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A new job requires a new fitness plan
If you’ve been reading Peak Fitness for a while, you’ve probably figured out that I lead a really flexible life. I’m self-employed, make my own hours, schlep all of 10 minutes to my office, and have it easy when it comes to finding 60-90 minutes a day to go exercise. Well, that all ends tomorrow, when I not only start a job in Denver that requires me to be at my desk during working hours each day, but I also have to deal with an hour-and-a-half commute each way from Colorado Springs.
So much for training for a marathon. And it was going so well, too. This morning I ran the fastest 9 miles of my life. Now I face 12 hours of sitting in a car and at a desk every Monday to Friday. Woe is to me, blah, blah, blah.
I know everyone out there with a regular job just smirked and is saying to themselves, “Hey buddy, welcome to the real world.” And they’re not wrong. Finding the time to exercise, heck, finding time to do anything in our over-scheduled, stressed-out world is the first and hardest step to getting started.
Now I get to find out how everyone else does it.
I do know that my disciplined approach to training—specifically for a January marathon—is going to suffer a setback. Whether that’s a week or two, I don’t know. But I’ve got a plan, and I could use your help to see if it’s got a solid foundation or whether it’s going to fall apart the minute I hear the words, “Working lunch.”

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