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Streets
by
Kimra Traynor Herb
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With no place to go

Richard Gere once cried in agony, "I'VE GOT NO PLACE ELSE TO GO!" The movie was called An Officer and a Gentleman and during that scene, when his face was screwed up in anguish, we all felt his pain, didn't we? To imagine having "NO PLACE ELSE TO GO!" when it would be so much easier just to quit; to give up the good fight and go on to easier and happier times, why, who wouldn't want to?

Why, me, for one. I thought when I started this whole "gym" life that it would just be for the activities that I was interested in: cycling and Pilates. But then all the real glamour girls of the gym, the ones who looked like cheerleaders on the ESPN championships, revealed that the true secret of their toned thighs and calves was STEP.

I knew all about this step. Back in the early 90's, when my children were small and my thighs weren't, one of the ambitious mothers at my church decided that she needed to enlighten (and lighten) all of us non-toned moms. She took money from the budget and bought like ten steps just like those used in the real gym, and put them in the Fellowship Hall at our church.

"It will be fun!" She promised, "and" (this part really appealed to me) "free!"

"Free" just about fit my budget so I gamely brought  my two tots to the church nursery and tried a few sessions.

The principles behind step is choreography up and down (and around and back again) on a step. It sounds easy, when you just hear about it, and it really doesn't look too hard when you watch someone do it. However, actually applying the rules and motions to my OWN body proved to be a more daunting task than I had first imagined. I decided that it was much easier just to stay home and eat and grow my thighs rather than to try to humiliate myself further in the Fellowship Hall at my church.

And thus I missed the step movement. I like to tell people that I was fat during the step craze, and that is pretty much the truth of it. It shouldn't have mattered, all these years later, that I couldn't step when indeed, everyone else could, but it started to really bother me.

Take, for instance, those times when a less popular cycle instructor was on the old schedule at the gym. The rest of the girls, those lucky sassy folks, just went to a step class instead. Not me- no such options for the step impaired, so I gamely fought through boredom and back on the bike; out of options and out of energy. And so, when the gym offered a "Step 101" class, a class designed to help even beginners like myself to learn the art of stepping, I signed up.

In hindsight, it wasn't the wisest move of my life. I mean, I had lived forty-one years without ever really stepping, so another forty-one or so wouldn't be too much of a wash without it, would they? But I was determined to try, really try, and no one, least of all me was prepared for how truly spastic I could be in the class.

By the end of week three I was pretty sure that I would be reassigned to a new class, one where helmets were required; so often was I falling off the step. At the end of week six, when a friend asked our instructor Ellen how I was doing, she scrunched up her face and said, "She's doing really great."

Ellen's eyebrows were so far up in her hairline from  voicing the lie that I had to laugh. I had kidded her the week before that she was my "Annie Sullivan" and I was her "Helen Keller" and should she actually be successful in imparting the gift of step into my life they would have to make a made-for-television movie about our ordeal, so stressful for us all had the journey been.

I have been pretty vocal in voicing my discomfiture of the class, and so it was that someone finally asked me the words I had pretty much been asking myself since the beginning: "Why don't you just quit; if it is so hard for you."

Spinning on my sneakered heel, I contorted my face into a parody Richard Gere's face in his famous movie and mouthed the words, "I'VE GOT NO PLACE ELSE TO GO!" This brought about a few uncomfortable laughs; people didn't know how to take the dramatic words about something as inconsequential as a step class. The way I figure it, though, quitting at this point would be equal to admitting that if something  is hard, just don't try it; and as my dad used to say to us kids, "I didn't raise any quitters."