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Find Your Best Activity
and How Much You Need.
How to Exercise for Weight Control
and Stay Motivated.
No matter when you start, exercise improves health. Even
people who start exercising later in life appear to gain many of the
same health benefits as people who've exercised their whole lives,
according to research at Stanford University School of Medicine.
Physical activity throughout life can help protect against
some cancers. For breast and prostate cancer, it may help by regulating
hormone levels. For colon cancer, physical activity speeds up the
digestive process, shortening the exposure of the bowel lining to
harmful substances Exercise also helps reduce cancer risk by helping
people maintain a healthy weight.
Choose Your Game
It's important to enjoy what you're doing so you won't get
bored or think of it as a chore. To choose an activity that's right for
you, ask yourself these questions:
Do you like to be social, or would you prefer time to
yourself?
—Social butterflies should try activities that connect them
with other people. Try to walk with friends, join a team or recreation
association, or go line dancing.
—If you need time to yourself, walking, running, swimming, or gardening
can give you time to reflect.
Do you need to get energized or wind down?
—For an energy boost, try aerobic activities that get the
heart pumping.
—Reduce stress with activities like yoga or tai chi.
Are you goal-oriented, or do you like to stay
flexible?
—If you like to feel a sense of accomplishment, choose
activities where you can chart and monitor your progress like training
for a run, or take up an activity with rising skill levels, like
martial arts.
—For a more flexible routine, try walking or find an exercise video you
can do at home.
Do you want to get away from it all or get involved?
—If you want to get away, choose outdoor activities like
hiking, biking, or rollerblading.
—Make your workplace more health conscious with the ACS program Active
for Life. Participants choose their own physical activities,
form teams of coworkers, and enjoy a friendly competition for the
highest number of minutes spent exercising.
—To get involved in the community, consider building homes for the
disadvantaged, participating in charity walks and runs, helping an
elderly neighbor with yard work, or tidying up a local school.
How Much Activity Should You Be Doing?
That depends on you.
- If you haven't been active, you should start with moderate
activities and gradually increase the duration, frequency, and
intensity as you become more fit. Work your way up to 30 minutes or
more five or more days a week.
- If you are active but want to do more, increase the
intensity, duration, or frequency of what you currently do. Moderate to
vigorous activity for 45 minutes or more five of more days a week will
increase your health benefits.
- If you are active and want to maintain your current level
of fitness, try adding new activities to your routine to use different
muscles and keep your interest.
Strike a Balance
Ads for expensive exercise equipment and special diets can
make healthy living look complicated. But the truth is there's no
secret to achieving the weight you want. It is as simple as balancing
the calories you burn. When that doesn't happen, you gain weight.
Remember that everything you eat contains calories, and
everything you do uses calories. For example, if you weight 150 pounds
and are active, you need approximately 2,250 calories per day to
maintain that weight, versus 1,950 calories if you are sedentary.
It helps to know that one pound of body fat equals 3,500
calories. That means that to lose one pound per week, you need to
reduce your total calories by 500 per day. You can do this by eating
250 fewer calories a day, and burning an extra 250 calories through
physical activity (e.g. walking 2.5 miles).
To Burn Off a Large Order of Fries (400
Calories)
A 160 pound person could burn off 400 calories in the time and
activities shown below:
| Activity |
Minutes |
| Moderate walking |
95 |
| Scrubbing Floors |
89 |
| Dancing |
70 |
| Bicycling |
39 |
| Running |
28 |
To plan the physical activity for weight loss, you'll want a
ballpark idea of how many calories are burned in different activities.
For example, if you weigh 150 pounds and did the following activities
for an hour, you'd burn 324 calories gardening, 297 in brisk walking,
and 216 calories playing with kids.
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Less vigorous activities use fewer calories but still
help in weight control. For a 150 pound person, an hour of strolling
uses 206 calories, vacuuming or mopping—150 calories. Watching TV burns
only 72 calories per hour. Find calorie counts for many other
activities with our online calculator.
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Calories
Burned Tool
Find
the calories burned by various exercises and activities of daily living.
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Staying Motivated
Be specific and choose variety. Rather
than having general goals like "getting in shape" or "exercising more,"
choose concrete goals such as walking 30 minutes on Tuesdays and
Thursdays, and doing stretching exercises five minutes each morning.
The more variety you have, the more likely you will continue. A
well-rounded exercise program that includes aerobic exercise, strength
training using weights, and flexibility exercises - even when performed
regularly in small increments - is key, according to the American
College of Sports Medicine.
Incorporate fitness into your lifestyle.
Begin to see exercise as an everyday opportunity. For example, use the
stairs instead of the elevator, walk during lunch, or bike to work.
Combine fitness with your family chores and activities, such as raking
leaves or gardening.
Motivate yourself. Try visualization
techniques to help your motivation. Imagine yourself being in shape and
how it feels. Create a vision of yourself looking fit. Rather than
focusing on feeling out of shape, picture yourself feeling energized
after your workout. Also, reward yourself when you meet each of your
goals.
Get a support system. Build a support
system of family, friends, co-workers, and/or neighbors. They can help
encourage you when your motivation is low. You can also exercise with
someone else. Try to find a buddy who shares similar fitness interests.
Many shopping malls have mall-walker programs where you can meet others.
Expect setbacks and prepare for obstacles.
Things like time, illness, or bad weather may occasionally get in the
way. Disruptions are inevitable. Accept them and move on. If you go off
your program, you can always adapt and resume. Some exercise is always
better than none at all.
If you are a male older than 45 , or a female over 55, and
have not been regularly active, or have any health concerns, consult
your physician before you begin an exercise program. Regardless of your
age, if you have two or more of the following risk factors, consult
your physician:
- High blood pressure
- High cholesterol
- Diabetes
- You currently smoke
- Family history of early onset heart disease (first degree
relative with heart disease before age 65 for female relatives, or
before age 55 for male relatives.)
Revised: 9/28/06
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