Sunday, March 31, 2019

Movements for the Middle-Aged, Straight-Up Range Brag


In my ongoing effort to not completely come apart at the seams physically in middle age, I had my second session with my personal trainer last Monday. This one was much more in-depth. At the initial consultation, we had a non-argument in which I told him that I can’t do squats, and he calmly but immediately contradicted me. This session…we did squats. Which I was extremely anxious about. But he was patient about it. He’s turning out to be a good trainer for a feeb like me. He’s soft-spoken and thoughtful in his approach and hyper-attuned to my comfort level. At some point, I must have winced or something, because he stopped everything and told me, “There will be no gutting it out in these sessions. You have to tell me right away if there is any pain at all. In fact, over-tell me about your pain. We are going to do everything safely and slowly.” This was very comforting to me. It gives me a small but satisfying sense of security to know that once a week for an hour, another human being is fully looking out for my physical well-being; far more than I look out for it myself.  

He taught me a series of simple but powerful lower-body exercises, which just about killed me the first time I did them. I was shocked and saddened to realize how weak my entire lower body is. I walk and swim on the semi-reg, but both are a fairly haphazard affair, and I realize that because of my knee injury, I’ve been operating for years with compensating habits that have caused all sorts of imbalances and weaknesses. But I have a spark of hope now. I did the exercises faithfully almost every day this week, which my trainer will think is too much, but I went a little overboard because was I excited at the first hint that they may be actually working. It might be my imagination, but I feel like my gluts and quads are getting a bit more sinewy and my core is feeling a little more…core-ish. I also noticed that once I started working those muscles, there was definitely some emotional pain stored in them that is being released by the activation of long-dormant muscle fibers. A few times upon finishing a set, I felt waves of what seemed like very old sadness and grief. It’s dissipated more and more with each set, so it’s just a passing thing, but I found the phenomenon interesting. (I’m not going to tell the trainer about that sort of pain, though. He has enough on his hands with me.)

Alright, folks. I’m not going to humble brag here. I’m not going demure and deflect and act like I’m not excited about this. I’m just going to straight up brag: I kicked ass at the range today! Now mind you, that was after I blew out not one, but two binder clips, and had a terrible first hour during which I almost cried. But…thanks to Mr. Typist’s keen analytical skills, we fixed my grip, and it was straight-up miraculous the difference it made.  Precision is a theme in my life these days, and it turns out, grip precision matters. A lot. For the first hour, all of my shots were coming in super-low, despite my aim being on target. Mr. Typist kept saying I was dropping my hands on the trigger pull, but I couldn’t feel it. Nothing I was doing was helping, I was rattled by the booms from a .50 caliber shotgun in the lane next to me, and I was beginning to lose hope. But the minute I was able to get my left hand higher up on the grip and re-positioned to a more stable angle, I had it. I actually had it! The photographic evidence is here:

Bad Grip: My shots are low, all over the place, and scattered to the four corners of the Western Hemisphere.





Good Grip: HA! I killed it, baby! (Except for those low ones. And the ones in the gray. But hey, I'll take it!)


  
I was super-excited, but also immensely relieved, because I was beginning to think that something was seriously wrong with my vision, or that I was incapable of accurate aim due to early-onset Alzheimer's or something. My arms were tired and achy, but when I saw those groupings, I couldn’t wait to put more rounds through, and had similar groupings on my last target sheet. I left the range for the first time with my head held high, feeling elated and proud and confident. Then I cried when I realized my Dad would be proud of me. I hope he was watching me from his desk chair in heaven as he smoked cherry tobacco from his wooden pipe.

The gist is that I now know I can do this. I can achieve competency, and, with a lot of work and practice, maybe even get good. I feel excited about going back to the range, instead of the usual gnawing anxiety and tinge of dread. I am definitely miles ahead of my first shot in that beginner’s class back in October, where I was shaking so badly the instructor had to put his hands around mine to keep me from blowing my own eye out by accident. So…onward…to lower body strength, precise shooting, and an able body in middle age.

--Kristen McHenry