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www.healthywomen.org April 2008
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Feature Article |
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8 Simple Steps to a Slimmer You this Spring Although she wanted to make a lifestyle change, Elena, who is 41 and lives in Miami Beach, Florida, felt little motivation to get active again. Then, one day, she saw a group of people walking on the sand. Each held what looked like ski poles, which they used to push forward with every step. "It looked like something that was great for health benefits and cardiovascular (strength)," Elena says. The people on the beach were doing Nordic walking, an activity that engages both the upper and lower body. Their leader lent Elena a set of poles for her first few walks. "The group helps motivate you, especially early on. The camaraderie helped," she says. Now with her own walking poles, Elena continues to exercise with the Nordic Walking Club of Miami Beach as well as by herself. She also changed her diet and sleep schedule. The difference is visible: since January 2008, when Elena got herself moving with Nordic walking, she has lost 20 pounds and feels more energized. Falling off the wagon You know all the good reasons to exercise. Yet it's so hard to get going when you've stopped for a few months (or years) or never had a regular activity program at all. Maybe you dropped off from exercising because of boredom, time pressure or the demands of kids. "Staying on track is the hard part," says Diane Austrin Klein, PhD, MPH, assistant professor in the Department of Exercise, Sport and Leisure Studies at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. Sometimes we put off exercising because it seems to demand so much exertion to be effective. That effort may be more than many of us, who don't think of ourselves as athletes, can imagine summoning forth. In reality, moderately intense exercise is better than highly intense workouts for your overall health. Less stressful activity seems to do a better job of decreasing metabolic syndrome, a group of risks—including abdominal obesity, high blood pressure, unhealthy cholesterol levels and insulin resistance—that lead to coronary heart disease and type 2 diabetes. Find your entry point How can you get yourself moving? Dr. Klein advises finding an activity or program that "meets your interests, needs, reasons and goals." If going to the gym or walking the high school track has lost its appeal for you, "don't be afraid to try something else," she says. Tonya Gutch is a senior personal trainer at Cooper Fitness Center in Dallas. Perhaps surprisingly, she's also an advocate of giving yourself permission to do just a little bit of physical activity. That changes the self-defeating idea that doing anything active takes a giant mountain of effort. "When they say you have to do an hour of exercise, it so frustrates people," Gutch says. "It's OK to do five minutes a day…that's a start. People hear that and say, 'I can do that.'" "Whatever mode of exercise you pick and you like, that's the best mode for you," she adds. "As long as you're moving, that's the key." Indeed it is. We know that U.S. women aged 25 to 44 will gain up to two pounds a year, mostly as fat. Getting moving now will keep those numbers from adding up, as well as preventing the health problems that come with inactivity. Ideas to get you going now
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