The Comeback Β· 4-Week Reset

Row Yourself Back
A gentle, no-willpower-required restart on the Concept2 β€” built around your body, not against it.

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🚣 Your voyage up the Cyprus coast0 / 32 km
Nicosia8kmHalfwayKyrenia 24kmCoast 32km

The deal 🀝

You told me you hate working out right now. So this month has one job: make sitting on the rower feel normal. Not fit, not shredded β€” normal. Everything else (energy, fat loss, muscle) is built on that one habit, and it comes later, on its own, once the habit is real.

Rules of the game:

  • 3 short rows a week. 15–20 minutes each, evenings. That's it. ~50 minutes of rowing a week.
  • The floor is 2 minutes. On a bad day, sit down and row for 2 minutes, then you're allowed to quit and it still counts as done. (You almost never will.)
  • Never miss twice. Miss a day, fine. Just don't miss the next one. That single rule protects the whole thing.
  • Easy is the point. If you can't talk in full sentences while rowing, you're going too hard. Slower is more correct, not less.

Two things to do this week, before Day 1 βœ…

Your medical file is genuinely reassuring for exercise β€” your heart scan is normal and you're cleared-looking on paper. Two quick housekeeping items make this fully safe:

Why the physio, specifically: that morning pain and the "can barely walk after I crouch or stretch" thing is a classic tendon pattern β€” it's a loading problem, not a rest problem, and you've had it 12 months. Rowing is in this plan because it's tendon-friendly (you sit; your bodyweight is supported). A physio just tells us which tendon so we load it right.

⚠️ One important correction about the "iron deficiency"

You mentioned Mediterranean anemia / iron deficiency. I went through your bloodwork and this matters, so read it once:

  • Your hemoglobin is normal (13.3 β€” normal for a man). You are not meaningfully anemic. Good news for rowing: your oxygen delivery is fine.
  • Your blood picture (small red cells, target cells, high red-cell count) is a thalassemia trait β€” "Mediterranean anemia." That is the opposite of iron deficiency.
  • The one ferritin (iron store) test in your file was 182 β€” completely normal/full. Nothing in your records shows low iron.
  • So: do NOT start iron supplements (or iron-fortified "energy" powders) to fix this. With a thal trait your body already holds onto iron, and adding iron on a mistaken "anemia" basis can genuinely cause harm. Only take iron if a doctor confirms low iron with an actual blood test.
I'm not your doctor and this is educational, not a diagnosis β€” but it's worth raising the "thal trait vs iron deficiency" distinction with your GP so nobody accidentally puts you on iron you don't need.

Set your machine once βš™οΈ

Damper

Set the lever to 3–4. Higher isn't "harder training," it's just heavier gearing that fries your legs before your heart benefits. Leave it at 3.

Drag factor

On the PM5: More Options β†’ Display Drag Factor. Aim 100–115. If it reads higher at damper 3, your flywheel just needs a dust β€” fine for now.

Stroke, in one line

Legs β†’ body β†’ arms on the pull. Arms β†’ body β†’ legs coming back. Slow on the way forward, no rush. Watch Concept2's 90-second technique clip before Day 1.

Full app + logbook setup is in the Toolkit tab β€” do that with a coffee, not mid-workout.

Your screen setup πŸ“±

The iPad Air is your secret weapon here β€” for someone who hates working out, the right app makes you forget you're rowing. Prop it in front of the rower.

Free + mandatory (do this first)

  • ErgData (free, App Store) β†’ pairs to your PM5 over Bluetooth. Press Connect on the monitor, open the app. It logs every metre, split, and stroke automatically.
  • Concept2 Online Logbook (free, log.concept2.com) β†’ your permanent record. ErgData syncs to it. This is where streaks, totals, personal bests and challenges live.

Pick one game app (this is what keeps you coming back)

  • EXR β€” start here. "Zwift for rowing": you row through 3-D worlds (Bled, Henley, Boston), level up, chase ghost-boats, unlock stuff. 14-day free trial, then ~€10/mo on the yearly plan. Reviewers who "hate indoor workouts" specifically rate it. exrgame.com
  • Aviron β€” the backup. More arcade/competitive; pure "forget you're exercising." Free trial too, ~€18/mo. Run its trial and EXR's in month 1, keep the one that hooks you.
In Cyprus, Apple Fitness+ and Peloton rower-pairing aren't available β€” don't waste time on them. EXR is the pick.

Free coaching if you want a voice

YouTube: Dark Horse Rowing and RowAlong have gentle follow-along beginner sessions. Concept2's own "As the Flywheel Spins" podcast has guided first workouts.

