions with vision and purpose over all other options, and it’s having the self control to overcome temptation. Discipline is self mastery, and it takes heart, effort, and will to complete. It’s matching your actions to your beliefs. Discipline makes the difference between greatness and mediocrity. Discipline is related to greatness, and lives between doing the right thing over doing what you want to do and doing what you don’t want to do because it’s the right thing. I do not know any living person on earth today who

Read More »
Bella Fella | What’s up, Doc? | Aiken Bella Magazine

Bella Fella | What’s up, Doc?

A Fan Fiction Interview I’ll bet Dr. Tiffany has more awards than your doctor. I don’t say that to put your doctor down, I’m just saying, the man has accolades. He’s been recognized by multiple peer and community organizations for his dedication to his clients, his community, and for his sweet dance moves.* Ask around Aiken — those who know him take their kids to him. Those who take their kids to him swear by him. I even asked my mom, and she went on for like 10 minutes about how great the good Doc is. But I’ve never met Dr. Tiffany. I’ve never had a doctor friend. So most,

Read More »