Ipod? Ipad? Iphone? What do you use? What do you like and dislike?
What prompted me to ask is that I have a birthday coming up and I was thinking of asking for an iPod so that I could listen to music, podcasts, and audiobooks wherever I am. But it is an expensive device to have just for that one purpose, and I do have radios and CD players in most rooms of the house. I know there is an ap for almost anything one could think of — so what else do you use your iPod for?
One son thinks I should get an iPad. I could definitely see it better (important at my stage of life), but then easy portability is lost since it is so much bigger. I couldn’t tuck it into purse or pocket.
Does an iPhone do everything an iPod does? Maybe it would be best to just get an upgrade to my phone.
A while back when I mentioned using the Biggest Loser Ultimate Workout for the Kinect, Carrie asked me what I thought of it, so I thought I’d answer in a blog post and expand it to include other electronic workout systems I’ve tried.
The Biggest Loser Ultimate Workout for the Kinect begins with a body scan and a series of questions. There is a fitness test as well, and they recommend a fitness program or you can “do your own thing” and choose exercises you want to do. If you go with one of their programs, it tracks your progress. You can select light intensity, moderate, hard, etc. (they suggest an intensity based on your fitness test), how many times a week you want to work out, and how long you want your sessions to be, and which trainer you want. I started with a light intensity and 20 minutes a day six days a week.
Then each day when you log on, you just go to “Today’s Activities” for your workout of the day as well as choosing a diet or lifestyle task for the day (like eating part of an apple instead of a sugary snack or going for a 30-minute walk.)
I tried to take a few pictures of the screen during one workout:
That blue figure in the lower right hand corner is me — taking a picture instead of exercising. 🙂 The Kinect, if you’re not familiar with it, can “see” you, and that is the image it sees. It’s almost like a silhouette but more 3-D-ish. It does help in that you can see if you are positioning yourself like the trainer. It turns blue between exercises, green if you’re doing the exercise right, red if you’re doing it wrong, and a muddy color if you’re somewhere in-between.
The figure in the upper left corner gives you an idea where you are in the workout. I love seeing it get to the end! 🙂
They always have a random character in the back doing the exercises as well, and you can change its hair, eye color, shirt color, etc., to look like you if you’d like.
I apologize that this picture isn’t centered, but I was having trouble with balance in general at the moment. 🙂 I’ve mentioned before that my balance is not good since having transverse myelitis, and my foot is propped up on the couch behind me there, but Virtual Bob said that was okay. 🙂 But what I wanted to show in this picture were the bars above me, the ends of which also turn red or green depending on whether you’re doing the exercise correctly. Then at the bottom it shows how many calories you’re supposedly burning and how many repetitions you’ve done (on exercises that have repetitions: on something like this where you just hold position, the little blue bars go across the bottom til time is up.)
I didn’t think to have someone video the workout, but of course someone else did theirs and put it in Youtube:
Thought it was funny when his little character was eating pizza instead of exercising.
It also has a weigh-in once a week. It doesn’t have a way to weigh you in, so you have to get your weight some other way and then enter it. Also everything you do — how well you work out, your weight loss, your “lifestyle” tasks, etc. — all go into a “score.” I don’t pay much attention to that — I’m just happy if it keeps going up. They do have “challenges” like the show does once a week, but it is kind of silly — they just have you do certain exercises that propel your character toward whatever it is supposed to be accomplishing in the challenge. They also simulate the show’s weigh-in and eliminations, and yes, I was up for elimination the second week when I gained .9 lbs.! But I have lost every week since then.
So what do I think about it? Well, you definitely get a good workout. The whole first week I was achy and felt like I had the flu, even with just 20 minutes at light intensity. That went away after a while, but I do work up a good sweat every time. There is one setting that is such a high intensity you’re warned not to try it unless you are already in good shape, so I think any level could get an adequate workout. I like the silhouette and the fact that I don’t have to hold the controller. I have definitely developed more strength, stamina, and flexibility over the weeks I have used it — and lost 7 lbs. so far. (I’m not dieting per se yet — I know I need to work on that but I hate the tediousness of counting calories or grams or whatever. At this point I’m just cutting way back on sweets and trying to make general better choices in what I eat. I know when I do adjust my diet more the weight loss will increase, but I am pleased that just exercise and cutting back sweets has resulted in a 7 lb. loss so far.) They seem to use some of the same exercises a lot, but they do vary others, and just when I am on the verge of getting bored, they throw in a new one.
