Detournement: By your own description, your blog came to be when you and Tracy set a goal to be the fittest you've ever been by the
time you turn 50. As that date approaches for both of you this late summer and fall, how do you feel about your fitness?
Sam B: I’m
a more well-rounded person that I was at other life stages. There were
times when I was a faster runner and there
were times when I was a faster cyclist but in those times that one thing
was all that I did. I’m stronger now, more resilient. I’m loving
CrossFit and my martial arts training in addition to cycling and
running. I spent a season rowing and loved that too. I
feel more ready to take on new things. It’s harder to measure fitness
when you’re doing lots of things but I’m okay with that too.
D: Was fitness and health always a concern and/or part of your lifestyle, or did they develop into a routine as you got older?
SB: I regret very much that I didn’t discover athletic me until adulthood. Growing up in the 70s it seemed you could be smart
or sporty but not both. I was an avid reader and I excelled in school and didn’t give sports a second thought. (See http://fitisafeministissue.com/2012/11/02/indoor-soccer-team-sports-and-childhood-regrets/.)
Of
course, come teen years and early adulthood there were many years of
dieting and trying to be a certain size Once I gave that up I decided
that if I was going to be bigger than average I was going to be fitter
and stronger too. I started running in the years
around my 40th birthday, cycling shortly after that and so it began!
D: Were you blogging before you started this particular blog?
D: Were you blogging before you started this particular blog?
SB: Yes, I blog with The Feminist Philosophers Blog, http://feministphilosophers.wordpress.com/
and other places too. A complete list is at http://samjaneb.tumblr.com/blogs.
Here’s a sample blog post not about fitness! http://peasoup.typepad.com/peasoup/2009/08/performance-evaluations-in-an-entrepreneurial-work-culture.html
D: What led you to start receiving contributions from other writers to your blog, and was it your intention from the beginning?
SB: Well,
at first we thought it would just be us but then friends started
suggesting ideas, we’ve developed a strong community
of readers on which we can draw, and it turns out we’re not alone. There
are lots of women who identify as feminists thinking about fitness and
how it fits into their lives. We typically know the people who guest
post for us—either through the academic world
or through the blog—and we have one or two guest posts a week. I love
our guest posts!
D: Do you think you are reaching your intended target audience? Is there a target audience?
D: Do you think you are reaching your intended target audience? Is there a target audience?
SB: Yes and no. We reach lots of academics and fitness oriented people but I’d like to reach more into the community of women
who aren’t quite there yet either in terms of feminism or fitness and help them find a way in.
D: Do you feel your pursuit of and education about fitness has changed your feminist perspective at all? How about your philosophical perspective(s)?
D: Do you feel your pursuit of and education about fitness has changed your feminist perspective at all? How about your philosophical perspective(s)?
SB: Well, as we say on the blog “But
we’re
also feminists and philosophers, so we want to ask: what does it mean
to be fit? What are appropriate measures for the goal? And, from a
feminist perspective, in what way(s) does women’s quest for fitness and
health contribute to empowerment and/or oppression.”
Sometimes it might mean we over think things! But hey, that’s what we do.
D: Cycling, of course, is what drew me to your blog, but you engage in so many more physical activities. Could you list a few (or all!) and explain their importance for you?
SB: In terms of cycling, I’m a road cyclist first and foremost though I also own a cyclocross bike, a mountain bike, a track
bike, and a fixed gear commuting bike.
But I also love Aikido, which is a very beautiful martial art. I’m training for my 4th
kyu test (so I’m a middle rank). I love it for self defense reasons. I
love the community. And there is something very empowering about
spending an evening throwing large men around in the dojo. I say that in
a joking tone but I’m serious about the empowerment
part. I’m more comfortable with my size and strength and how my body
moves. The practise of Aikido has changed the way I am in the world both
on and off the mat.
I
started CrossFit a couple of years ago in the cycling off season and I
love the intensity. I’ve always lifted weights
but it can be lonely as a woman in the weight room. At CrossFit there
are lots of women and many of them are stronger than me. I love that. I
also like the variety. There’s something new almost everyday and I
really think there is something right about the
functional fitness idea.