The engagement tricks I've baked in 🧠

These aren't fluff β€” each is from adherence research. You don't have to think about them, they're already in the plan:

  • Anchor + tiny start β€” you attach the row to something you already do every evening, and the required dose is trivially small. Motivation you don't need.
  • Temptation bundling β€” pick one show or podcast you love and only allow it while rowing. Your brain starts pulling you to the rower to find out what happens next. (This alone raised gym visits ~50% in the study.)
  • Never miss twice β€” the streak counter up top forgives one miss; two in a row is the only real failure.
  • Immediate reward β€” the payoff (the game, the episode, marking the box) happens during/right after, never "in week 4."
  • Visible progress β€” the voyage bar and your falling 500m time give your brain proof it's working.

Break the sitting, not just the workout πŸͺ‘

Honestly this might matter more than the rowing for how you feel day-to-day, after 20 years at a desk:

  • Every ~30 min of sitting, stand up and move 1–2 minutes. Even 5 sit-to-stands from your chair counts (and it's gentle on the tendons).
  • +3,000 steps a day over your normal. Walk on phone calls, take stairs, park far. This "non-exercise" movement is the biggest lever you've got and never feels like a workout.
  • Craving hits? A 3–5 min row or a short walk cuts nicotine cravings for up to ~50 minutes. Use the rower as the craving-buster.

After these 4 weeks πŸŒ…

The timing is a gift: finish Week 4 and Concept2's "Dog Days of Summer" challenge opens August 1 β€” row 10,000m in week one. That's ~3 of your normal sessions. It's the perfect graduation: same habit, now with a global event and a badge. From there, Concept2's free "Couch to Consistency" plan carries you into autumn. We'll build month 2 when you get there.

Green lights 🟒

From your records, the reassuring stuff:

  • Heart scan (echo) + ECG normal β€” good pump function, normal valves, normal rhythm. No cardiac reason not to start.
  • Not anemic β€” normal hemoglobin; your oxygen delivery is fine.
  • Myasthenia was ruled out β€” so exertional fatigue isn't from a neuromuscular disease.
  • Thyroid was normal & stable at your last bloods (mid-2025), antibodies negative.

Amber β€” worth a quick GP word 🟑

  • Thyroid not re-tested since mid-2025, and your eye scan showed active thyroid-eye inflammation in 2026. Your last thyroid bloods were fine, but since we're starting exercise, a quick TSH check + "am I clear to train?" is smart. Until then, keep effort easy (talk-test pace). Uncontrolled overactive thyroid + hard exercise is the one combination to avoid.
  • The active eye condition means: avoid heavy breath-holding / straining (Valsalva) and long head-down positions, which spike pressure behind the eye. Rowing at easy pace with normal breathing is fine β€” just don't grunt through max efforts. (There are none in this plan anyway.)
  • Slightly high fasting insulin β€” an early "your body would love some muscle and movement" signal. Not a risk to exercise; a reason to do it.

πŸ›‘ Stop the session and rest if you get:

  • Chest pain or tightness
  • A fluttering / irregular / racing pulse that doesn't settle
  • Real dizziness, feeling faint, or a cold sweat
  • Breathlessness far beyond "I'm working" β€” gasping at rest
  • Pulse still over ~100 several minutes after you stop
Tendon red flag: a sudden sharp pain or a "snap/pop" at the back of the ankle/heel with weakness pushing off β€” do not walk it off, seek urgent care. That's the one tendon thing that's an emergency.

The tendon rules (your 12-month issue) 🦡

  • No hard static stretching of the calf/Achilles. You already know it β€” you can barely walk after. That end-range stretch compresses an irritable tendon. We replace it with isometric calf holds (built into every warm-up): they actually relieve tendon pain for ~45 min and load it safely.
  • Row heels-down / straps loose, shorten the slide early. The catch (knees bent) is where the ankle loads most β€” don't jam into full depth in weeks 1–2.
  • The 24-hour rule: some tendon ache during/after is OK if it settles within 24 h and next morning isn't worse. Worse-and-worse = back off, see the physio.
  • Sore muscles (DOMS) 1–3 days after early sessions is normal and harmless β€” that's different from sharp, localized tendon pain. Keep moving gently; it fades in a week.

IQOS + rowing ⏱️

  • No IQOS ~30–60 min before or after a row. Right before, it stacks a raised heart rate and tightened vessels onto the work; right after, it blunts your recovery window.
  • Small honest win: IQOS gives off far less carbon monoxide than cigarettes, so slightly better oxygen than smoking β€” but it's "less bad," not safe.
  • Use rows and walks as your craving tool. Cutting down even a little will show up fast in how the rowing feels.
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