Gen Xers 'whip it' to get fit for marathon music festivals
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[June 15, 2024]
By Lisa Richwine
PASADENA, California (Reuters) - At 53, live music fan Ken Lawrence
found his dance floor stamina waning and he wanted to do something about
it.
Lawrence started hiking and lifting weights. He then joined an online
community called "Whip It ... Into Shape," a group of Generation X music
lovers who work to get or stay fit for all-day outdoor festivals. Over
14 months, he lost 47 pounds (21.3 kilograms).
"I want to be the guy who's living his best life on the dance floor, or
at a music festival, into my 80s," he said.
The "Whip It" group, named for a song lyric by 1980s new wave band Devo,
was founded a year ago by Southern California resident Melissa
Kirkpatrick.
The 43-year-old had a desire to improve her own fitness for festivals
that involve many hours or days of standing, walking and dancing. She
thought there might be others like her, united by a love of '80s music.
"I wanted a group for being accountable for getting fit," she said. "I
let everyone know right off the bat that I wasn't a fitness
professional, and that I just wanted to be their friend and we'd do this
together."
Kirkpatrick launched the group on Facebook, where she serves as
cheerleader for over 350 members, chronicles her own progress and
creates themed workout and wellness challenges.
The Duran Duran-inspired "Hungry Like the Wolf" challenge encouraged
healthy eating. "Add It Up," named after a Violent Femmes song, called
for weightlifting every two or three days.
To motivate each other, members post photos of themselves at the gym,
often in band T-shirts. Others share 80s-themed workout playlists and
words of inspiration.
"Sometimes, a random person on the Internet telling you they believe in
you is all you need to hear to get you out the door, to the gym or a
hike or a yoga class," said Lawrence, who posted pictures from his
scenic hikes in and around Los Angeles.
Kirkpatrick said she "set a precedent to be really positive, and
everyone caught on." Small victories were applauded, and no one was
judged for skipping a workout.
CRUEL WORLD
This spring, "Whip It" members geared up for the annual Cruel World
Festival, a showcase of '80s alternative rock, post-punk and other
music. Performers have included Morrissey, Siouxsie Sioux, the
Psychedelic Furs and Simple Minds.
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Members of fitness group "Whip It … Into Shape" pose for a photo at
the Cruel World Festival in Pasadena, California, U.S., May 11,
2024. REUTERS/Lisa Richwine
A test of endurance, the nearly
12-hour event features three stages spread across a grassy golf
course next to the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California. Band sets
overlap, prompting some fans to sprint between stages to catch as
much music as possible. Many attendees said they logged 20,000-plus
steps during the day.
"The stages are really freaking far apart," said "Whip It" member
Rachel Bove, explaining some of the day's physical challenges. "It's
really hot. And I'm the type who's going to be on my feet all day."
Bove, 53, said she works out five days a week because "I have no
plans to stop enjoying my passions."
Heidi Nagel, a "Whip It" member from Michigan, felt her fitness
decline after she was diagnosed with hip dysplasia and told to stop
running. She adjusted her workouts and started physical therapy in
January with a clear goal: to be able to walk for hours at the Cruel
World Festival in May.
"It definitely worked," Nagel said. "I walked a whole day at Cruel
World and was comfortable and not medicated."
Nagel said she liked that "Whip It" members embraced people at all
fitness levels.
People who were teens in the '80s, she said, grew up when schools
emphasized organized sports rather than physical activity. Those who
were into music often did not work out or socialize with classmates
who played sports.
"I was a goth kid," Nagel said. "(Sports) was not what we did. It
would have interfered with my clothing and my makeup."
In the "Whip It" group, "we're just all coming from a different
place and we're all trying to do our best," Nagel said. "Everyone is
celebrated."
For Lawrence, his improved fitness enabled him to dance for nine
hours at Cruel World.
"If I had done the same thing a year ago," he said, "I may as well
have been hospitalized."
(Reporting by Lisa Richwine; Editing by Mary Milliken and Bill
Berkrot)
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