Oh, and I play soccer recreationally. But that’s mostly for fun, with friends from my neighbourhood.
D: Which type of exercise/training is your favorite, and would you consider it to be the most fun out of all of them?
D: Which type of exercise/training is your favorite, and would you consider it to be the most fun out of all of them?
SB: Cycling! There is something about going fast on my bike that makes me smile. I feel like a little kid again. Whee!
D: Have you faced any serious challenges and/or setbacks on the way to your goal, and if so, how did you overcome them/it?
D: Have you faced any serious challenges and/or setbacks on the way to your goal, and if so, how did you overcome them/it?
SB: Oh,
stress fractures a few years back. Too much running, too soon. And the
hard part was that they took me out of all
physical activity for 6-8 weeks each time. The downside of seeing a
sports medicine doctor is that they know too much about what we do. I
asked if I could ride my bike and he said, “Yes, but no big gears, no
hills, no sprinting, and if you can’t do that stay
off the bike.”
D: What advice would you give to another woman having a similar setback?
D: What advice would you give to another woman having a similar setback?
SB: Build slowly!
D: What fitness products/gear have you discovered you really like to use, and what ones have you gotten rid of, if any?
D: What fitness products/gear have you discovered you really like to use, and what ones have you gotten rid of, if any?
SB: I’m a big fan of heart rate monitors and bike computers. Love my Garmin.
D: This might come off as silly, but do you think there is a different perception of exercise/fitness in Canada than in the US, or do you think both countries are roughly the same in this regard?
D: This might come off as silly, but do you think there is a different perception of exercise/fitness in Canada than in the US, or do you think both countries are roughly the same in this regard?
SB: First,
Americans tend to be either into things in an over the top way or not
into them at all. I notice that the US is
the land of the super fit and the land of people who don’t exercise at
all. It’s very much a “go big or stay home” kind of place. There’s less
room for the person who wants a little bit of everyday exercise.
Second,
the biggest difference isn’t between Canada and the US but between
Canada and the US, on the one hand, and Australia
and NZ, on the other. The latter have a much more participatory sports
culture. There are more Masters athletes and more club level racing.
Racing isn’t just for the elite cyclists there.
D: I was wondering if you could elaborate on the last one,
which I found really intriguing and others might, too. Have you had
first-hand experience of the sports culture in that part of Oceania?
Is it a part of your research interest? Do you think feminism plays a
role in NZ and AUS' more inclusionary behavior in sports?
SB: I've done visiting academic gigs in
Australia and New Zealand. I was a Visiting Faculty Fellow, Social and
Political Theory, Research School of Social Sciences, The Australian
National University, September-December 2011, 2007-2008. From Sept to Dec
2011 I was
a Visiting Faculty Fellow in Philosophy, RSSS, The Australian National
University in Canberra, Australia. From Jan-June 2012 I was a Taylor
Fellow in Philosophy and a Visiting Fellow in Bioethics at the
University of Otago in Dunedin, New Zealand.
In Australia, at ANU, I met up with the Vikings, http://vikingscycling.org.au/home/
and did their Novice program and then later rode with their women's
group, the Valkyries. I raced time trials, road races, and
crits and generally had a blast. The racing culture there was very
inclusive. For example, for crits they had Women's A, B, and C grades
whereas here we often just have Men's A and B and women race with Men's
B. There were lots of Masters women and young women
too. In Dunedin, New Zealand (land of crazy big hills!) I hooked up with Women on Wheels, a track cycling group, http://www.cyclingotago.co.nz/customdata/index.cfm?fuseaction=display_text_listing&CategoryID=12690&itemLayout=2&headerselector=3&OrgID=6359. Again, there were loads of opportunities to race and to train that we just don't have here.
Why the difference? The culture generally in both Australia and New Zealand seemed much more active, sporty, and outdoorsy. Racing seemed like a normal part of life, no matter what your sport.
Aaaaand.....I don't really know how to end these things. Mainly because I don't really want them to end! I feel the discussion could keep going and going and going....Well, that is sort of the intention, isn't it?
Please feel free to check out any and all links that Sam provided in this interview, and let's keep going!
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