Maintain Momentum
Chances are
good that at least once a year — in January, perhaps? — you vow to commit to an
exercise program. If you've had some trouble with the follow-through, you're
certainly in good company. Yet there are so many compelling reasons to make the
commitment again and stick with it. Everyone has a different reason for losing
momentum. The bottom line is that if getting fit is important to you, you can
do it in less time than it takes to watch the nightly news. In fact, you can do
it while you watch the news. If you follow the recommendations of organizations
such as the American Council on Exercise and the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC), what you need to improve your heart health (and reduce
your risk of all kinds of other diseases) is a total of 150 minutes of exercise
per week or 30 minutes three times a week. You can break it down however you
want.
Set a SMART Goal
In Online fitness
parlance, a SMART goal is one that is Specific, Measurable, and Attainable, and
it’s one that you can Reward yourself for meeting as long as you meet it within
a certain Time.
Meeting
goals is satisfying, and fitness experts say it helps build momentum. Just pay
close attention to the "attainable" part of this equation because an
unrealistic goal only sets you up to fail. Instead of challenging yourself to
exercise daily for 30 minutes when on some days you can’t even get in 15, look at
your schedule, and find two days that you can realistically boost your workout
time to 30 minutes. It all adds up to get you toward your goal of 150 for the
week.
Vow to Take More Steps Every Day
For nearly a
decade, public health experts at the CDC have urged Americans to take 10,000
steps every day. But we're falling short. A typical American woman takes just
5,210 steps a day, and a man takes around 7,000. Incidentally, the 10,000 mark
comes out to about five miles a day, and people who walk that much are
considered "active." Those who get in 12,500 steps a day are
"highly active."
Movement Matters
Even if
weight loss isn’t your goal, you should still aim to increase your daily
mileage to maintain general health.
In a recent
study in the Journal of the American Medical Association, researchers asked
healthy young men to significantly reduce the number of steps they took each
day (dropping from an average of 6,203 to 1,344 steps a day). Within two weeks,
the subjects' insulin levels rose by nearly 60 percent — putting them at risk
for diabetes — and their amounts of abdominal fat increased by 7 percent even
though they hadn’t gained any overall weight.
[Source: http://www.healthline.com/health-slideshow/setting-fitness-goals#4]
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