How to actually work out with your kids

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Kelly Bryant, a fitness coach, works out with her five-year-old daughter at their home in Stuart, Fla., on Nov 26, 2023.

Fitness coach Kelly Bryant works out with her five-year-old daughter at their home in Stuart, Florida., on Nov 26.

PHOTO: NYTIMES

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NEW YORK – For parents of young kids, it can be hard to prioritise exercise. Children need things – a snack, a ride, a person to explain fractions – and usually just as you are lacing up your running shoes or laying out the yoga mat.

Instead of skipping your workout, consider looping your little ones in. Exercising together will combine family time and fitness, and is a way to model healthy habits. Research suggests that children with active parents are more likely to be active themselves and to grow up to be active adults.

Adding kids means you might need to “let go of the idea that you’re going to get a perfect workout”, said Ms Kelly Bryant, a coach with fitness app Future, who often exercises with her five-year-old and toddler.

Still, there are plenty of ways to make your workout a decent one.

Give kids a role in your workout

People often think they need to find a child-specific activity, Ms Bryant said, like a dance party or a Disney yoga video. “But really, any body-weight workout is going to be pretty kid-friendly,” she added.

Her own children enjoy exercises that involve jumping, such as squat jumps, lateral jumps, jump rope, ladder drills and jumping jacks. “Kids love a burpee,” she said.

Do the moves together or turn it into a partner workout, suggested Ms Jess Sims, a Peloton instructor who leads family-friendly classes. You might hold a plank while your child does five jumping jacks and five squats, for example. Then you switch, alternating moves for five minutes.

If kids lose interest in participating, re-enlist them as trainers. Ask them to count your reps or run a timer on your phone, Ms Bryant said. “Or have them hand you a block every time you finish a set,” she suggested. “Anything where you give them responsibility and authority, they’re very into it.”

Turn exercise into a game

Ms Sims, a former elementary school teacher, often uses “listening games” in her adult classes, where participants increase their speed when they hear certain words in a song.

With kids, do jumping jacks to a song your child likes, and choose a move you will do when you hear a particular phrase.

For example, “every time you hear Beyonce say ‘break my soul,’ you do a push-up”, Ms Sims said. Or march in place through the verses, then do mountain climbers during the chorus.

Propose a game of “exercise charades”, which Crunch Fitness vice-president Marc Santa Maria often plays with his husband and nine-year-old twins. Everyone writes a few strength moves or yoga poses on scrap paper, then takes turns picking from a bowl.

“You start doing the move, and everyone copies you,” he said. After 30 seconds, people can yell out the name of the exercise.

Running ideas

If it is not too cold outside, set up a race circuit in a park or an open area. You might challenge your child to ride a bike around a certain route while you do crunches, Ms Bryant suggested, and then you run that route when your child returns. Do a few laps of the circuit, and try to beat your best time.

“My kids will do anything if it’s a race,” she said.

To get some sprints in, head to a public tennis or basketball court with a bag of small, light items, Mr Santa Maria said. Run back and forth with your child, moving the items from one end of the court to the other – give yourself twice as many items – and time yourselves to see who can finish first.

Kids on bikes or scooters make great pacers while you run alongside them, Ms Bryant said. For something easier, alternate running and walking intervals together. “That’s how kids run anyway,” she said. “They sprint for 30 seconds, then they stop to pick some flowers, walk a bit, then sprint again.”

Use the playground

A playground can be a great place to get in a full-body workout, Mr Santa Maria said. Warm up by doing lateral shuffles around the perimeter in each direction, then use the playground equipment to create several stations for cardio, core and exercises for the upper and lower body.

For example, on a swing, “I’d jump off and land in a wide stance, then do 10 squats”, he said. Or you could lie across it and hold a Superman extension with cactus arms, working your back, glutes and shoulders.

Do pull-ups on the monkey bars, triceps dips on a bench and step-ups on the stairs to the slide, he suggested. The key is that while your child is playing, Mr Santa Maria said, “you want to take advantage of the things that are already there”.

Embrace screen time

Many streaming fitness platforms, such as Peloton and Crunch+, have family classes online. But if you do not subscribe, YouTube can be a gold mine of free workout videos.

Ms Bryant said that “squirmy kids” like her daughter may prefer AcroYoga, which combines yoga and acrobatics, to regular yoga, particularly if they can do it on a trampoline.

They also do step aerobics videos together, with her child using the bottom step of a staircase or “the type of stool every parent has in front of the bathroom sink”.

Create a dance routine using moves you can learn by watching the free videos on Hip Hop Public Health, Mr Santa Maria said. He will also sometimes stream an exercise video on mute and put on his kids’ favourite soundtrack so they can sing along while he works out.

Whether you stack a few of these ideas or have time for only one, do not beat yourself up if it does not feel as gratifying as a workout without kids. “Any movement is great movement,” Ms Sims said. NYTIMES

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