To Schedule An Appointment- CALL (865) 332-8758 or EMAIL heidi@nutritiousfoundations.com
Nutritious Foundations
Many of us try to get by with as little as possible, the bare minimum to get the job done. We are busy after all! When it comes to exercise, something is always better than nothing, but how much do you need to get the health benefits? To lose weight? To maintain weight?
Remember "exercise" is more than just cardio, there are lots of aspects to keeping our bodies fit and healthy, in fact, I love the word "fitness" because it incorporates all the different aspects of working our bodies towards maximum heath.
Fitness is an all-encompassing word that should include:
Aerobic exercise is great for cardiovascular health and it burns the most calories of any of these categories. The CDC recommends a minimum of 150 minutes weekly of moderate intensity activity (that's 30 minutes, 5 days a week). For weight maintenance or prevention of weight gain 200-300 minutes per week is more effective (1 hour, 5 days a week). Indeed, when members of the NWCR (National Weight Control Registry) were polled, these are folks who are keeping off at least 10% of their initial body weight for 1 year or more, they reported 420 minutes of exercise per week. That translates into 1 hour, 7 days a week! Don't get me wrong, your 30 minute stroll around the neighborhood is amazing for the health benefits it will give you, but if you want to lose weight, think more in the 1-hour range per day of cardio. Just keeping it real, folks!
Increasing your lean body mass (LBM) is a great way to improve your resting metabolic rate (RMR), or the calories you burn at rest. This is because muscle is more metabolically active than fat, more than double in fact! So, more LBM means more calories burned. Over the course of a day, it could be anywhere from 60-100 extra calories burned per pound of LBM which is nothing to write home about. But when you multiply 60 extra calories burned daily by weeks and months and years, it really adds up! Two strength training sessions per week are recommended, but it is also perfectly acceptable to add on an extra strength exercise or two to the end of your cardio session. That way, you hardly notice the extra time or effort! As an extra bonus, strength training also increases bone mineral density, especially in women, who are often at higher risk for osteoporosis.
Think of your body as a rubber band. You want it to be nice and stretchy, not brittle and breakable. Flexibility is your injury prevention time. It can also double as your meditation time. Flexibility is especially important as you get older in order to help prevent injury, especially if you are actively pursuing cardio and strength training activities.
Many of us focus on only the cardio aspect of exercise because it "burns a lot of calories" when we ought to be focused on all of them. If you perpetually neglect flexibility or strength in favor of cardio, you will get injured. If you always favor strength training over cardio, you will lack the endurance that is so beneficial for heart health. I wish there was a way to calculate the benefit of time and effort spent exercising and prepping healthy foods and subtract it from the time spent waiting in doctor's offices or convalescing from illness. As in every hour spent at the gym meant one less hour dealing with chronic diseases directly caused by poor eating habits and a sedentary lifestyle. Maybe if we could see the direct benefit of our efforts to live healthy lives we would be more motivated!
Make a daily commitment to include all aspects of fitness in your life.
Exercise is man's best medicine
--Hippocrates
Photo by David Marcu
Copyright © All Rights Reserved.