Much of my training these days is at the Roppongi Hills Spa, the one luxury in my otherwise ascetic existence. I spent some two hours at the Roppongi Hills Spa yesterday and during the hour I was in the swimming pool I did not see a single other swimmer. After the swim I spent 45 minutes in the exercise room which I

Contrast this with the "spa" I went to in California recently. Actually in America we would not call this kindof facility a spa. Americans go to "athletic clubs" or "health clubs". The Redwood City Athletic Club possesses all the same facilities -- pool, exercise, sauna, restaurant as the Roppongi Hills Spa. But us Americans (at least the males) hastily change our clothes and spend our time rigourously swimming, lifting weights, playing basketball, spinning. It is a grim, goal-oriented, time-harried crowd. Showering is a perfunctory thing. The shower facilities are rather spartan and do not always smell particularly nice, but even if they were as luxurious as Japan's, people are in too much of a hurry to care. Too much of a hurry to chat much either. More than half the people are wearing i-pods at the Redwood City Club anyway.
Now contrast this with the spa I went to on a business trip to Germany. As usual I was preoccupied with completing my swim and bike workout programs. But all around me the people were wading and floating in waist-high water, holding drinks and socializing with one another. I felt like I was at a huge poolside cocktail party. Nobody else was wearing goggles or doing laps.
Now that the ironman is over and my training requirements are less time-intensive pehaps I can relax a bit more at the spa? I doubt it, I am too American I guess in this respect.
1 comment:
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