You’ve likely heard by now that sitting is
considered the new smoking; meaning that the health detriments of prolonged
sitting day in and day out are just as dangerous if not worse than smoking
cigarettes. I recently read a report
that two hours of continuous sitting will undo the benefits of 20 minutes of exercise. This is just more evidence that we need to
get up and get moving and get out of our seats at home and at the office. Obviously any form of exercise is better than
none at all, but what type of exercise should you be doing to gain the greatest
return on investment for you overall health and wellness?
As I’ve reported before, the best exercise programs
include dimensions for strength, cardiovascular, as well as balance,
coordination, and flexibility. Most
people simply don’t do this. The weight lifters
are often lacking the flexibility and cardiovascular components. The walkers/runners are often lacking the
strength and flexibility. The yoga
enthusiasts could do better with strength and cardio. Again, this is not to downplay any of these
forms of exercise as they’re all equally great in their own right; they’re
simply incomplete by themselves. The
standard recommendations that are most widely accepted are to do strength
training twice per week where you work on all the major muscle groups at least
once each week. Try to make your
strength training as “functional” as possible where you are performing common,
real-life movements with resistance rather than isolated muscle training. A personal trainer can help you with
this. In addition to strength,
cardiovascular training three times per week is the most commonly accepted
schedule. In order to get the greatest
health benefits and weight loss out of your cardio work, practice what is
referred to as HIIT or high intensity interval training. This type of training is so important on many
levels and it is where I’d recommend getting started if you’re just getting
back into exercise. The advantages of
this training include insulin regulation, maximized growth hormone, but also
time management. Through HIIT training
you can get a better workout in just 20 minutes than what you would otherwise
do in an hour on a treadmill or bike with a steady heart rate. Again, a trainer can provide different
options for HIIT. In regard to
flexibility and coordination, it’s a good practice to include 10 minutes of
this at the end of every workout. This
practice will relieve stress off your muscles and joints that can lead to
injury but more importantly, working on balance will help prevent dangerous
falls as we age.
What I’ve just described is the type of workouts
provided in our 8 Weeks to Wellness program.
The doctors who designed this program took the latest science and
research and put it into practice. In
addition to this, our trainers focus on core strength and posture to retrain
the posture patterns that cause much of the back and hip as well as neck and
shoulder problems that people suffer from.
We’re proud to announce that we have two new trainers in the office
(Brittani Groff and Kelly Culp) doing this work and their anxious to help –
they’re so anxious that we’re offering one free workout through the month of
August to anyone who responds to this article.
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