When I asked Myrika Schneider, the studio director at PUSH Fitness in St. Paul, if the class she'd invited me to would kick my butt, she giggled.
"You'll love it," she said. "You'll be with Connie."
At 6 a.m. on a Tuesday morning, I logged into a virtual Tabata class — my first time doing the circuit exercise — taught by a 58-year-old Black woman named Connie Sheehan, the founder and owner of PUSH Fitness, from a living room in Chicago, where she's caring for her mother who recently suffered a heart attack.
She did not have any weights or equipment, but her vibrant demeanor and energized presentation proved sufficient.
"Today is going to be the best day of your life!" she told the class, while "Best Day of My Life" by American Authors played in the background. "You didn't know that when you woke up, did you?"
I'd caught the virtual bug after I canceled my gym membership a few months after the COVID shutdown, bought a discount exercise bike and started online spin classes.
The positive vibe of the instructors is infectious. It was also an important barometer. They could pedal at 120 revolutions per minute in a hip-hop spin class while rapping every word of Warren G's "Regulate." At that time, I had barely reached the humming phase of my pandemic fitness journey. I had — have — work to do.
"I'm here for you," said Schneider, who teaches classes at PUSH Fitness. "I hope that I'm always giving that vibe and energy out."