Staying Fit on Business Trips

Don't let traveling for business derail your healthy lifestyle.


Staying fit is hard enough. Staying fit on the road, where routines are dashed, temptation lurks on every restaurant menu, evenings run long and work starts early the next morning--well, that's another story.

I used to come back from nearly every business trip a few pounds heavier, bloated by turndown-service truffles, five-course, three-hour meals at trendy restaurants and pain au chocolat at conference coffee breaks. But I'm sure I puffed up not just because I ate so much rich food, but because I wasn't making the time to work out. Now, I've figured out a way to eat out at every meal and still stay stable.

Only count calories at one meal a day. For me, that's breakfast. Unless your typical breakfast consists of bacon and eggs with a Krispy Kreme chaser, eat what you eat at home. Even on early-morning flights and at most hotels I can find cereal and skim milk, a container of nonfat yogurt, coffee and a piece of fruit. If I start off the morning right, that discipline often lasts longer than if I have a massive breakfast, which for some reason makes me hungry all day.

Don't go to a fabulous restaurant when you’re famished. Lunch and dinner are trickier to manage than breakfast, especially if the meals are at great restaurants. One tried-and-true trick: I eat a piece of fruit or a handful of sunflower seeds before my meal or have a Virgin Mary for a cocktail to curb my appetite. Then I order whatever I want.

Don’t finish everything on the plate. This is where the pre-meal healthy snack will help out. I’ll butter my bread, but will only take a few bites. I'll order a steak and only eat one-third of it.


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Always find time to work off at least 300 calories a day. No matter how tired I am, no matter how seductive the siren songs of the destination--theater, museum, shopping--I always plan time for at least one workout per day. An hour or 90 minutes is ideal, but I'll settle for a half hour if my schedule is really pinched.

My workouts vary, depending on the weather, whether my hotel has a health club, the time of day, my schedule and my mood. Sometimes I work out in my room. Sometimes I scout out a gym outside the hotel. Sometimes I find a volleyball game or arrange a round of golf. If I'm really stressed, I'll swim laps or take a yoga class.

Whenever I have a choice of where to stay, I pick a hotel with a workout room. My idea of the utmost in luxury is a hotel that deposits your favorite piece of workout equipment in your room. If you belong to a health club at home, check to see if it has reciprocal privileges at gyms in other cities. When all else fails, there's always the YMCA.

What do I do if there's no gym, or if I can't spare an hour there plus the time it takes to cool off, shower and dress?

  • Take a power walk. Ask the concierge for route suggestions, and always carry a map and cab fare in case you get lost or too tired to get back.
     
  • If the weather's crummy, or if I have a real time crunch, I work out in my room before my morning shower. If I'm reduced to doing calisthenics, I use hotel-room props: crunches, elevating my legs on the bed; wall pushups; chair dips; and even jumping jacks, though I detest them. You can even make your own improvised free weights by using two one-liter water bottles--one weighs roughly 2 pounds when full--and using them as dumbbells.

Besides making me feel better, these out-of-town workouts also help me break out of my fitness routine at home. I usually toil on the recumbent bicycle and an elliptical trainer called Body Trek--both of which are rare at hotel gyms--so I take on-the-road workouts as an opportunity to cross train.

Besides the joy of being able to fit in my clothes and eat out without having to order everything broiled dry, sticking to the exercise plan has other important benefits. It makes me feel better, it helps me sleep more soundly in unfamiliar settings and it also keeps me sharp.


Julie Moline has been writing about corporate travel since 1980, and has since logged more than 650 business trips on five continents. She currently writes the "Road Warrior" column for Entrepreneur and has written about travel for the International Herald Tribune, Money, Harper’s Bazaar, Global Finance, Toronto Globe and Mail and The London Daily Telegraph.





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