Tune in today to see
if she can … tackle a Turbo Kick class.
When I was in high school, my parents had this dog, Faith.
Faith started out as my brother’s dog, but a pattern of puppy passing was
beginning and she eventually went to my folks. She was a weird blend of breeds
and we often referred to her as Santa’s Little Helper (you know, from the
Simpson’s). I am a big believer that people get one, maybe two, great
four-legged companions in life, and the rest tend to be just … well, dogs.
Faith was a dog. She was nervous and jittery and her hair fell out in clumps.
But saddest of all, in her golden years, Faith started having the wackiest
seizures. Honest to Henry, I once saw her come up onto her two back legs and
hop across the kitchen, twitching like a kangaroo covered in fire ants. It was awful
and, admittedly a little funny now, but I bring it up here for a very good
reason. Tonight, I was Santa’s Little Helper.
At my best friend’s urging, I decided to try Turbo Kick. She, conveniently, was away for my debut and unable to witness the chaos that was my attempt at the routine or, better phrased, the complete collapse in communication between my brain and my extremities.
So many of my basic neurological functions failed me. The
jabs … the uppercuts … the roundhouses … it was a system overload no one could
have seen coming. I felt like the drunk girl at a dry reception. It’s not the single action so much as the combinations;
combinations that repeated but never formed a logical sequence in my brain. And
people were hooting. No judgement. Whatever gets ya juiced up. But it did make the tone a little like exercising in the rain forest exhibit at the zoo.
Just when a faint whisper of confidence, in the form of
a knee-up-crossbody-jab series, crept closer, the instructor threw out a “jack
with air”. I froze … an ironic choice of words considering I was sweating like
Martha Stewart at a tax audit. It was intimidating in its simplicity. A jumping
jack where the exerciser is expected to come a handful of inches up off the
ground. Maybe it was the heat. Maybe it was my temporary coordination drought.
Maybe I just failed at rule no. 76, to play like a champion. But I could not do it. Every time
she came to “jack air” I faltered. Until finally …
I went for it. I anticipated it was coming and I used the
last of the gas in my tubby-girl tank and leaped. Only, it didn’t look like
everyone else’s. It was special. It was more spasm than sporty. It was a
dolphin changing its mind mid-trick. It was so Santa’s Little Helper! It’s now
my Everest.
After the class, the regulars were so sweet. Three of them
actually came up and told a few of us we, “Did great for our first time.”
Imagine that … strangers talking to strangers. What a concept. I think I’ll go
back just for the stellar social scene.
Until next time …
I need a demo on Monday
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