Trending Topics

Take 20 minutes

Every crimefighter knows that they need to be physically fit, not only for their optimal survival on the street but for their emotional survival as well. However, many cops don’t feel they have an hour or more to spare in the gym, in a martial arts program, or out pounding the pavement completing a 10K run, so they don’t bother to do anything at all. If you’re having a hard time starting or resuming a physical fitness program, just remember this: “Twenty Minutes.”

Almost every one of us can find twenty minutes to engage in some form of moderate physical activity. Whether it’s a two mile run, a brisk neighborhood walk with the dog, 20 minutes on the elliptical, or having your eight year old teach you how to dribble a soccer ball, twenty minutes is better than doing nothing. The benefits, it turns out, are not just physical, but emotional as well.

According to the West Australian Centre for Health and Aging just 20 minutes of exercise a day can help prevent memory deterioration. The University College London study found that any form of exercise can improve your emotional health. Their study also found that while just 20 minutes of physical activity a week improved a person’s mental state, the more activity a person undertook, the lower their chances of experiencing psychological distress.

The weather is starting to get nicer, take the kids, put a child seat on your bike, get a running stroller for the baby, challenge your fifteen year old to a race, take a walk with your spouse every night after dinner. Make it as much about your emotional well being as it is about your physical fitness.

Commit to just 20 minutes of any physical activity five days a week (with your doctor’s approval of course) for the next two weeks, and then monitor how you feel. That 20 minutes will soon turn into 30 and then more, and before you know it, you’ll start to look forward to exercising and you’ll be healthier, happier, and more fit to fight crime.

My column is undergoing a bit of an identity crisis. I’ve been writing for the Street Survival “Newsline” and the P1 Newsletter for several years. As a Street Survival seminar instructor, I write about officer safety and survival, but I’m also a supervisor, a mom, a trainer, a cop’s wife, and dare I say, a woman, so I’ve got a lot to say about any number of topics (what woman doesn’t?!), and I’ve always received great feedback from our readers. So when Police One approached me and asked me to author a monthly column dealing with women’s issues, I enthusiastically agreed. “What a great opportunity” I naively thought “to bring issues to light that both women and men in law enforcement could all relate to, perhaps discuss at roll call, and ultimately learn something from each other.” Yeah, just call me Sergeant Pollyanna…I forgot that by calling it a “women’s” column, not only will most of our male readers skip over it, but so will at least half our female readers. What?! Why in the world wouldn’t women read a “women’s” column?! Because, there are a lot of female crimefighters out there like me who have spent a lot of years just trying to blend in, to be “one of the guys” if you will…to be perceived as and conduct ourselves as “warriors,” not “victims.” We don’t want special treatment; we just want to be cops.