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Exercise: Why YOU Should Do It
by: Aaron M. Potts
Hundreds of Thousands of Americans
spend millions of dollars each year on diet pills, “magical”
exercise devices, and misrepresented health and fitness products,
when in all actuality a good set of dumbbells and a brisk walk may
be all you need to get in better shape than you’ve ever been in.
What can you do with nothing but a
set of dumbbells, you ask? Provide resistance to your body’s
movements - also known as weight lifting. That’s all weight lifting
is – resistance. The terms “weight lifting” and “resistance
training” have become one in the same because they are describing
the same activity – moving your body under more resistance than it
normally has to handle.
In fact, you’ve just stumbled upon
the basic secret of exercise in general! Whether you are talking
about resistance training, Pilates, Yoga, cardiovascular activities,
or any other form of exercise, all of these programs have one thing
in common - performing more activity than you would get sitting on
the couch. WHY should you exercise, though?
How about defying the aging process
for starters? Do you know that the primary reason why elderly people
end up in nursing homes is because they lose the ability to think
and move on their own? Do you also know that the entire process of
thinking and moving on our own happens because we do it every day?
Until we retire, that is. Once we don’t have to go to work anymore,
or deal with scheduling and lifestyle issues, suddenly the only
thing that we have to think about is whether to watch game shows or
soap operas all day long, and the only exercise we get is deftly
flying our fingers over the remote control.
Mush. That’s what our brains and
bodies turn into when we stop using them. Think you are still sharp
as a tack, and at the height of your game? Try to say the alphabet
backwards in 30 seconds or less.
Yes…. sharp indeed.
What about physically? Think that
you can still hold your own even though you don’t really exercise
much? Stop reading this article and drop down on the floor for some
correct-form push-ups. Did you do at least 30 if you are female, or
at least 40 if you are male? No? How about 20 or 25? 15? Unless you
pulled off 30 or 40, you are probably at less than the 50 percentile
mark for your gender – health conditions notwithstanding.
Okay, so you’ve determined that you
aren’t exactly Olympic athlete material. So what? You don’t even
like sports, let alone being very good at them. That’s fine, and
there is nothing wrong with that. So what about fat? Do you like
bodyfat? Do you find it physically appealing? Do you think it’s
healthy? If so, we’re done speaking. Go on about your business, and
thanks for reading this far.
For everyone else, here is a
newsflash: In America today – the year 2004 – obesity related health
conditions account for more deaths in the United States each year
than all known forms of cancer COMBINED. Heart Disease alone is the
number one killer of American adults, and it is a PREVENTABLE
CONDITION!
How about self-esteem? 64% of
Americans are overweight. That is almost two-thirds of the
population. If you think that a figure like that and the
skyrocketing sales of prescription anti-depressants aren’t related,
you now have a second opportunity to stop reading this article and
continue on with your day.
Here is the bottom line, folks:
Exercise and a reasonable nutrition program are necessary for ALL
people, for their ENTIRE lives. Note, however, that I said
“exercise”, and that I also said “reasonable nutrition program”. At
no point did I say anything about spending 2 hours per day at the
gym, or about eating nothing but carrots and celery for the rest of
your life. Why? Those practices are just as ineffective at long-term
weight loss as diet pills and late night infomercial products. Here
is what DOES work:
1) Weight/Resistance Training –
Weight training for both men and women has the same effect – it
makes your muscles more metabolically active. In simpler terms, it
means your muscles will burn more calories – even when you are
sleeping. Muscle is the only site on your body where bodyfat is
broken down. Weak muscles = weak metabolism. Weak metabolism = slow
calorie burning.
2) Cardiovascular Training –
Contrary to popular belief, this type of training is meant to help
your cardio-respiratory system function more effectively, and
ultimately to last longer. Does it burn a lot of calories? Sure it
does. However, if you don’t combine it with resistance training and
supportive nutrition, you’ll likely just burn off water weight and
the muscle tissue that you worked so hard for up in step number 1.
3) Reasonable Nutrition Program –
Quality sources of complex and fibrous carbohydrates, essential
fatty acids, and lean sources of protein. Eat those nutrients in
reasonable proportions frequently throughout your day, and your
metabolism (refer again to #1) will crank up to high, and you’ll be
burning more calories on a day to day basis than you ever have
before in your life.
So far we have seen that not only
can exercise literally keep us out of a nursing home, but it can
also keep off excess levels of bodyfat which will – literally – keep
us alive. We haven’t even touched on sports performance,
recreational activities, improved energy levels, ability to focus,
or many of the other benefits of a regular exercise program.
Personally, I’d be happy with just
staying out of a nursing home, and staying alive long enough to look
good in a bathing suit. What about you?
About The Author
Aaron M. Potts is an ISSA Certified Personal Trainer and
Youth Fitness Instructor in Jacksonville, FL. His company,
Aaron's Personal Training, provides one on one personal training
services, fitness consulting, nutrition counseling, and online
personal training services to both local and long distance
clients. Find out more about Aaron's Personal Training at
http://www.aaronspersonaltraining.com or call Aaron directly
at 904-699-9917.
aaron@aaronspersonaltraining.com |
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