The down sides? Entering information is a little tedious. Since the Kinect doesn’t have a controller, you use your hand. To enter anything you have to hold your hand in the right position, and to enter information, like the weight you’ve gained or lost, you have to hold up or down arrows until it gets to the right place. It’s very hard to get that exact, because even when I am holding my hand still, onscreen it appears to move a bit.
Because of balance issues and bad knees, I can’t quite do every exercise they bring up, so I wish you could skip or eliminate some, but I haven’t seen that as an option (in the prescribed fitness program. If you’re just choosing random exercises to do, of course you can skip the ones you can’t do as well) . I do a modified version, so I know I am still moving and burning calories, but then you get the little red screen and silhouette saying you’re not doing it right, which is not really a big deal but it bugs me. On the other hand, some exercises that I couldn’t do at first I am able to do now for short periods, so I am sure that is one reason they don’t let you “skip” — we’d tend to just do the easier ones and then not really be challenged or strengthened.
I haven’t tried this game for the Wii, but it looks pretty similar except for showing your silhouette and having to have the controller on you. I haven’t watched the whole video here, but it looks like a higher intensity than what I use (I assume you can set the intensity for the Wii as well as the Kinect). Some of the catch phrases and tips are even the same as the Kinect:
I have tried Wii Fit, and you can get a good workout there as well, but they have a lot of emphasis on balance, which I don’t do well on. Wii Fit also weighs you with their balance board so you don’t have to go and do that separately. The more you do with the Wii, the more it unlocks new exercises, and that keeps it from getting boring.
It’s funny that though I detest boxing as a sport, I feel the most worked out on both the Kinect and Wii Fit with the boxing exercises.
I’ve also used the Biggest Loser Power Walk DVD and really enjoy it. It’s divided into 4 15-minute segments in which they take you through a number of steps that are supposed to equal a mile, and they add different types of steps, arm movements, even light weights (I used canned foods 🙂 ) to add variety and intensity. Though it is not the full-fledged workout of these video games, it does get your heart rate going. It doesn’t take long til you feel like you have everything they say memorized, and I am thinking of turning their sound off and listening to my own music or maybe even an audio book while working.
I’ve also had on my shelf for a while but just opened a DVD of the Biggest Loser 30 Day Jump Start. I haven’t looked at the bigger segments of it since I had already started with the Kinect, but they also have 10 minutes workouts for upper body, lower body, and cardio and they’re easily doable yet they do put you through good paces as well.
What I like about both DVDs is that they use previous contestants, and they don’t always get things just right — you’ll see one of them look for a minute at the trainer and then take a few steps before they get the rhythm right, or adjust their clothes, etc., and the fact that they’re not perfect makes you feel more comfortable than the video game characters. Plus they always give modified versions of what they’re doing if you can’t keep up or don’t have the equipment they do.
I’ve also years ago used several videos set to classical music by a teacher from my alma mater, Linda Haught, and I was just wishing they had been converted to DVDs — and I just found that many of them have been. In the video version, you start with the warm-up, then work as far as you want (she listed suggested stopping places depending on whether you were a beginner, etc.), then fast forward to the cool down: I am sure that process would be much easier with the DVD. The one I used most was “Wimp Aerobics,” which at the time was not as professionally done as her others, but was great for low impact workouts (her parents were her back-up exercisers.)
Really any of these will give you some exercise, with the convenience of being right there at home without having to take the time to go to a gym and pay their fees. I love the Kinect game and I think it does give me the best workout of all of these, but we already had a Kinect system — I don’t think I’d spend money to get the X-box and Kinect (they work together) just to get this game. But I think there are Biggest Loser games for just about any current video gaming system. And of course, there are other fitness games besides Biggest Loser ones — I just tend to gravitate towards them because I watch the show and know the name, so I have some idea of their background.
When I found I could handle the 20 minute workouts pretty well, I tried to up the intensity to 30 minutes. But when the next workout seemed to go on and on and on, I discovered I had set it to 40 minutes instead — twice as much as I was used to! The first day at 40 minutes seemed extremely long, but I was able to do it. Previously I had been doing 20 minutes with the Kinect game and then 15 with the Power Walk DVD, but when I started doing 40 minute workouts (and actually they go 43-48 minutes), I stopped the DVD. But sometimes the 40 minute workouts cycle through the same exercises, which gets boring. So I think I am going to go back to 30 minute workouts and then add either 15 minutes of the Power Walk DVD or one of the ten-minute segments from the 30 Day DVD. I’ve been working out with the Kinect 5 days a week, but I may go to three or four and then use something else on the other days just for variety.
