Exercise Help

 

Seems to be a lot more written lately about if being slim means that you are in better physical condition.  I find this question lacking in common sense actually.  Why?  Because it relates to the idea of physical fitness.  Not to how you are doing physically.  Over the years as I had become bigger and my obesity started to really take it’s toll, I was often more active than many people my age.  Now looking at me you would not have guessed it because at almost 3/4 of my height inches around my waist.  I worked out each week.  Many of my friends did not.  I would often work harder in group situations than many of the people that where thinner and even younger.

You could say I had more endurance than some, but still I wasn’t physically fit.  I could not have run a mile to save my life.  Three miles before work like yesterday would have been out of the question.  First of all I could not have done 3 miles in one setting walking or running.  Giving it my best still would have wiped me out for the day.  So active is not always fit.  And slim is not always active.  How to measure fitness?

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1.  Determine if you are talking medical fitness or endurance fitness.   Medical fitness can be tested and measured as well as endurance fitness.  Each one is a different set of tests.  Medical fitness is measured with things like blood tests, having check-ups, body fat percentages, and various other measurements of healthy body.  Put them all together and you have a measurable results that tells you if you are healthy or not.  Physical fitness has other tests.  Length of workouts, recovery, intensity, endurance, and the list goes on.  It too can be measured and tracked.  If physical fitness is not being worked on, it is dropping.

2.Decide what needs to change. If you are at your ideal weight (determined by you and someone you trust) than you may need to look at the other forms of testing.  Are there areas of either physical fitness or medical fitness that you need to look at?  Start working on them and perhaps you can combine the two for “optimal health”.  If you weight needs to change, stop fighting it and work on weight loss.  If you have no endurance then exercise and come up with a plan to change it.  If you have no ideas, than ask for help.  It is available here and many other place on the net.  Make a change.

3. Lastly stop making excuses for yourself. I hear it all the time.  On of my favorites is that BMI charts are old science and have no bearing in truth.  So frigging what!  Adjust it for your body type and muscle mass and figure out if you are in shape or get your body fat measured.  Stop using it as an excuse for not doing the work to reach a healthful state.  Same with exercise.  Here it is I am too out of shape or it takes too much time.  How will that change if you don’t change something?  As far as time goes you can pack life changing fitness into 20 mins a day or less.  So time is not the issue.  Commitment is!  Way out of shape?  Start slow and keep ramping it up till you get where you want to be.

You are not too big, too old, too young, too timid, too out of shape or too anything to not change something to make an improvement.  You may need some help to get started.  You may need a kick start on your weight loss or your physical program.  You may even need some one like our team to teach and encourage you.  But you can do it!  You can reach optimal health no matter where you are now.  And optimal health is the best that your body can do for the condition it is in, not in comparison to someone else and their abilities.

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This last week was the first time in months that I was feeling so bad I had to take some time off from work and workouts.  I came down with a cold or flu and just before that I had pulled something in my back during one of my last weight trainings.  Reminder to self remember to stretch more.  So imagine for a few short moments coughing and sneezing with your back spasms that would normally bring me to my knees if I could just get out of bed.  That was just two days ago and this morning I was back up and walked out 2 miles.

No, I am no superman.  I did have to dig in and find that hero I wrote about recently. I had to get back at it as soon as I was able.  Why you ask?  Well because it was the workouts and the weight loss that turned what would have been a full weeks worth of illness to just half a week.  That’s right my recovery was faster because my body was stronger.  It wasn’t hauling around an extra 100 lbs.    It was not in the constantly worn down condition of no sleep and no reserves.  When I got back there where still people out from the same or similar bug.

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I went and got my back adjusted as I had gotten it out of alignment.  Feels much better today.  Again a recovery that would normally take a couple of weeks before I would even think of going back to working out.  In talking to the chiropractor we talked about recent vacations he had taken this last year and I commented that I used to think that action, fun-filled things like hiking and snorkeling where out of the question for me just one short year ago.  That this last year I had hiked the Grand Canyon for the full day and loved every minute of it.  I look forward to my next tropical vacation where I can get back in the water and enjoy the fish and swimming without feeling like I was going to run out of breath.

To answer the question I used for the title, I realized on my walk this morning that the way to recover is to start back at it.  It doesn’t matter if it was illness or lack of weight loss that slows us down.  It doesn’t matter that we are discouraged or feeling a bit let down.  It matter how we overcome that feeling.  It matters that we do what we can do.  Last week it was keeping the hands out of the chocolate jar at work.  This week it was going for a walk rather then slacking another day.  All of it based on choices that stacked up over this last year that made it even possible to do it in the first place.

That’s right loosing weight and working out made me stronger and recovery was faster.  Small price to pay to have along with it more energy and determination to keep going.  What goal are you working on today?  What are you willing and able to do to get there?  Think about it and DO Something about it today!

 

Doing long runs or walks can often be hard to do for a lot of reasons. First you might not be able to spend the time to walk or run for 60 mins in your day. Add to it that if you workout in a gym you may find yourself easily bored after 15 mins on a treadmill or elliptical machine. At the same time you want to speed up your weight loss or work on your cardiovascular health.

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Here is something you can do to get more out of your workout and reap the benefits that time allows. Lets stat with the assumption that you are just beginning this idea on how to workout and get more out of you time. I going to start with the idea of interval walking. The idea can be applied to treadmill, elliptical or just in your neighborhood. The idea behind it is the same. The results are that you can pack into 20 mins what would maybe to take you an hour or more to do at a steady pace.

  1. Start with a warm-up pace at 3-5 mins. This should be just easy pacing to get your muscles warmed up. Make sure you do some stretching before you start!
  2. Alternate with short burst of around 75-85 percent of your maximum effort  It can be anywhere from 15-60 seconds.  Longer periods later as your endurance increases.
  3. Remember the more intense you push to give yourself a longer recovery time between bursts.  The goal to be ready to give it your best on the next burst
  4. Do this for 6 to 12 bursts with recovery times in between.
  5. Cool down for 5 mins.
  6. Enjoy the additional metabolism boost and the great cardio workout you just did!

This will give you a great aerobic routine, increase your fat burn and can be easily adjusted to your current fitness level.  Watch your heart rate and keep in mind any advise you are getting from your doctor as to your intensity of exercise.  I think you will find that throwing in an interval training one to two times a week helps you get more from your time spent in working out.

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