Buff(ing) for BlizzCon: Dog days
Buff(ing) for BlizzCon is a bi-weekly fitness series written by ShrinkGeek authors Rafe Brox and Michael McGreevy. Join the WoW.com team in getting in shape for the ultimate WoW geek event: BlizzCon 2010.
No, it's not another worgen post. I'd roll a goblin, anyway, and not merely because of factional preference. I spent too many hours as a n00b getting repeatedly pwnt in Silverpine Forest, which has made me as bitter as powdered aspirin towards those furry bastards; I'd gank myself. No, this is the midsummer swoon, when folks tend to go through the motions in the long, hot stretch (at least in the Northern hemisphere), twiddling their thumbs between increasingly monotonous dungeon runs, idly considering rolling yet another alt or take a hiatus altogether to go hit some conventions and interact in the big blue room.
In our case, it's also just past the midpoint of our six-month journey towards BlizzCon, when motivation may flag and adhering to healthier eating and exercise habits can begin to wane. Maybe you've hit a plateau. Maybe you're bored with your program. This point in time is, to quote everyone's favorite Mon Calimaran, a trap. OK, maybe it's more of a pothole, or yet another slog through Desolace/Stranglethorn Vale/[insert your least-loved zone of mid-game grind leveling here].
So what is there to be done about it?
The easiest answer, of course, is to keep practicing the good habits you've developed over the last couple months. Like building any good tanking, casting or DPS rotation, this is something you've gradually tuned and honed as you've done it, occasionally spicing things up when you get a new skill or try out a re-spec or need to adjust to accommodate a new weapon. But with familiarity comes boredom, and you can slip back into doing encounters you've been farming on something like autopilot. While zoning out on the treadmill or exercise bike or even going for a jog isn't a bad thing, it's not exactly the ideal headspace from which to pick up heavy things, especially if you're going to be holding them over your head.
But let's say that you're still feeling that creeping ennui about your fitness routine. Here are some ways to rekindle your enthusiasm.
Do something completely different
Maybe you've had your eye on a group fitness class that you saw a flier for at the supermarket. Maybe you have a birthday coming up and when someone asked what you wanted, the idea of getting a bike for the first time in years flashed across your mind. It could be something simpler, like giving up a particular vice or potentially troublesome foodstuff for a month. In my case, I have done a couple of different things, both out of necessity (I didn't pick up anything heavier than I am for a month to let an injury recover) and from pure curiosity ("How does this intermittent fasting thing make me feel?"). I also joined my company softball team.
Recruit a friend
Recruiting a friend works in WoW to rekindle some passion and enthusiasm, right? You've got someone new to run with, and revisiting content with a fresh pair of eyes can make some of it new all over again. The same is true when you have someone new to go for your daily walk with or someone new at your gym, even if it's a friend who is just starting out with this whole "getting healthy" thing. It's amazing how much more attention you'll pay to your own workout when you're tutoring or mentoring someone, even if it's something as simple as sharing bike routes or telling someone where the good water fountain is. Maybe your significant other/best friend/favorite sibling would be interested in joining you as you do your routine. Maybe they're doing something that you want to try; you could both join something new together. Having a workout buddy is a great way to make sure that you'll keep going.
Take a short break
WHAT, you say?! Seriously, a mini-vacation may be just what you need. In weightlifting parlance, this is called a "de-load" (though that can also mean just taking it easy and lifting lightly for a week). The mental break can be as beneficial as the physical one, so you can come back refreshed and renewed. You might just find that you missed exercising. Giving yourself a chance to recover and reload might just reward you with a renewed surge of progress when you get back on the horse. Just remember that you need to get back on, so that a short break doesn't turn into abandoning the quest altogether.
Navigating the August doldrums requires a bit of creativity and a little effort ... but for those of us who don't have Cataclysm beta keys, what else have we got going on?