So, that’s my regimen for now. This is the first time in a long time I’ve exercised regularly. To me the convenience of being able to do it from home helps: I would be much less motivated if I had to go somewhere else, but for some people that is more motivating than working from home. I am struggling with adding 40-50 minutes of exercise into my schedule, but I have become convinced that I need to do this, so I am trying to adjust getting everything else done around it.
On a side note, I’ve always used Bob as trainer with the Kinect game, but once my son chose Jillian and did things wrong deliberately just to see if she’d yell at him, but she didn’t. 🙂 They do alternately compliment or “get after” you depending on how well you’re doing.
And there you have my experience. Have you tried any of these? What works for you?
Welcome to The Week In Words, where we share quotes from the last week’s reading. If something you read this past week inspired you, caused you to laugh, cry, think, dream, or just resonated with you in some way, please share it with us, attributing it to its source, which can be a book, newspaper, blog, Facebook — anything that you read. More information is here.
I hope you’ll forgive the length of some of these: I cut them down but didn’t want to cut too much.
The following is an excerpt from from the Day 12 reading titled “Sanctification by Satisfaction” of Gospel Meditations For Women:
Scripture describes the Christian life as the source of such great joy that temptations lose their appeal. Like the feeling we have after Thanksgiving dinner, we should be so full of Christ that we don’t have room for sin!…Does obeying Christ mean saying no to sinful pleasures? Sure. However, saying no to sin in favor of Christ is like saying no to a scooter in favor of a sports car, or no to peanuts in favor of filet mignon. Life with Christ is a feast, not a famine.” ~ Chris Anderson
I never thought of “fullness” in that way — what a great illustration.
This is an excerpt from an Elisabeth Elliot e-mail devotional taken from a chapter titled “How to Be Free” from All That Was Ever Ours.
Dietrich Bonhoeffer, a man who epitomized true freedom in his acceptance, for God’s sake, of the prison cell and death, wrote: “If you set out to seek freedom, then learn above all things to govern your soul and your senses. . . . Only through discipline may a man learn to be free.”
Freedom and discipline have come to be regarded as mutually exclusive, when in fact freedom is not at all the opposite, but the final reward, of discipline. It is to be bought with a high price, not merely claimed. The world thrills to watch the grace of Peggy Fleming on the ice, or the marvelously controlled speed and strength of a racehorse. But the skater and horse are free to perform as they do only because they have been subjected to countless hours of grueling work, rigidly prescribed, faithfully carried out. Men are free to soar into space because they have willingly confined themselves in a tiny capsule designed and produced by highly trained scientists and craftsmen, have meticulously followed instructions and submitted themselves to rules which others defined.
“We give to God to show Him we think He’s valuable, not because He’s poor..” — Drew Conley
God doesn’t “need” what we have to give, but we need to give it.
I hope you’ll visit some of the other participants as well and glean some great thoughts to ponder. And don’t forget to leave a comment here, even if you don’t have any quotes to share!
This is an old hymn I’ve not heard in ages — I’m not sure why. I don’t know what brought it to mind today, but it brought to mind a sad situation we know of where a father with a wayward daughter seems to be assuming the stance of arms-folded hardness and toe-tapping impatience until his daughter repents. I don’t know his heart or the conversations they have privately, and I know his heart breaks for her. Yet seemingly, from a public vantage point, he’s forgotten that love woos and draws. There has to be a balance: sin can’t be skimmed over, but rather needs to be dealt with, yet love draws. Again, I don’t know their hearts: I pray for them. But I hope the daughter and all wayward ones know the tender love of a Savior who wants to cleanse, heal, and restore them in love.
In tenderness He sought me,
Weary and sick with sin;
And on His shoulders brought me
Back to His fold again.
While angels in His presence sang
Until the courts of Heaven rang.
Refrain:
Oh, the love that sought me!
Oh, the blood that bought me!
Oh, the grace that brought me to the fold,
Wondrous grace that brought me to the fold.
He washed the bleeding sin wounds,
And poured in oil and wine;
He whispered to assure me,
“I’ve found thee, thou art Mine”;
I never heard a sweeter voice;
It made my aching heart rejoice!
Refrain
He pointed to the nail prints,
For me His blood was shed,
A mocking crown so thorny
Was placed upon His head;
I wondered what He saw in me,
To suffer such deep agony.
