From the most demanding runner to someone who simply wants to keep an eye on their health, sportwatches are everywhere. But are we sure we’re using them the right way? Here’s how to avoid becoming a slave to the numbers.
When I’m in line at the supermarket checkout, to pass the time, I look at the watches people in front of me are wearing. It’s become a game: I can recognize the silicone bands, the shiny bezels, sometimes even the model, and definitely the brand at a glance. On their wrist is no longer a simple timepiece, but a sort of small control center that knows how many times a minute they breathed during the night and whether their heart is functioning optimally.
These are no longer niche tools for obsessive runners. Nowadays, everyone has a sportwatch (or its “civilian” version, a smartwatch, which often has similar, though less specific, features), from the office worker who does yoga twice a week to the retiree who counts their steps more scrupulously than an accountant. In just a few years, we’ve gone from “I feel good, so I am good” to “my Garmin says I’m sleeping poorly and haven’t recharged my batteries, so I’m sleeping poorly.”
The Digital Awareness Revolution
This cultural shift is enormous. Until yesterday, knowing parameters like heart rate, oxygen saturation, or sleep quality required dedicated instruments or, sometimes, even specialist visits. Today, you just have to lift your wrist, and science streams via Bluetooth.
We have access to an amount of data about our bodies that our parents could only dream of. We know everything, or almost everything. And this is extraordinary: it means you can get to know yourself, understand how your body reacts, and maybe notice sooner if something is wrong. It’s like having a small diagnostic unit always on, telling you, “you pushed hard today, take it easier tomorrow.”
But along with awareness comes its shadow: a certain anxiety, more or less veiled.
The Dark Side of Closing the Rings
Think about those who have to close their Apple Watch “rings” before going to bed (hey, I’m talking about myself). It becomes a mission, a matter of principle. At eleven at night, you find yourself running up and down the stairs like a maniac or taking the dog out for the 12th time in a day, just because a small colored circle isn’t complete yet.
If you don’t close it, you feel like you’ve failed. It’s as if you haven’t completed a video game level, with the difference that the final boss that gets you isn’t digital, but the creeping feeling of not having done enough. I haven’t disappointed you, have I, my trusty wrist-friend?
When Numbers Become Masters
The problem is that by chasing numbers, we risk forgetting what these tools are really for. We’re not running to improve our health, to feel better, or to feel the wind on our faces: we’re chasing graphs, percentages, and VO₂ max.
Between virtual badges for running three days in a row, heart rate variability charts, and that mythical value of maximum oxygen consumption, running becomes a gamification gym. The difference is that there’s no joystick to handle here, but a body that struggles, sweats, and sometimes gets more tired than it should.
The fundamental question is: are we running better, or are we just chasing numbers?
Technology Is Neither Good nor Bad
A GPS watch or a smartwatch is neither good nor bad in itself. Like all technologies, their value depends on how we use them. They can be a discreet coach, a compass that guides you without ever imposing. Or they can become a tyrant that dictates your times, paces, and even your mood for the day.
The tipping point is when the device stops being a tool and becomes a judge. If you wake up in the morning and the first thing you do is check if your watch says you slept well, you may have delegated too much. You don’t need to know how long your REM phase lasted to tell if you’re rested: just ask your body. Knowing certain data is important, of course: you can understand the many ways your body and its behavior can be described, and you can deepen your knowledge of it, learning to use it better, starting from a place of respect.
In short, certain data are incredibly useful if we know how to read them, but if they become the only measure of judgment, then we have a problem.
How to Use Them Without Being Used by Them
Technology can be an excellent servant but also a terrible master. How we use it makes all the difference. Here are some practical tips to stay in control:
- Remember they are approximations: The data is useful, but not perfect. There’s no need to live as if it were truth set in stone. Even the most advanced device can make a mistake or misinterpret a signal.
- Always listen to your body before the screen: If you feel good, a sleep chart shouldn’t convince you otherwise. Your body has a feedback system far more sophisticated than any algorithm.
- Use them as motivation, not as judgment: An unclosed ring isn’t a failure, but an indication. You’ll do better tomorrow, or maybe tomorrow you’ll rest. Both options are valid.
- Leave your wrist free sometimes: Running without a GPS, even for just a few miles, reminds you that running is, above all, freedom. Run by feel, listening to your breath and the rhythm of your steps.
- Use the watch as a logbook: Check it once you’re back home, not like an air traffic controller shouting instructions in your ear while you’re moving.
The Secret Is, as Always, Balance
Perhaps the solution lies in finding a balance. Use the data to map out the general route, but then rely on your own feelings for daily navigation, or at least never forget to compare the data with what you feel. Focus on the scenery, on the good kind of fatigue, on that silent dialogue between body and mind that is the purest essence of running.
Numbers can tell a lot, but not everything. What really matters—the joy of moving, the pleasure of breathing deeply, the satisfaction of a workout well done—no sensor can ever measure.
In the end, the difference is all here: who is in charge of whom. And the right answer is always you.