Have you ever wanted to write for WoW.com? Your chance may be right around the corner. Watch for our next call for submissions for articles via Seed, the Aol guest writer program that brings your words to WoW.com. The next byline you see here may be yours!
No, it's not another worgen post. I'd roll a goblin, anyway, and not merely because of factional preference. I spent too many hours as a n00b getting repeatedly pwnt in Silverpine Forest, which has made me as bitter as powdered aspirin towards those furry bastards; I'd gank myself. No, this is the midsummer swoon, when folks tend to go through the motions in the long, hot stretch (at least in the Northern hemisphere), twiddling their thumbs between increasingly monotonous dungeon runs, idly considering rolling yet another alt or take a hiatus altogether to go hit some conventions and interact in the big blue room.
In our case, it's also just past the midpoint of our six-month journey towards BlizzCon, when motivation may flag and adhering to healthier eating and exercise habits can begin to wane. Maybe you've hit a plateau. Maybe you're bored with your program. This point in time is, to quote everyone's favorite Mon Calimaran, a trap. OK, maybe it's more of a pothole, or yet another slog through Desolace/Stranglethorn Vale/[insert your least-loved zone of mid-game grind leveling here].
So what is there to be done about it?
The easiest answer, of course, is to keep practicing the good habits you've developed over the last couple months. Like building any good tanking, casting or DPS rotation, this is something you've gradually tuned and honed as you've done it, occasionally spicing things up when you get a new skill or try out a re-spec or need to adjust to accommodate a new weapon. But with familiarity comes boredom, and you can slip back into doing encounters you've been farming on something like autopilot. While zoning out on the treadmill or exercise bike or even going for a jog isn't a bad thing, it's not exactly the ideal headspace from which to pick up heavy things, especially if you're going to be holding them over your head.
But let's say that you're still feeling that creeping ennui about your fitness routine. Here are some ways to rekindle your enthusiasm.
Do something completely different
Maybe you've had your eye on a group fitness class that you saw a flier for at the supermarket. Maybe you have a birthday coming up and when someone asked what you wanted, the idea of getting a bike for the first time in years flashed across your mind. It could be something simpler, like giving up a particular vice or potentially troublesome foodstuff for a month. In my case, I have done a couple of different things, both out of necessity (I didn't pick up anything heavier than I am for a month to let an injury recover) and from pure curiosity ("How does this intermittent fasting thing make me feel?"). I also joined my company softball team.
Recruit a friend
Recruiting a friend works in WoW to rekindle some passion and enthusiasm, right? You've got someone new to run with, and revisiting content with a fresh pair of eyes can make some of it new all over again. The same is true when you have someone new to go for your daily walk with or someone new at your gym, even if it's a friend who is just starting out with this whole "getting healthy" thing. It's amazing how much more attention you'll pay to your own workout when you're tutoring or mentoring someone, even if it's something as simple as sharing bike routes or telling someone where the good water fountain is. Maybe your significant other/best friend/favorite sibling would be interested in joining you as you do your routine. Maybe they're doing something that you want to try; you could both join something new together. Having a workout buddy is a great way to make sure that you'll keep going.
Take a short break
WHAT, you say?! Seriously, a mini-vacation may be just what you need. In weightlifting parlance, this is called a "de-load" (though that can also mean just taking it easy and lifting lightly for a week). The mental break can be as beneficial as the physical one, so you can come back refreshed and renewed. You might just find that you missed exercising. Giving yourself a chance to recover and reload might just reward you with a renewed surge of progress when you get back on the horse. Just remember that you need to get back on, so that a short break doesn't turn into abandoning the quest altogether.
Navigating the August doldrums requires a bit of creativity and a little effort ... but for those of us who don't have Cataclysm beta keys, what else have we got going on?
