I feel awful!I post about him and he dies the next day...
Rest in Peace, Jack...
God bless you Elaine...
I feel awful!
When I was a kid, I remember my mom watching TV and using a chair or the table and watching this guy in something like a leotard. He was stretching, and breathing, and bending and stretching his arms and legs – this was before there was anything even remotely like “working out” for the masses. Only real athletes did that.
When he started his show back in 1951, it was the thought that it would be short lived. It became nationally syndicated and ran for 34 years! I remember my mom responding to his encouragement of “Get up, work out, and feel better!” Being kids, we just had fun bouncing around and thinking this was fun and new. He really was the father of modern workout videos.
He routinely performs feats of amazing strength and endurance every year on his birthday. You know – little things like swimming to Alcatraz while wearing handcuffs; Or setting a record of 1033 push-ups in 23 minutes! (That’s an average of 45 per min.); Or swimming while towing 10 row-boats with 77 people on board more than a mile in less than an hour. You can read all about him here. You can even watch videos from his original show and exercise right along with him! Grab a chair! We would all do a lot better if we did only a quarter of what he does!
OK – I’ll be totally honest here. I’m not much into new-fangled phones. I use my phone (an old flip-open 10-key design - here it is in all it's blue splendor!) to make and receive phone calls, and occasionally to leave or listen to messages. I don’t send or receive texts, I don’t surf, email or play games… and I’ve never “run an App” in my life. I often forget my phone at home and always turn it off in movies, at meals and in meetings. If I’m in the waiting room at my local car-fix-it shop and I get a phone call, I’ll step outside to answer it rather than subject everyone in the little space to my conversation.
So – the phrase “There’s an App for that” is very common, but I think that it’s really important to remember things that there will never be an App for: Building a birdhouse with your kid; Working a puzzle with your family; Taking a walk on a beautiful spring morning; Playing some fun games with your kids in the backyard on a late summer evening; taking a lazy drive, looking at things and talking about them (or singing silly songs)