Refrain
I’m sitting in His presence,
The sunshine of His face,
While with adoring wonder
His blessings I retrace.
It seems as if eternal days
Are far too short to sound His praise.
Refrain
So while the hours are passing,
All now is perfect rest,
I’m waiting for the morning,
The brightest and the best,
When He will call us to His side,
To be with Him, His spotless bride.
Refrain
– W. Spencer Walton
I couldn’t find a video of this hymn being sung to the tune I know: this one is just instrumental, but it was a blessing to me. Hopefully you can put together the words and melody easily if you’re not familiar with it. And may anyone reading who is not yet “in the fold” be found of the seeking Savior today.
Welcome to Friday’s Fave Five, hosted by Susanne at Living to Tell the Story, in which we can share five of our favorite things from the last week. This has been a wonderful exercise in looking for and appreciating the good things God blesses us with. Click on the button to learn more, then go to Susanne’s to read others’ faves and link up your own.
Here are a few faves from the past week:
1. Independence Day, all that it stands for as well as the fun part: time off, time with family, barbecue, fireworks, etc.
3. Caramel Cake. I had seen a caramel cake mix in the store and wondered what it was like: caramel can sometimes taste too sweet or rich for me. But as Grandma did not have a preference for her birthday cake, I decided to try it. It was really good!
I hadn’t meant to make it look tiger-striped: I used the pre-made caramel icing and then tried to drizzle a chocolate glaze over it but it didn’t drizzle. Her birthday was on Saturday and thankfully all the family was over again on Sunday for dinner and more cake for dessert, so I wasn’t left alone in the house with it for too long. 🙂
4. Good deals. Jesse needed some clothes for his youth group’s combination mission and camp trip, and pants with a 34″ inseam are hard to find. But we found those as well as shorts and swimming trunks at Sears and got a gift card towards our next purchase as well.
5. Starting a new cross stitch project. Can you guess what it is yet?
No Distance Too Far is Book 2 in the Home to Blessing series by Lauraine Snelling. Dr. Astrid Bjorkland, the daughter of Norwegian immigrants, has planned to help her doctor sister-in-law in their home town of Blessing, North Dakota in 1904. But after hearing the needs of Africa, she feels perhaps God is calling her there. With a great measure of reluctance but a desire to be obedient and to test whether this is really God’s call, she enrolls in a missionary school. There she enjoys classes from godly teachers, makes wonderful friends, has her faith challenged and stretched, but she also encounters negative responses both from male students and some board members who feel that a woman, especially an unmarried one, has no place as a missionary to Africa. Further complicating her efforts to discern her call are the needs back home as Dr. Elizabeth falls ill, needs that Astrid seems uniquely fitted to meet, as well as the desperate needs of an nearby Indian reservation, and the attentions of Joshua, a young man who works with her brother.
Though it’s been over 30 years since I was in college, it doesn’t really seem that long ago that I struggled with discerning God’s call and wondering whether that call meant the mission field. I empathized with Astrid’s struggles and thought the author portrayed them genuinely.
In some Christian books, the pastor is sometimes brought in as the voice of authority or the one with the answers to the dilemma, but I found Astrid’s discussion with her pastor quite natural. He doesn’t tell her what to do but helps her as she wrestles through questions.
I thought I was reading the book that immediately followed the one I had previously read, but I discovered afterward there was one book in between. That contributed to my feeling like I was missing something from references to events I couldn’t remember, but after a while I was able to piece together enough to comprehend the implications of those past events.
The only very minor negative was that there were so many people it was hard to keep them all straight. There were two sets of series before this one concerning the whole family when they first came to the States, and therefore there was a lot of history and family expansion leading to this book which I had not read. But early on I decided not to try to keep straight who everyone was and how they were related and just to concentrate on the main characters, and eventually those other relationships did become clear. I do think this book could be read as a stand-alone book without having to read all the ones that came before to understand it.
I didn’t necessarily agree with every little point made throughout the book, but overall I did enjoy it and did agree with the overarching principles, and I am happy to recommend it.
(This review will also be linked to Semicolon‘s Saturday Review of Books.)
Welcome to The Week In Words, where we share quotes from the last week’s reading. If something you read this past week inspired you, caused you to laugh, cry, think, dream, or just resonated with you in some way, please share it with us, attributing it to its source, which can be a book, newspaper, blog, Facebook — anything that you read. More information is here.
I wasn’t sure if anyone would be here for the Week In Words or not today, but I figured I’d go ahead and have it for whoever might be here.
