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September 25, 2009

Posted by Osman Samiuddin on 09/25/2009

A country-sized gym


Such healthy living can sap the spirit of even the most well-meaning tourist © AFP
 

I have walked into a country-sized gym. I’ve always considered myself essentially a fit human being, even sporty. I jog, I go to the gym, I play cricket; even if the diet isn’t so well-controlled. But in Johannesburg I am a pygmy blimp of cholesterol and oil, fattened by a lifetime of sloth.

I noticed it first in the South African matches broadcast on TV, in shots of the crowd, a scarily large number of whom looked far too drunk to have ripped, lean biceps and such. Now I see it here, on streets, in stadiums, in malls. People look like they’ve walked fresh out of gyms, glowing, clean, healthy, athletic. Some days everyone looks like a professional sportsperson. It is intimidating, in the way that knowing someone will live longer and healthier than you can be. It is dispiriting also because you know it is a state achieved with great difficulty.

I ask locals about it and they laugh and assure me that there are South Africans unfit enough to think I am fit. I don’t doubt it, but maybe there aren’t as many as in other parts of the world. Some tell me I should go see other areas of Johannesburg. I presume that meant the press box at the Wanderers or Supersport Park, the only public space I have been to so far where I have seen locals without washboard stomachs.

The thing is, why wouldn’t you be? There is such freshness in the air here and if the sky is so blue and the temperature so pleasant (at this time of the year anyway) the only right and proper way to celebrate it, to enjoy it and to fully feel it, is to be outside doing something energetic. The minute you land here you can feel it. It doesn’t seem a constructed thing in any way, or imposed; just a natural, inevitable outcome of the land and climate. Australia I imagine to be much the same.

All this despite the amount of meat that is consumed here; urban Pakistan is big on meat and you can go for days in Lahore and Peshawar without so much as seeing a vegetable. But we’re vegetarians in front of this lot.

 
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Comments

Posted by: Stuart on 09/25/2009

You think the air in Johannesburg is clean? Compared to Cape Town, Jhb is pollution central. Come down here for a while, visit a golf course or two and you'll notice the difference!

Posted by: Matt Vassard on 09/25/2009

OMG OMG!! A non-political piece by Osman! :o

Posted by: MiaPak on 09/25/2009

Mr. Samiuddin - I think I hear you. I am a Pakistani who lived in USA for about 10 years and then moved to Miami. (Yes, Miami is not USA). After being used to average American obesity, suddenly I am in a world filled with fitness freaks either cycling, walking or running -- and looking pefectly fit !!! But we will still not give up "Mutton Karrhai", "Chicken Biryani" or "Brain Masala".

Posted by: Sid on 09/28/2009

Mr Osman.its okay to be in awe and amazement when an average Pakistani who is a meat eater encounters these people with natural healthy build ..you cannot help but be amazed by the difference ..see the difference between Pakistani players and southafricans ..thats what i am talking about .:D

Posted by: Stelle on 09/28/2009

Hmmm...and jast month I read Safricans are the 3rd "biggest" (read fat) country in the world (after the Americans and the Brits) Yes, we consume a LOT of meat...and gyms are for people who dont have anything better to do :)

BTW Stuart...when last were you in the Garden Route? NO pollution here whatsoever! Although we can do with a little rain...the 252 355 golf courses are beginning to look a little icky

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