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Seeing Starting Over as an Opportunity

Have you ever reached a point in your fitness pursuits where something interfered with your progress? Starting over can be daunting, but your perspective can make a difference.

Becca Borawski

Written by Becca Borawski Last updated on Oct 19, 2021

The last six months have been a struggle for me in regards to physical activity and fitness level. While there have definitely been days my lagging fitness has gotten me down, I have decided recently to take the situation on as a possibility instead of a problem.

Like most things in life having a different experience is a matter of perspective. For me, I am looking at starting over as an opportunity.

The last six months have been a struggle for me in regards to physical activity and fitness level. While there have definitely been days my lagging fitness has gotten me down, I have decided recently to take the situation on as a possibility instead of a problem.

Like most things in life having a different experience is a matter of perspective. For me, I am looking at starting over as an opportunity.

Have you ever reached a point in your fitness or athletic pursuits where something happened to interfere with your progress? Maybe you sustained an injury that took you out of exercise or practice for a prolonged period.

Maybe you had to deal with a family emergency, got sick, had a baby, got a new job, moved to a new city, or any number of endless things that occur in life and disrupt our schedules.

It could be something we have chosen to take on, like a baby or a new job, or it could be something that just occurs, like an injury or accident. Or it could just be you got burned out and gave up on the whole thing for a little or a long while.

Regardless, something got in your way and stopped you.

And now you want to start over.

And it’s hard. Really hard.

For me, it started back in June. I was dealing with a neck and collarbone injury that caused me to experience migraines any time I performed overhead movements. I had to dial it back quite a bit in my training and restrict my exercises.

Then in July I was offered a job in Portland, Oregon, and in August I left Los Angeles after living there for fourteen years. So, there was the whole moving thing and settling in thing, and somewhere in there my shoulder became injured and I couldn’t even pick up a grocery bag without being in pain, much less lift weights.

In September through December there were all sorts of other things – pulled muscles, friends visiting, new boyfriend, parents visiting, holidays, vacations, work deadlines.

I never went a week without working out, but I was never able to keep a regular schedule. Some weeks it was one workout, some weeks it was four workouts, but I definitely lost the fitness level I once possessed.

And here’s where the actual problem came up.

I never gave myself credit for having a “good” week because I was using my old self as a yardstick. Even on a good week, where my body wasn’t in pain and I exercised three or four times, what I heard in my head was that I wasn’t in rowing competition shape, I wasn’t in CrossFit competition shape, and I wasn’t coming home with bruises from muay Thai.

I was stuck in thinking those old measurements still applied, even though everything else in my life (including my priorities) had changed.

That’s a recipe for feeling miserable about yourself. I can attest to that.

So, as I continue my journey to get “back in shape” I’ve decided my intention is to be generous with myself – to give myself credit where credit is due.

I’m not going to require myself to be the focused, goal-oriented, strategy-over-friendship athlete I once was. I don’t even want those old goals anymore. Instead I’m working on being a writer, a coach, and a truly fit and healthy person on all levels.

And there’s a really great part. I spent a lot of years being pretty darn good at a lot of stuff. When you first start things you have so much room for improvement and so many things to celebrate.

After a while, your increments of improvement get a lot smaller. The celebrations, while wonderful, are fewer and further between.

So this is the gift I’m giving myself: Being out of shape doesn’t mean anything bad. Instead, it means I get to go back to making big incremental changes again.

I get to go back to celebrating all sorts of accomplishments. Yeah, I might not be “the athlete I used to be.” But I also have a lot of space for growth now and I can probably enjoy celebrating those steps a lot more than I did the first time around.

Becca Borawski

About Becca Borawski

Becca found her way to a career in health and fitness through Martial Arts and CrossFit. Originally a music editor for film and television, Becca started studying Martial Arts in 2000. Though she started with traditional Martial Arts it was not long before she discovered Mixed Martial Arts (MMA) and her path was forever altered. She began training in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu (BJJ) and Muay Thai and started working with professional MMA fighters, building websites, working on fight promotions, and producing videos.

As a competitor in BJJ herself, Becca wanted to get stronger and fitter. In 2006 she discovered CrossFit and became a student at CrossFit Los Angeles. In only a couple of years she became CrossFit Level III Certified, left her career in the film industry, and dedicated herself full time to coaching. She has since been certified through CrossFit in Olympic Lifting, Powerlifting, Nutrition, Endurance and Kids coaching. She also held an NSCA-CSCS from 2006-2008 and is a certified IndoRow instructor. In addition to coaching adults, she founded the CrossFit LA Kids program in 2010 and taught children aged 5-17.

Becca regularly takes on new sports, which have included indoor rowing, fencing, and most recently, cycling, as she believes it makes her both a better athlete and a better coach. In order to reach more people with her coaching, Becca also created ModernAthena.com – a website dedicated to women in pursuit of physical fitness and self-improvement.

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