I’ve posted this before, but it is one of my favorite Independence Day quotes:
From John Adams’ famous letter of July 3, 1776, in which he wrote to his wife Abigail what his thoughts were about celebrating the Independence Day, with his original spellings:
The Second Day of July 1776, will be the most memorable Epocha, in the History of America. I am apt to believe that it will be celebrated, by succeeding Generations, as the great anniversary Festival. It ought to be commemorated, as the Day of Deliverance by solemn Acts of Devotion to God Almighty. It ought to be solemnized with Pomp and Parade, with Shews, Games, Sports, Guns, Bells, Bonfires and Illuminations from one End of this Continent to the other from this Time forward forever more.
You will think me transported with Enthusiasm but I am not. I am well aware of the Toil and Blood and Treasure, that it will cost Us to maintain this Declaration, and support and defend these States. Yet through all the Gloom I can see the Rays of ravishing Light and Glory. I can see that the End is more than worth all the Means. And that Posterity will tryumph in that Days Transaction, even altho We should rue it, which I trust in God We shall not.
Enjoy your “Pomp and Parade, with Shews, Games, Sports, Guns, Bells, Bonfires and Illuminations” today!
Also, a stanza from “My Country, ‘Tis of Thee” stood out to me yesterday as we sang it at church:
Our fathers’ God, to Thee, Author of liberty, To Thee we sing; Long may our land be bright With freedom’s holy light; Protect us by Thy might, Great God, our King.
If you’ve read anything that particularly spoke to you that you’d like to share, please either list it in the comments below or write a post on your blog and then put the link to that post (not your general blog link) in Mr. Linky below. I do ask that only family-friendly quotes be included.
I hope you’ll visit some of the other participants as well and glean some great thoughts to ponder. And don’t forget to leave a comment here, even if you don’t have any quotes to share!
Does Gender Matter? Yes! Despite one family’s attempt to keep their baby’s gender a secret for its “freedom.”
Believe It Yourself. “If you look at the ten commandments as a boundary around something, instead of a obstacle to something, you will see that God’s laws are situated in places that make real life possible. They are rules of freedom.”
Welcome to Friday’s Fave Five, hosted by Susanne at Living to Tell the Story, in which we can share five of our favorite things from the last week. This has been a wonderful exercise in looking for and appreciating the good things God blesses us with. Click on the button to learn more, then go to Susanne’s to read others’ faves and link up your own.
Here are a few faves from the past week:
1. Biggest Loser Power Walk video. I found that with bad knees and balance problems, I couldn’t quite do all the exercises on the Biggest Loser Ultimate Workout game for the Kinect (though it actually seems to be adapting and not bringing up as many of the ones I can’t do. One advantage to it “seeing” me, I guess.) But I was thinking that I either needed to walk more or find something that was primarily walking, and then I saw this video at W-Mart. It’s been a nice supplement, and they have “modified” steps for those who can’t do all their variations.
2. Losing 3 1/2 lbs. using both programs. Woot! My first week I actually gained almost a pound. No fun. I’m glad to be going in the other direction now!
3. Small clock radio. I’d been looking for a clock radio for my bathroom. My family found a couple that were meant for the shower, but I wanted something for the wall or counter top with big numbers so I could see it from anywhere — the shower ones had really small clock faces. And here in the South having to fight off mildew due to the humidity, even while running a fan — I just didn’t want to have to deal with that on a radio in the shower. But I found this little travel one:
Big numbers, doesn’t take much space, and the radio is surprisingly clear. It came in handy one night when we lost power because of a storm — I put it on my nightstand, and it has a little button to push to shine a light on the clock face.
And she included a sweet note and a few extra goodies, too:
5. Productive days. I haven’t gotten quite as much done as I had planned so far this summer, but had a couple of really productive days this past week. This past Saturday my husband hung up several things for me and I got some cleaning out and organizing done later in the week. The living room looks much more finished and put together now. I had promised when we moved in here last August that I’d give you a house tour some time — I’m almost ready. 🙂 One project Jesse helped me with is the game closet:
I didn’t take a “before” photo, but it would have shown two boxes with the games we’ve played recently set on top. That set of wicker shelves is old — we got it from a friend who was moving and used it for several years, and then when we were just about to get rid of it, Jason and Mittu wanted it. They had to get rid of some things to move into their new apartment, and that’s when it hit me that this would work for the games. A new coat of spray paint, and voila!
Have a great weekend! We’re celebrating Grandma’s 83rd birthday tomorrow.