- Joined
- Sep 9, 2008
- Messages
- 3,669
- Reaction score
- 2,614
- Points
- 5,676
- Attending Physician
You just became my favorite poster on SDN.I hope all you archers in here are traditional bowmen and not some compound bow ****.
Most important hobby for any man: LIFTING. Take advantage of your natural testosterone and muscle growth and get swole. Unlimited health benefits both mentally and physically.
I actually just got the final piece of my home gym setup, a tbar row. Building my own gym has actually had tremendous gains for me because I can squeeze stuff in a lot easier. Highly recommend.
My other hobbies are snowboarding, mountain biking, guns (although I’m just sitting on my ammo atm), and video games.

Golf. 18 holes gets you out of the house for 5 hours min.Too many depressing threads, time for something different.
I need a new man-hobby. I have 4 kids under 7, been cooped up for the better part of a year. Losing my mind and need a man-hobby. Suggestions?
I hope all you archers in here are traditional bowmen and not some compound bow ****.
Most important hobby for any man: LIFTING. Take advantage of your natural testosterone and muscle growth and get swole. Unlimited health benefits both mentally and physically.
I actually just got the final piece of my home gym setup, a tbar row. Building my own gym has actually had tremendous gains for me because I can squeeze stuff in a lot easier. Highly recommend.
My other hobbies are snowboarding, mountain biking, guns (although I’m just sitting on my ammo atm), and video games.
I hope all you archers in here are traditional bowmen and not some compound bow ****.
Most important hobby for any man: LIFTING. Take advantage of your natural testosterone and muscle growth and get swole. Unlimited health benefits both mentally and physically.
I actually just got the final piece of my home gym setup, a tbar row. Building my own gym has actually had tremendous gains for me because I can squeeze stuff in a lot easier. Highly recommend.
My other hobbies are snowboarding, mountain biking, guns (although I’m just sitting on my ammo atm), and video games.
Recs for gym equipment for weight lifting for a small area? I prob only have a 12x 14 ft area in the garage I can make into a home gym. Already have a rowing machine and treadmill.
Bowflex? Marcy?
Throw a water rower in there and you've got your cardio too.A power rack/squat rack with pull-up handles plus a bench will allow you to do all the major compound lifts (bench press, squat, deadlift, rows, overhead press, pull-ups).
Skydiving is one of the best things ever. If you don’t want to jump out of planes, consider getting your private pilots license and learn to land them.
If you don’t want something that adventurous then perhaps learning a new musical instrument.
I have 4 kids under 7
Nah, I’ll skip the middle mans and stick to cocaine and viagra.I second resistance training. Pair it with a solid nutrition plan and get muscular and lean. Also reap the benefits wrt vitality, better sleep, better mood, better libido. It’s a plus on all fronts.
Ignorant and foolish comment right there.I hope all you archers in here are traditional bowmen and not some compound bow ****.
Most important hobby for any man: LIFTING. Take advantage of your natural testosterone and muscle growth and get swole. Unlimited health benefits both mentally and physically.
I actually just got the final piece of my home gym setup, a tbar row. Building my own gym has actually had tremendous gains for me because I can squeeze stuff in a lot easier. Highly recommend.
My other hobbies are snowboarding, mountain biking, guns (although I’m just sitting on my ammo atm), and video games.
You misspelled "most accurate comment in SDN history"Ignorant and foolish comment right there.
Mega millions >>>>powerball right nowSome good suggestions on this thread. Makes me want to buy a powerball ticket so I can do all of them.
Doge>>>>>>> Mega millions >>>>powerball right now
I do archery with my kids, got 'em a smaller bow. It's fun!Second archery. Takes a lot of skill to master.
Smoking brisket on a wood pellet grill would be fun with the kids
Rack with accessories. Can do every major muscle group with the right rack and bench.Recs for gym equipment for weight lifting for a small area? I prob only have a 12x 14 ft area in the garage I can make into a home gym. Already have a rowing machine and treadmill.
Bowflex? Marcy?
Get the best of both worlds. Get an oneida. Hybrid recurve, compound. That's what I shoot bow fishing. that's my addiction. Not for everyone I know but it's my thing. Mix of archery, hunting, fishing, boating.Please let this thread devolve into a flamewar between those who shoot longbows and those who shoot compound. FWIW, I'm a longbow guy.
