Lots of Islanders resolve to be fit
Video: Getting fit in the new year |
By Catherine E. Toth
Advertiser Staff Writer
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Susan Nagata wouldn't consider herself active. But she's hoping that will change in the new year.
"I hate working out, I really do," said Nagata, 50, of Kaimuki. "But I feel better after I do it. And I hope I feel better three months from now."
So she signed up for membership at the Y, hoping to tone up and improve her fitness in 2007.
"Aesthetics is a strong motivator," she said, taking a break from bicep curls in the YMCA's fitness center yesterday, "especially when you're gonna be 51."
Health clubs and gyms usually see enrollment jump during the first quarter of the year, due mostly to those yearly pledges.
"January is the busiest month for probably all fitness-type facilities, and that has to do with the new year and New Year resolutions," said Mike Doss, YMCA of Honolulu district vice president. "We start the year with the understanding that a good January will set us up for a good year."
About 20 percent of enrollment at Nu'uanu YMCA comes in January, Doss said.
This is the busiest month for most health clubs, with new members enrolling and others returning to their regular workouts.
The Honolulu Club on Ward Avenue sees up to a 20 percent increase in enrollment in January, mostly former members eager to get back in shape, said athletic director Rick Ahn.
The annual boost is fueled by a continued interest in health, due largely to alarming rates of obesity. About 65 percent of U.S. adults are overweight, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Cardiovascular disease was a factor in more than one-third of all U.S. deaths in 2004, according to the American Heart Association.
Such news "has had a definite impact on how people eat and exercise," said Carolyn Olomanu, owner of Curves in Mililani, where enrollment has shot up 70 percent from December.
Nagata is determined to stick to a fitness routine because she quit once before after sinus surgery.
"So this time time ... I have to," she said. "Check back with me next year. See if I'm still here."
TIPS FOR STAYING MOTIVATED
About a third of those who make New Year's resolutions will break them by Feb. 1, according to a study by University of Washington researchers.
Here are tips from fitness experts on how you can stay committed — and motivated — throughout the new year.
— Catherine E. Toth
Reach Catherine E. Toth at ctoth@honoluluadvertiser.com.