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Getting Started With an Exercise Bike
It is usually around the New Year that I begin noticing how fat I’ve become.
The holiday season goes very well for me, in fact so well, that towards the draw
of the New Year, I often have to deal with a spare tire around my midriff. It is
at times like these that I am tempted to buy an exercise bike.
I got my first exercise bike over a decade ago. It was a fairly simple piece of
machinery. It looked like one half of a regular bike. And it was mechanically
operated, with a simple belted-up gear contraption that you tightened by hand as
you went along. I spent more time staring at that first exercise bike than
actually using it for what it was meant and it slowly but steadily faded away
from my memory. Until this New Year came about and I decided to get myself
another exercise bike.
There’s a health and fitness store just around the corner from where I live and
I went there to seek out my exercise bike. Upon entering and asking the manager
where the exercise bike section was, I was guided to the second floor of the
store, where – I’m not kidding – the entire floor area was devoted to exercise
bikes! Boy had I missed out on the exercise bike trend or what! But what I
discovered next convinced me that I was too far removed from the exercise bike
culture to ever hope to stage a comeback.
You see the exercise bike I used to own was an antique now, doomed to a musty
life in some fitness museum. The new age exercise bikes were radically different
beings. For one thing, the word ‘simplicity’ or the phrase ‘ease of use’ seemed
to have been thrown out of the window when these new age exercise bikes were
designed. None, I repeat, none of them were simple to understand, much less
operate. There were exercise bikes with motorized resistance, bikes with
magnetic resistance, even more exercise bikes with wind load resistance and even
friction-free resistance! What ever happened to the plain old resistance belt?
Anyways, that was just the tip of the iceberg. Seems most of the new age
exercise bikes needed to be plugged up to the power source as they came with
in-built computers which monitored everything from your heart rate to the rate
of your toe-nail eroding on the tread (I’m kidding!). Anyways, they needed a
power source to run the array of sensors that the exercise bike employed to
monitor various bodily functions and rates. Most of them had a digital display
LCD, electronic monitor charts for time, speed, distance and calories, pulse
monitors, heart-rate monitors and a whole range of allied equipment.
This made me wonder. If I was going to spend all my time hooking up these allied
monitors to various extremities of my body, where was I ever going to find the
time to actually get on to the exercise bike and… exercise?
This page was last updated on
Tuesday, August 22, 2006
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