I agree with posters who have suggested various outdoor activities as a function of where you live. Exercise + sunshine + novelty is an antidote to burnout. It's really fun to be a beginner at things, and we're lucky in that we have time and income to adopt new/different hobbies. Over the last couple years I have enjoyed being a beginner at surfing (8-9'+ longboard + chill beach break = loads of fun), playing golf (one of the other docs in my group gave me his high school clubs -- I keep score by how many balls I lose), playing keyboard-based instruments (learn instruments along with your children!), fly fishing for trout, and have been learning to be better at maintaining my own bike (help your kids fix their own bikes -- if you want to mountain bike, check out some tandems from Ventana and take your kids out with you).
As others have mentioned, running is a nice way to get out of the house and be a little bit healthier. One thing that I think has helped me keep doing it is replacing all my prior social media utilization with Strava, which provides the same dopaminergic pings of sharing things and reinforcing things with your firends but ties it to something that's actually physically good for you.
Pre-pandemic I got pretty into woodworking and built some furniture for my house -- if you live near a makerspace of sorts, you can typically access training on how to use power tools safely and access those tools for a monthly fee that's very reasonable, and if you don't, you can build some pretty cool stuff with hand tools that your children could safely participate in making by learning how to do things on YouTube. A seven year-old (with some help) could probably make a dovetail joint by hand and enjoy doing so.
Get the best of both worlds. Get an oneida. Hybrid recurve, compound. That's what I shoot bow fishing. that's my addiction. Not for everyone I know but it's my thing. Mix of archery, hunting, fishing, boating.
Get a girlfriend?
Did you just assume my gender and orientation?Get a girlfriend?
Did you just assume my gender and orientation?
...and without asking your preferred pronouns first. Sheesh.Did you just assume my gender and orientation?
Preferably something that sneezes when you shift or whistles when you accelerate OP.Get a sports car and go for a drive.
This is good advice for the car and the girlfriendPreferably something that sneezes when you shift or whistles when you accelerate OP.
1. SCUBA - I moved to a tropical spot with world-class diving opportunities at my door and many more within just a few hours flying time. I realized when I purchased my own BCD, regs, and computer, that this is the most money I've spent on tangible objects since finishing residency. I just finished my advanced open water/Nitrox in the past month, I'm taking a deep diving course next week, plan on doing a wreck diving course after that. Goal is to work towards master diver certification over the next 6 months. I was never a strong swimmer growing up, so being able to get comfortable spending time in the water (and being decent in fins) is a big confidence booster. It's the closest feeling you can get to being an astronaut without going into space!
2. Target shooting - My collection has waxed and waned over the years. Currently waning given recent move. Would love to start collecting NFA items, some of these can really accrue value over time and can be very expensive (tens of thousands of $).
3. Bartending - Mainly rum cocktails lately. It's fun learning about different rums and making new cocktails for guests and for myself.
4. Board games - Great way to disconnect from screens for a while and spend time with your friends. I'm not hardcore by any means, but Catan, Pandemic, Forbidden Island, Tokkaido. Great way to have fun and enjoy some cocktails and unwind (goes with #3 above).
5. Reading - I used to be big into sci-fi, lately it's been a bunch of books about Cold War espionage and (for whatever reason) submarines. I got a Kindle and that's been awesome, not to mention you can (ahem) score a lot books online for free.
Things I plan to get into in the next year:
- Day trading - equities and options. This straddles the line between work and hobby. The Stock MD's blog and cyanide12345678 have inspired me, I feel like this is a good way to get some supplemental income on top of clinical and non-clinical work. I need to progress my FIRE timeline given how the future of EM in the US looks rocky. I'm about to have a NW of zero in a few weeks and I need to buff up to a six month emergency fund then let my taxable account take off.
- Aviation - I plan to enroll in a PPL training course when the schools here re-open.
- Bodybuilding - Been needing to get back into this for years.
- Alpine skiing - I was doing this fairly regularly up until about five years ago, doesn't help that I live somewhere tropical, but skiing is a 3-4 hour plane ride away. Haven't tried snowboarding yet but will give it a shot.
- Astronomy/stargazing - I'm a big nerd for space stuff. I should buy a telescope.
- Skydiving - Have only done this a handful of times but would love to do it some more, possibly get licensed
- Windsurfing - A business opened up offering courses, I'm taking one soon.
- Sailing - I'd like to sign up for an actual sailing course to learn how to sail on my own.