People Running

Joy Through Exercise

On the 鈥淔itMawrter鈥 Facebook page, late-blooming athletes are having fun while getting stronger.

"I owe my Bryn Mawr degree to Jen Shillingford,鈥 says Irene Segal Ayers 鈥82, who credits the compassionate former director of athletics for letting the 鈥渙verweight, chain-smoking English major鈥 fulfill her entire gym requirement during second semester, senior year.

Now an Ironman triathlete, marathoner, hiker, and backpacker, Ayers quit smoking by temporarily switching to candy (鈥淔or the health effects of obesity to be as bad as smoking, you鈥檇 need to weigh over 300 pounds,鈥 she reasoned), then dropped the weight she gained and gradually got fit by doing what she loves.

鈥淚鈥檝e never liked team sports鈥攂ut as a kid, I loved biking, swimming, and running,鈥 she says. Exercise eased the stress of career and family demands as Ayers jogged, then ran, then raced her way to middle age. Training for her first triathlon, she rode her bike in the hardest gear 鈥渂ecause I didn鈥檛 know how to change gears! This was a rediscovery.鈥

鈥淚 don鈥檛 care what other people think, I don鈥檛 care if I don鈥檛 look good in Spandex, and I don鈥檛 care if I finish in last place."

The FitMawrter Facebook group is full of such women, rebooting their personal strength and joy through exercise. If the group had a motto, it might be Ayers鈥檚 response to my query, loosely translated from Latin: 鈥淚 don鈥檛 care what other people think, I don鈥檛 care if I don鈥檛 look good in Spandex, and I don鈥檛 care if I finish in last place. [No, that's not true. I still care, but I鈥檝e learned to adjust my goals鈥攁 last-place finish in an Ironman is still an Ironman finish].鈥 To a desk-dweller like me, their resolve is impressive. But what鈥檚 surprising is the source of the group鈥檚 camaraderie: a contagious sense of humor and fun.

鈥淎t this age, it doesn鈥檛 matter if I look foolish. It's about having fun while getting stronger,鈥 says Carol Bergstresser Quick 鈥90, who reinvented herself from an 鈥渦ncoordinated and introverted鈥 college student terrified of public speaking to a fitness instructor leading classes in weight lifting, yoga (with Pilates), and indoor cycling at Gold鈥檚 Gym. For the former computer programmer with a master鈥檚 degree in public policy, her son鈥檚 long-term illness necessitated a job with flexibility. 鈥淕etting certified in Body Pump was harder for me than graduate school!鈥 she says. 鈥淭his is a new way to use my brain.鈥

Of the mental hurdles she cleared to join her first group fitness class鈥攁nd later, to lead鈥攕he says, 鈥淚 had so many misconceptions about what fitness was and what a fit person looks like. I thought, I can鈥檛 be on stage (teaching) unless I look better than I look now! That was a complete fallacy. I鈥檓 not graceful, but I鈥檓 willing to try anything. I鈥檝e found power being in front of people and having them listen to me.鈥

鈥淢y happiness is cued to swing dancing,鈥 says Cynthia Burr Ramsey 鈥92, who took it up at 40, while dating after her divorce. An accomplished clarinetist and Night Owls vocalist in college, Ramsey couldn鈥檛 suppress her impulse to move while playing or singing. 鈥淚鈥檓 enthusiastic, loud, and vivacious,鈥 she says. 鈥淚鈥檝e been a dancer all along鈥擨 just didn鈥檛 realize all the different types of bodies dancers could have.鈥

Devoted to a style called West Coast Swing, she prefers this 鈥渃onversational鈥 form to ballroom dance, in which the 鈥渓ead鈥 gives directions that the 鈥渇ollow鈥 executes. The 鈥渋ntensely social connections鈥 swing dance inspires remind her of her a cappella days; long experience listening and responding as voices blend to create sound gives her sure footing as she communicates physically through dance.

鈥淭he quicker you and your partner can pick up on what you鈥檙e telling each other with your bodies, the more fun it is,鈥 she says.

Now, managing a new job, coursework towards an MBA, a relationship, and family demands, Ramsey still tries to dance every week. 鈥淢y great epiphany was understanding how dance affects me socially and psychologically. This is where I find the most joy and freedom.鈥

Midlife offers an opportunity to refit our lives to our aspirations; to borrow a computer metaphor, new values won鈥檛 be in force until we reboot. 鈥淚 used to think that I had to do something really big and important, but I didn鈥檛 know what that was,鈥 says Carol Quick, whose clients convey her work鈥檚 significance with their gratitude.

For Cindy Ramsey, the satisfaction dance brings isn鈥檛 an end but a means to measure engagement she seeks off the dance floor. She speaks for many of us when she says, 鈥淢y life is a search for the kind of intense, joyful connection I first found at Bryn Mawr.鈥

Published on: 09/16/2017