Thursday, January 23, 2014

ARTICLE: GIRLTREK ORGANIZES WOMEN TO EXERCISE OUTIDE

 
 
 
When Faye Paige Edwards woke up recently to numbing weather and a wind chill well below zero, she expected some women to cancel plans to join her on their usual walk on the North Riverfront Trail near Hall Street and Riverview Boulevard.

But five women, including Edwards, did show up and began walking at 8 a.m. sharp, their boots making crunching sounds on the snow and ice on a trail where nothing else seemed to move except the glittering water in the Mississippi River.

“There is no such thing as bad weather,” Edwards said. “If you have enough layers on, you can do it. So we are trying to change the face of fitness in the black community.”

The women are part of a relatively new national movement called GirlTrek, which seeks to get often sedentary black women out the house and on their feet for workouts, says Edwards, a retired sales and marketing consultant and the volunteer rep for the local GirlTrek organization.

“We had a lot of cancellations this morning,” she said, “but some of us will be here the first Saturday of every month, rain or shine.”

The monthly river trail walk is in addition to the organization’s efforts to encourage women to exercise at least 30 minutes daily.

“For many people the only way you are going to get fit is to lace up your sneakers and walk because a gym is not an option,” she said. “People ski and skate in cold weather. So there is nothing unsafe about being out here.”

The goal, she said, is to promote good health and address obesity among black women. Obesity is a condition under which body weight is sharply higher than the recommended body mass index. African-American women have the nation’s highest obesity rate, according to the federal Office of Minority Health.

Edwards and others on the walking trail talked about being proactive about their own health. One participant was Ida Harris, who works for the American Heart Association and chairs the Health and Wellness Ministry at New Sunny Mount Baptist Church on the north side.

“I am out here with GirlTrek because walking 30 minutes a day, five days a week combats heart disease, diabetes and stroke,” Harris said. “We are committed to be out here the first Saturday of every month, even on cold days, even if it’s below zero.”

The women envision GirlTrek enjoying lots of growth once more people see the benefit of walking.

GirlTrek is a nonprofit group that began two years ago in Washington, D.C. An estimated 150,000 girls and women nationwide take part in its activities. The unit in St. Louis started last summer, and about 50 people participate in local activities, Edwards said.

What seems to discourage African Americans from exercising in cold weather and in general, Edwards said, isn’t the temperature or neighborhood safety but habit. “We are all victims of our culture and our socialization,” she said. “You do what you see your friends do. That’s one reason we are trying to create a fun, friendly community of people who are walking.”

Another factor among women, she said, is that many of them “spend time focusing on everyone else’s care but not their own. Their own care has never been a priority. We were too busy or tired.”

GirlTrek intends to make exercise by women a priority, she said.

“If we don’t have healthy black women to model healthy black behavior, we will never have healthy black girls,” she said. “Most of our black girls are on track to have diabetes and most of that is due to inactivity. So there is more at stake than our personal fitness.”

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