Filed under: BlizzCon, Guest Posts







Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Elunr Aug 12th 2010 9:21PM
Is this meant to make us fit by blizzcon, or is all this work out stuff an analogy(or something like that) for WoW?
xanddra Aug 12th 2010 10:17PM
You must be new here... Read everything in here: http://www.wow.com/tag/buffing-for-blizzcon
Cowy Aug 12th 2010 9:31PM
I've been doing the usual summer stuff (walks, swim, bike, vacation, party etc) and playing other MMO's to try find ANYTHING to kill time till next xpac... Nothing kills the "sparkly WoW Xpac" craving. The wait is maddening, and there are miles to go yet till release. *sob* This xpac can't come soon enough! I think the Cata previews from Beta are just making the wait worse.
I'm beginning to think WoW really IS addictive and drug like. Its the only game I can get completely sick of, burnt out on, swear off forever... and then miss/love like crazy a few months after.
I'm not subscribed atm, and man... I'm fighting it. I don't want to get bored/burnt out AGAIN right before the xpac... that would likely lessen my enjoyment of it once it was released. Meanwhile though...I have a mental list going on in my noggin of all the loose ends I could be tying up, if I'd just resubscribe. Quite a dilemma. Bah!
Tim Aug 12th 2010 9:52PM
I am going to start working out soon. I gained 20 pounds recently and need to get rid of it and more. Nice article to read IF/when I get to the duldrums part of it. Nice analogy too.
rafe.brox Aug 13th 2010 11:06AM
The most common day to begin a healthy-living routine is not, in fact, Monday.
It's "Tomorrow."
Don't fall into that trap. Get up and get moving TODAY.
Moomoo Aug 12th 2010 10:03PM
Them Dog Days Are Over!
Doanld Aug 13th 2010 11:34AM
Don't you mean "the worgen days of summer"
Jay Aug 12th 2010 10:14PM
Son of Aragul says "Boo!"
hehe, I too spent many a corpse run cursing those Wargens, and yes i know i am being very literal with the article here, but those mobs in Silverpine instill a Fel Reaver like feeling in you, one not repeated until Un'goro so many levels later.
Drakkenfyre Aug 12th 2010 10:34PM
Nothing compares to the annoying of Dragonmaw Ascendants. They are level 72 Elite, they make NO sound as they walk, sneak up on you, run faster than you, and two-shot you.
When you die, you are ported, alive, back to the graveyard in Shadowmoon Valley. You have to fly back to the area, and if you are caught again, you are killed, and sent back again.
http://www.wowhead.com/npc=22253
Read the Wowhead comments about them.
Colerejuste Aug 12th 2010 11:24PM
I don't want anybody else.
When I think about Alliance, I gank myself.
- If the Devinals played WoW.
Serathe Aug 13th 2010 2:23AM
I took a break for about 6 weeks, didn't miss the game at all after the first week. Got bored (actually a few sick days) and reinstalled the game (still had a prepayed card conveniently at home) and made a new alt and rp plans. The alt happened, the rp didn't as much. It's pretty slow on that front as well. Not to many people around. But it was nicely and relaxed messing about on wow. Though it were relatve short sessions compared to the "old days". After 10 alts it does become a bit did this done that. If i install a new card after this one runs out I will be trying to solo dungeons on my main who is a blood dk's who are still no cataclysm tank spec (oh how i'll miss it... love blood, don't like tanking), collecting pets on my hunter and vanity pets on my warlock, hunting for nice pre cat screenshots, chatting with friends and guildies if any are on (not as much as i'd like), revisit some old quests (and actually reading them again) before the cataclysm wipes them out as well as some places for the same reason (reason for the alt), mess about on pvp with my baby hunter alt depending on wait-times and hopefully get some spontanious lighthearted rp. Key being only doing it when the mood takes me... and when I get bored I log out immediatly (unless i am in a group ofcourse). So i go days without and then suddenly a few hours in a row.
But all in al enough to keep me bussy when i feel like it.
Wójciak Aug 13th 2010 3:15AM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iWOyfLBYtuU