Housework Counts as Exercise, Too

Why do we ignore all the movement that is involved in being a human?

Rosie Spinks
Forge

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Photo by Volha Flaxeco on Unsplash

Here’s a funny thing I’ve noticed about wealthy people: The more money they make, the more they outsource the fundamental labor of being human to other people. I’m talking cleaning the house, taking care of the garden, buying food and carrying it home, and looking after the animals/pets they choose to own.

In that process, wealthy people aren’t just outsourcing basic tasks, they are outsourcing movement, too. The forms of movement that, for millennia, humans have been basically designed to do: Carrying heavy things, squatting down to pick something up, reaching for those top bathroom tiles that never get properly cleaned.

And what do wealthy people do with all this glorious spare free time? They get in their car and drive to the gym. Or hire a personal trainer. Or join the cult of Peloton. In other words, they eliminate the need for much natural human movement and then pay more money to move in other, more manufactured and aspirational ways.

I think of this weird artifact of modern life often when I’m faced with the question “what do you do for exercise?” Sometimes I’m asked this by the doctor, or friends, or people who are particularly interested in optimizing their lives. I never feel like I have…

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