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Fitting
Fitness Back in Your Life
Excerpt
by Kathleen Doheny,
HealthScoutNews
(HealthScoutNews) -- In the good old days before you were married,
had kids, got the promotion, bought the house and did the yard
work, you really worked out.
Hard, fast, regularly. Back then, you could run a five-minute
mile. Or bench press your weight. Or sweat through that 90-minute
advanced aerobics class.
These days, are you spending more time feeling guilty about
not working out than working out?
If so, you're probably the kind of lapsed boomer President Bush
was talking to when he recently declared war on being fat and
sedentary. No wonder you weren't invited along on that three-mile
fun run with him and his staff.
But you have plenty of company. You've joined the 4-in-10 adult
Americans of all ages who admit they are not physically active
at all, according to the President's Council on Physical Fitness
and Sports.
Exercise experts like Richard Cotton and Cedric Bryant have
heard it all before -- busy boomers complaining that, between
carpools and van pools and making ends meet, they barely have
time for a movie, much less a regular exercise routine.
Cotton is an exercise physiologist and also a spokesman for
the American Council on Exercise in San Diego, Calif., an organization
that certifies instructors and oversees exercise research. Bryant
is the chief exercise physiologist for the council.
They both specialize in motivating inactive people to become
involved in exercise programs. They inspire woefully out-of-shape,
middle age lapsed exercisers or never-exercisers to consider the
benefits of incorporating workouts into their however-hectic-or-sedentary
routine, convincing them that the stress-reduction and disease-risk
reduction benefits are worth the effort.
Here are some of their best tips.
- Blot out that "hard body image" memory. It's
normal to have a mental image of yourself when you last exercised
regularly, says Cotton. If your image is from high school, you
could be in big trouble. Even if it was from last year, forget
it. "Try to have as little memory as possible of what you
used to look like and do," Cotton says. "Be in the
present."
- Start slowly. "Do much less than you think you
are able to," Cotton suggests. Take a 10-minute stroll
if you're newly back to workouts. Clients tell Cotton, "It's
not enough." No, he replies, it's not, "but it's a
start." Consider walking as a good way to get back to exercise.
- Know the risks of too much, too fast. "Go too
fast and you're likely to get injured," Bryant says. That
could set you back to square one.
- Prepare. Plan your workout wardrobe so you'll be comfortable.
Consider the weather you will be walking in and decide: long
pants, long sleeves, shorts, hat?
- Don't skimp on shoes. A good pair of shoes should cost
about $70, says Cotton, and they'll help ensure good shock
absorption and cushioning. Which type? "If you are walking
with the hope of jogging eventually, buy running shoes,"
says Cotton. If you plan to walk as your main exercise, get
walking shoes.
- Don't overlook good socks. Best for workouts: Socks
with some synthetic fibers (rather than all-cotton) because
they wick away sweat better. When you try on exercise shoes,
wear your exercise socks.
- Increase your duration of exercise in small increments.
"Spend one week minimum at each phase," Cotton says.
Exactly how long you will walk in each phase will depend on
your stamina and your doctor's advice. But you might begin with
as little as a 15- or 20-minute walk, then work up, Cotton says.
Add duration before speed. You can increase the length of the
walk each phase, by perhaps five minutes a phase. Soon, you'll
be at the recommended 30 minutes (or more) a day, five or more
days a week. "Accept yourself where you are," Cotton
says.
- Do the talk test. If you can't talk with ease as you
walk or jog, you're going too fast and trying to do too much,
Bryant says.
- Remember to stay well-hydrated. "The thirst mechanism
is less sensitive by age 50," Bryant says.
- Add strength training to the cardiovascular routine.
But only when you are ready, Cotton suggests.
- Consider getting an exercise buddy. That could help
increase your faithfulness to your new routine. "An exercise
buddy is always nice," Cotton says, "especially if
you can latch on to someone who already has the habit. That's
a free ride."
- Be realistic about the payoff. You might notice looser
waistbands but no difference on the scale. "As you get
up into the 35-, 40- or 45-minute walks that are brisk, you
can expect weight loss," Cotton says. "But figure
it takes six to eight weeks to transform your body. And even
if you do not lose a pound, you are healthier if you exercise."
And quite possibly, that might put you higher up on Bush's
invite list, should he host another run.
What To Do
For more information on exercise and age-related weight
gain, see the
American College of Sports Medicine. For information on
staying fit, see
American Council on Exercise.
Reference
Source 101
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
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