You choose, we deliver
If you are interested in this story, you might be interested in others from The Journal Gazette. Go to www.journalgazette.net/newsletter and pick the subjects you care most about. We'll deliver your customized daily news report at 3 a.m. Fort Wayne time, right to your email.

Fitness

  • Alex Velasquez, 38, of Fort Wayne
      Alex Velasquez has a favorite run mapped out. The route starts in front of his house and ends, oh, 300 meters down the street.
  • gear up for run
    It’s running season. But before you take your mark and go, make sure you get a good start by picking the right running shoe for your feet.
  • When it comes to shoes, innovation is the key
    Running-shoe companies want you to lace up their newest innovations. Find out which of these styles is the right fit for you.Don’t know where to wear it? We’ve got the ideal debut for each shoe.
Advertisement
Fitness feature
•What’s Your Workout is a monthly feature that spotlights readers and their exercise routines. If you would like to be featured, email Kimberly Dupps Truesdell at kdupps@jg.net.
Photos by Samuel Hoffman | The Journal Gazette
Karen O’Connell, center, takes a short run on the Rivergreenway with her workout partners.
what’s your workout: group dynamic

Karen O’Connell|55, Fort Wayne

O’Connell first met the group while taking fitness classes. The grandmother rarely exercises alone anymore, she says, with members of the group getting together to run, bike, walk, spin and do cardio.

“First one to the pole wins,” Karen O’Connell says as she sets off down the Rivergreenway. More than a half-dozen women – and a lone guy – follow her down the trail.

“Karen, don’t you dare beat me,” one shouts as they run.

The gathering, which nearly resembles a small 5K race, is just an average run for O’Connell and her gaggle of girls, as her husband calls them.

Since she first met the group, which continues to grow, while taking group fitness classes at Summit City Fitness, 5928 Trier Road, she says it “rarely happens” that she exercises alone.

“There is a core group of nine of us that alternate between running, biking, lifting, walking, spinning and cardio,” O’Connell says. “What’s so wonderful about this is there is always someone available to meet up and work out. We have an engineer in the group, a fitness instructor, a PA, a PT, an office manager, a full-time grandmother … ”

O’Connell is the full-time grandmother, and she says that her six grandchildren inspire her to stay active (“They just think I’m the funnest thing ever,” she says). It’s clear, though, that it’s her partners that keep her going – and then some.

Week of workouts: O’Connell’s workouts focus on endurance. She runs four times a week, logging at least eight miles each outing, and goes to an indoor cycling class three times a week. O’Connell also incorporates strength training with cardio-lifting classes at Summit City Fitness.

Benefits of group exercise: One of O’Connell’s friends calls their runs “free therapy,” and there’s nothing that doesn’t get discussed on the trail. “We have one guy in the group, Jay,” she says, “and it’s pretty funny when we start talking about things like the ‘uni-boob bra’ … but he grew up in a big family so he takes it all in stride.”

How to meet exercise partners: O’Connell and her friends have been working out together for years but are always taking on new members. They advise people to be open to “whoever is around” and not to be intimidated by someone’s level of fitness.

On staying motivated: “What motivates me is this group. You always regret not exercising but you never regret the exercise once you’re finished,” she says. “(One of the group members) is a great motivator. If you bike 26 miles, she’ll do 30. If you do 32, she’ll do 35. If you finish a (half marathon) in two hours, she’ll do it in 1:55.”

Gear: “We don’t spend a lot of money on fitness gear,” O’Connell says. “Shoes are the exception, but most of us do our shopping at Marshalls.”

Goals: This year, O’Connell says, she wanted to work on my swimming skills. “(I’m) still thinking about a triathlon and a full marathon.”

– Kimberly Dupps Truesdell, The Journal Gazette

Advertisement