I lost 2 stone through kayaking. I hated sport at school - couldn't throw, couldn't catch and couldn't run. I was the fat speccy kid that nobody wanted in their teams.
As a student I started climbing and then in my 30s I started kayaking.
I heard about an annual endurance race from Devizes to Westminster and thought it sounded insane. I had a mad paddling friend so we thought we'd give it a crack. We joined the local racing club and started training. She dropped out after a month or so so I carried on on my own. Afterall, I'd told the world I was going to do this 24hr kayak marathon.
I started training in the September - 3 times a week and got to love it but it was tough.
I remember one winter training session that first year - only me and 2 16 year olds. We were using the paddling machines which are a bit like rowing machines. I was too weak to be able to actually paddle the machine so I was given a paddle and just told to wave my arms around with good technique whilst they did a proper work out. I was mortified but I kept at it and raced the following easter and loved it.
I carried on training and did it the following year with one of the club juniors and we had a fabulous time. Sharing the winter training with somebody else was great. She had a saturday job so we'd be out on the river at 7am with plenty of time for her to get changed and get to work. It didn't matter if it was -7 degrees, that the water dripped off your paddle and had formed balls of ice before they hit the river, that the might river Severn was thick and viscous and beginning to freeze... having somebody to share it with was fun!
I dropped from 10 stone to 8 1/2 stone and had a tiny waist and awesomely strong core muscles. It was fabulous!
I had DD a couple of years ago and never went back to proper training after that but spent a lot of time coaching but after a year of racing again I was pretty much back to my previous speed - although still a stone heavier. I'm now 40 weeks pregnant and can't wait to get back to it. I have so much motivation at the moment but I'm not sure how that will fare following broken nights with 2 kids...
What made the initial training easier was having a regular session to go to. I used to leave work twice a week and go straight to the club. It didn't matter what the weather was doing; it may be dark, hailing, snowing, blowing a hooley but I'd still get to the canal at 6, be on the water at 6:20 and paddle for an hour or so without even thinking about it.
I've done some running since - initially with a colleague and we quickly got to running 10k before work but since DD was born I've been training solo. Its been really hit and miss and when you've not arranged to meet someone its easy to look at the weather and decide to go tomorrow 'cos its a bit damp out there and then miss another session and then find the next one really hard and your motivation wavers more...
I have committed to a 10k next September and I WILL be doing the DW again in 2014.
Sorry - that's a very long post.
If you find something that you want to do, and ideally somebody to do it with (unless you have an iron will) then anything is possible.
let us know how you get on and if you're in Shropshire, I'm looking to start running in 7 or 8 weeks...