Even if you’re not interested in joining a health club, you may want to incorporate aspects of the gym experience into your home workouts. Adding the following health club features to your home gym boosts your motivation and sense of purpose.
- Sign-in sheet: When you go to the health club, you have to sign in at the front desk to prove you were there. If you’re the type of person who’s motivated by measuring your accomplishments, record your attendance at your home gym in a workout log or even create your own attendance sheet and tape it to the door or keep it on top of yourfile cabinet. Signing in at the beginning of your session reinforces your commitment to weight training.
- Mirror: The purpose of a mirror isn’t to develop anxiety over the shape of your body. You need a mirror to check your form, especially when you’re doing free weight and band exercises. Just make sure that you watch where you put your dumbbells and barbells. If you leave them on the floor, they may roll around and crack the mirror. The best way to avoid this problem is to invest in a dumbbell rack. Any mirror suffices as long as it’s big enough for you to see your entire body when you’re standing with your arms spread wide.
- Comfortable mat: A mat is useful for doing strength training exercises on the floor, such as abdominal crunches and side-lying leg lifts. And, of course, it’s useful for stretching and doing yoga or Pilates exercises. You can substitute a towel or blanket, but these substitutions tend to bunch up. Most exercise mats fold or roll up and can be placed in a corner or underneath your weight rack. A good mat costs $20 to $100. The differences between a cheap mat and a more expensive one are many:
- The thickness and quality of the padding
- The quality of the surface covering
- The antibacterial and antifungal materials
- The size of the mat
- The way the mat stores
- The mat should be long enough so it fits your body from the top of your head to your tailbone. The padding should be cushy enough so your knees don’t dig into the floor when you do the modified push-up and other exercises that require kneeling. Shirley recommends combining a towel over a mat for strength training exercises as the towel absorbs perspiration and extends the life of your mat.
- Rubber mat: A rubber mat, placed under the equipment, looks like the rubber mats on the floor of your car. They help cut down on noise and vibration to the floors below, and they help protect your floors and rugs from sweat and wear and tear. Mats are particularly good to put under equipment that leaks oil, such as multigyms and treadmills. Some mats are custom designed to fit under specific pieces of equipment.
- Proper attire: Health clubs require you to wear freshly laundered exercise clothing so the grime from your jeans, leather belts, and work shirts doesn’t soil the pads on the weight equipment. Follow the same rule at your home gym, too. You’ll prolong the life of your equipment. Plus, it’s a lot more motivating to work out when you’re wearing clean, comfortable clothes that allow your skin to breathe.
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