A new quest (and blog-project) begins!
The last time I enjoyed a blog-project, of sorts, I was
reading Jewish dietary laws and cleaning out my kitchen in preparation for a
day of kashering and then four weeks of kashrut
observance. That was nearly two years ago, with a variety of writing tasks
catching my attention and energies. I’ve joined a women’s writing organization,
flirted with poetry a bit more regularly, even enjoyed writing for writing’s
sake, i.e. writing without a predetermined goal. I’ve learned a lot about
myself too, with some deepening awareness, consciousness extended back into old
narratives that had seemed too fearful or dark for reconsideration. (They
weren’t). Several small goals have appeared in these journeys, but a
well-defined one has become this quest, of sorts. I hadn’t thought of it as a
new blog-project, but when I shared a brief essay piece about it with my
writing-circle small group, one of them planted the seed of suggestion. Voila!
It has grown into a preliminary post. So what is the new quest?
I aim to do one pull-up by my birthday in mid-March. Just
one. It need not be pretty, nor technically flawless. Hanging on the bar, then
one chin-up above it. That’s it. To mark my learnings and celebrate my progress
is the blog task, I am presuming.
Why and what has this come to mean to me? I don’t have hopes of being immediately comprehensible in why this matters so much to me.
What’s the big deal about a woman of my body-type and build doing a pull-up?
Perhaps that’s part of the draw.
To start, I’ve been immersed in about two years’ worth of
personal-training at a local gym, various goals in mind over the months. I had
originally imagined running a marathon or half-marathon, but as I listened to
my own body-awakening in these weekly 'tutorials,' of sorts, that goal waned in lieu of other, less articulate
pursuits: fitness, flexibility,
learning, loving, sensate awakening. Along the way, I’ve discovered that the
fitness world is so much bigger than my rather one-dimensional focus on
distance-running. I’m fascinated with
how the body moves, specifically how my body moves, and various ways to play
with weights, machines, body-resistance training, and more. I’ve also grown
curious about the inherited manners in which I conceive fitness, how we think
about its importance and contour, how women experience our overculture’s
obsessions and guilts about the human body and its fitness (or lack thereof),
how I have experienced my body as a woman regularly trapped in a superfund site
of media-saturated, imputed feminine and religious-traditional toxins.
True to form, I approach these fascinations and curiosities as
a Christian theologian, if one increasingly unwilling to accept my tradition’s
assumptions, language, and absences of the female body. For most centuries, it has neglected,
abused, and ignored the body, particularly the female body. So, I find myself a
Christian theologian with few resources that are not already toxic in and of
themselves. I’ve also found few companions who are similarly unwilling to
ingest a tradition’s 'good intentions' that are steeped in ignorance—both male and
female—or even worse, malice and abuse.
The quest begins, though, with my
sixth-grade self, second in line to the pull-up bar, where I awaited Ms. Hill to call me forward for that spring’s dose of shame and impossibility. Every spring, the
Presidential Fitness Test would loom, which aimed to measure the fitness of the
nation’s children, to communicate a governmental commitment to children’s
health. Whatever else it may have provided, with statistical precision, it
taught me one inexorable truth: Fitness is Fearful. The worst was being second
in line, watching my girl friend hang helplessly at the bar, being timed for
how long she could hang. The boys behind us would smirk and complain that
girls were not required to do pull-ups proper, like the boys. “Wimps,” they’d
say, disdainfully. Even when many of the boys couldn’t do a pull-up either. Standing
there, second in line, you had to watch and then accept that the girl in front
of you was ashamed and ‘unfit.’ Then you would be named the same when it
was your turn. Yee-haw.
Another more implicit learning in this spring ritual
impressed itself onto my own flesh as well: “My body is too
heavy for any good, especially anything upper body oriented.” Lifting,
endurance work? I’ll find somewhere else to be. Three decades later, I still
fear my bodyweight and the impotence of my upper body. Usually, this comes up in the obvious
unavoidables: doctors’ office visits with their scales of shame, menstrual
mornings of weakness when I, for some unimaginable reason, think it’s a good
time to step on the scale. Days of moving furniture or stacks of books from one office to the next.
Imagine my surprise, then, when months of personal training
developed into a fascination for the pull-up bar. Something about its
impossibility, but also its invitation to a sort of freedom, weightlessness,
playfulness...even for adults? Really? A couple women of muscular build and fingerless
gloves caught my attention too—hands on bar, hanging, toes to hands. I
marveled, but appreciated seeing women enjoy themselves this way.
So…my new goal, with a smiling face: one pull-up by my
birthday in March. My first guess is
that one pull-up promises me something much more important than any
Presidential Test Assessment of Fitness. I want to learn, come to truly know in
my bones: my body is just as it needs to be, as I learn what that is and as I’m
finally taught by those who know a woman’s body.
I’m also eager to see whether facing the bar
will make my sixth-grade self smile, perhaps even give my beloved PE teacher
the bird for never preparing us nor inviting us to consider the beautiful
mystery and wisdom of the human body. I
don’t hold it against her too hard—she was not trained to do so, nor could she
actually do a pull-up anymore either, by the time I met her—but I’m eager to
see whether I can learn what my sixth-grade self needs to learn, then share it
with any and all young women who would benefit from such learnings.
Perhaps it’s finally time for me to name my own definition
of fitness (tentative, for now) and really live into it, with my own body and
form. Fitness is being able to do what the body can do, when it needs to, for things we
imagine, for the age we are and the needs of our lives at the moment.
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