This doesn't inconvience the people that already go to gyms though.
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It also doesn't subsidize actual gym users memberships though.
To an extent, it does. If everyone who has a gym membership but never goes cancels, they'll have to raise prices for the people who actually go
They'll do that anyway if the gym is successful. You ideally want a gym that's on the verge of collapsing but not backed by any VC
Just be that guy that yells really loudly during all your sets for a couple of weeks and you can accelerate the demise of many New Year's resolutions.
Money doesn't motivate commitment, social obligations do. Go to the gym with a group at a specific time, or with a trainer; not disappointing your friends/trainer will keep you on time far more then "wasting $10 a month"
$10?
Probably a gym for ants.
Planet Fitness
Or whatever your local gym costs.
It's usually low enough people can't be bothered to cancel.
Alternatives - community center gyms, work gyms, temple gyms, etc
There is a gym in a public park near me that is $2 per year, yes it's a government project, but there are options!
I wish I had a gym that was $10 a month. They closed all the gold's gym express joints a while ago. Those were gold.
Nit-pick time: I think the verb phrase "(to) work out" ought to retain the space between "work" and "out", even where the derived noun form is hyphenated or has no separation at all.
When the gerund becomes "workouting" and the past tense becomes "workouted"*, I might, begrudgingly, accept the lack of a space.
* or "workouten" I guess, if that old way of forming past tenses becomes fashionable again.
I have a similar pedantic issue between log in / login and follow up / follow-up.
Log in is an action. Login is part of credentials. >_<
Man that nitpick was a real mental workout.
How very German of you.
I understand your point in the context of "switch on" and "switch off", but the base verb "work" doesn't have many separable prefix/suffixes.
To work in? To work on (same as work)? To work about (does that mean anything)?
"They work in an office, where they work on some problems and work around (avoid) others."
"Work about" could be used in place of the latter but would sound a bit dialectal or rustic.
There's also "He does work about the place", meaning "He performs tasks in that place.", but there the "about" is part of the following adverbial phrase rather than a specifier on "work".
I think there's probably a case for most English prepositions after "work" come to think of it. As to how useful they'd be, well, it'd be a matter of finding a list of prepositions and see which of them works out.
There are actually more distinct meanings than I initially thought, but yeah most of them are prepositions
- To work up (an appetite, an argument)
- To work down (a screw, or something grinding)
- To work for (prep: an employer, some hierarchy)
- To work in (prep: an office, a space)
- To work on (prep: a project)
- To work with (prep: a person)
I finally got a power rack for home and have never looked back. I don't have all the fancy stuff, but it's easier for my wife or I to duck off to the basement for 45 minutes than it is to carve out a two hour block for gym time.
Initial investment was a tough pill but by this point it has paid for itself through saving me a gym membership.
I'm thinking about getting one every now and then, but I find it very hard to motivate myself to work out at home. It's way easier to not abort my workout when I already went through the trouble of driving to the gym. When I'm at home there are so many things I'd rather do than getting all sweaty. I'd love to get a personal trainer, but they are so expensive.
Real talk the struggle is real and it was WAY easier to stop in at my old gym on the way home... But I just don't have the time that takes anymore, so "3 times a week most weeks" is better than "never."
“It’s like standing under a cold shower ripping up hundred dollar bills.”
How about a gym that costs $3,100 a month, but you can get $100 back if you spend a hour in the gym once a day?