"When people are similar to the activities they
pursue," says Gavin, "they tend to be happier, express more
satisfaction and stay with it longer." Enter: the fitness personality.
Consider how tough it is to stick with something you really
don't like, says Ryan Rhodes, Ph.D., a professor in the Behavioral Medicine
Laboratory at the University of Victoria. "We like the outcomes of
exercise -- weight control, disease prevention, a boost in appearance," he
says. "These are highly-desired things, but the process to get there is
not."
Luckily, this is merely a framing problem: While we
acknowledge that enjoyment is the primal impetus behind many of our daily
habits when it comes to exercise, we focus instead on disease prevention,
Rhodes says. Boring!
Instead of trudging along in workouts we hate, we may be able
to learn something more from our natural emotional responses to exercise. In
her 2009 paper, Personality, Physical Fitness, and Affective Response to
Exercise Among Adolescents, Margaret Schneider, Ph.D., associate researcher at
UC Irvine, explored the link between physical activity and two personality
systems, behavioral activation (BAS) and behavioral inhibition (BIS).
Someone with a high BAS score is more motivated by reward,
while someone with a high BIS score is more motivated to avoid punishment,
Schneider explains, and physical activity can be both rewarding and aversive.
"We know that at very high intensity, everybody feels bad," she says,
but at a more moderate level, different people will feel different things while
exercising. "People who are more BIS-motivated may be more sensitive to
the negative cues like sweating, breathing hard and increased heart rate,"
she says.
Those cues are part of the body's physiological response to
exercise, which is by definition a stress response, says Gavin. Additional
pressure from an activity you truly disdain will only add more stress.
Early studies compared apples and oranges, says Gavin, and
kept hitting dead ends. As he writes in his 2004 paper, Pairing Personality
With Activity:
"Through the 1970s and 1980s, countless studies explored
the relationship of personality traits to sport choice and participation. Most
studies yielded results that could rarely be replicated. For example, some
studies characterized runners as compulsive, depressed, inhibited, introverted,
taciturn, cautious, deliberate, and suited to monotonous, repetitive
situations. Others described runners as sociable, optimistic, sexually active,
and well-adjusted. One report found that body builders had a pathologic
preoccupation with muscularity, but another investigation found them to be
quite normal. Martial artists were depicted as highly aggressive in one study,
while another reported relatively low levels of aggression. Highly committed
exercisers were described as narcissistic and obsessive-compulsive by one
researcher, even though the general trend describes regular exercisers as
well-adjusted."
To truly match a workout with a personality, he says, there
had to be a way to "describe a physical activity on the same dimensions as
personality," which led him to creating the chart below, depicting where
19 physical activities fall along seven personality trait spectrums.
But Gavin isn't the only one trying to make a better metric.
"It's really important for people to know what their
expectations are for fitness," says Jessica Matthews, an exercise
physiologist and spokesperson for the American Council on Exercise (ACE).
"What they gravitate to becomes helpful [in making] exercise something you
want to integrate into your life and continue long term."
To help people along that life-long journey, Matthews developed
a Facebook quiz for the ACE that sorts users into Diet for
Weight Loss types. Someone who identifies as a Planner may take a more
reserved approach to fitness, sticking to familiar, tried-and-true exercises,
she says. A Go-Getter loves competition and intensity and thrives off of seeing
continued improvement. A Social Butterfly, unsurprisingly, loves group fitness
and positive energy, while the Adventurer will try anything and everything,
even if it's just a passing fad. Each personality is also paired with some
suggestions for how to bust through those typical routines to reach peak
fitness.
[Source: http://www.wellnesstoday.com/fitness/how-to-find-the-best-workout-for-your-personality]
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