I was walking into the gym the other day and mentally preparing myself for a great workout when I heard someone mutter, “I want the Santa Claus workout.” I chuckled a bit as I began to stretch, but then suddenly it hit me like a one-ton sleigh. I wanted the Santa Claus workout too. Think about it, here’s a guy that eats over 20 million cookies in one night, works basically one night a year, but has the endurance, strength and stamina of about 200 bodybuilders!
Let’s Start with the Numbers
Granted Jolly
Old Saint Nick has a well-organized and amazingly efficient team of elves
creating, building, packing and loading toys, but once he is air born Santa is
on his own. So, working in round numbers, let’s estimate on the low side and assume
there are 5 million kids receiving presents, with an average of 4lbs per
present, Santa is roughly dead-lifting and dragging around nearly 2,300 tons of
toys. This is even giving him the benefit of the doubt by assuming the average
weight is down due to electronics and phones. I don’t know about you, but my thighs
start to burn after my second set of squats. Lifting all those presents has to
take a toll on him right?
Then there
is the issue of the speed. Santa needs to travel nearly 212,030,000 miles in
one night. Not factoring in the stopping, diving down chimneys, setting up
pleasing gift arrangements, swallowing 2-3 cookies and drinking milk, this
means Santa has to fly 1,800 miles per second. Between each stop he is at a
full sprint down, up, over and between, in a full winter outfit no less and
boots. That kind of makes wind-sprints look easy! In addition, I swear I saw
him skiing the other day. Who is this guy?
I Gotta Guy that Knows an Elf
After doing
the math I decided to call in a favor. I have a friend, whose second cousin’s brother-in-law, knows a guy who delivers dumbbells to Santa’s personal elf
trainer, Brutus. Here’s the skinny. It seems that Santa just doesn’t lie around
on his 364 days off. In fact he is an avid believer in a balanced exercise
routine consisting of stretching, cardio, and weight lifting. Here’s a fun
fact, Santa hates leg day too. In warmer months he puts an hour in at the pool,
and chases reindeer. During the polar night season, Rudolf runs alongside so he
can see his way. While he does go with the gluten-free cookie diet during
training, it seems he still can’t stop eating the ginger bread houses.
So what is the Santa Workout?
The Santa
workout is just what you would expect it to be. It’s the workout that works for
him and his fitness level and shape. You see, Santa’s gift to me is the
realization that our body shape doesn’t necessarily indicate our level of
fitness or commitment. However, our lifestyle and living active does. So bells
and bobtails aside, we need to focus on what we need to be healthier and just
start there. We can’t all be the herculean Santa, and I’m not sure I want to
work that hard anyway.
So as you
enjoy the holidays with your family and friends remember that becoming healthy
doesn’t always mean six-pack abs, huge biceps, or having Santa’s amazing strength
and speed. It means working hard, becoming your best, and enjoying who you are.
So this year, unwrap your "inner you" and leave globe-trotting to the guy in the red
suit.
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