Every mother who works full time and trains is often asked, “How
do you find the time?” Since this runner is also a BCBA, I will give you
the behavior analytic answer: competing schedules of reinforcement. In
other words: prioritizing, organizing, and streamlining to fit it all
in.
In daily life, we do the things that maximize reinforcement
and avoid punishment. It’s not as simple as a laboratory arrangement
with a rat pressing the lever that delivers food while avoiding the
lever that delivers electric shock, but it’s the same principle. There
are always countless things going on in our lives, and we make choices
based on what brings us pleasure (e.g., hugging our loved ones, eating a
favorite food, petting our cat), what we have to do to continue in life
based on our higher level rule-governed behavior (e.g., working to make
money to support our families and to avoid losing our home, sending the
kids to school to learn and to avoid truancy, etc.), and what we have
to do in the moment to avoid aversive situations (e.g., turn the stove
off after cooking breakfast, stop the child from taunting the cat).
There isn’t a simple way to describe how this all works for me or for
any one person, but there are many concurrent schedules or reinforcement
and punishment operating all of the time in our lives, and we behave
accordingly.
I find time to train because it is very reinforcing
to me. I arrange my daily schedule and life in a manner that is
conducive to working, spending time with my family, meeting my other
obligations (the boring stuff like paying bills, doing my laundry,
cleaning my house, getting my oil changed), and training, which is my
leisure time. For me, this means I wake up between 4:30-5:00 a.m. during
the week to complete my workouts before I leave my house for work
around 7:40 a.m. Is getting up at that time always easy? Absolutely not.
But not only is running reinforcing, missing a workout is aversive. My
behavior matches that – I get up out of my warm bed and get the workout
in, and am always better for it.
I am fortunate to have a
supportive husband who makes this process easier simply by staying in
our warm bed and therefore home with our daughter while I’m exercising.
Once, when he was out of state during the week (and on some weekends)
for 6 weeks, I learned how much harder it is without him. But I still
worked out daily, thanks to lunch break runs, our home workout room,
repeated back-and-forths on the road right in front of our house, and
the YMCA Kids Zone and dirt half mile loop (I have run 32 laps in a row
on that puppy).
I also don’t do some of the things that others
enjoy, because training is more valuable to me. I don’t watch television
or movies (except during indoor workouts), I don’t make extravagant
home-cooked meals, I don’t do anything featured on Pintrest, I’m not big
on shopping. I have nothing against those things, they just aren’t
priorities for me. No one can do it all, and no one should try to. But
we all should do the best we can at our most important jobs (for me that
is being a Christian, wife, mother, and BCBA), and have some “me”
activities we enjoy that make us better at the important jobs (for me
that is running competitively!). At the end of the day, I’m just a
regular person responding to her environment, just like everyone else.
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This is how we do cold weather race spectating! |
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My inspiration |
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Before the Bass Pro Marathon 11/1/15 |
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