There are many ways to excercise and it really does depend on your level of current exercise and fitness.
If you havent done much or very little physical excercise then why not make time for yourself to go out for a 20 minute walk everyday.
To some that may seem difficult or not easily achievable because "I dont have time! There is no where to walk, I dont want to go on my own" I am sure you have to go the shops and most people have one within 20 minute walk away. If you are working why not consider a walk at dinner time. Just to get away from the work environment can do wonders to the body and mind. Pop your i pod earphones in and have a walk and forget the toils of the previous few hours and allow the mind to settle ready for the post dinnertime work.
Dont forget to take your water to sip on the way. If you dont want to go on your own get a work colleague to go with you or a member of the family to have a wander to the shops with you (they can carry the shopping back!)
Build yourself up gentle and just enjoy it. 20 minutes a day is all it takes to increase your fitness and by leaving the car behind you will see things in your neighbourhood you never knew was there.
If you have a fair level of fitness and currently exercising there is a question that quite often gets asked.....
"Is there an order to working out? In other words, should I do
weights first and then cardio?"
Working out is always good for you. The good news is that, whether you do it
before or after weight training, cardiovascular exercise like running,
swimming, biking or machine-work will improve everything from your heart health
to your mood to your chance of avoiding many cancers. And lifting weights helps
with everything from bone density to metabolism.
But according to exercise physiologists and personal trainers that have been asked,
the order of operation can change depending on a person's goal.
"This question is one of the biggest questions on people's minds when
they go to the gym," says personal trainer and HuffPost blogger Jeff
Halevy. For those who are seeking weight loss, cardio should come first, but if
gaining muscle mass is the goal, it's time to hit the weight room first. But
why?
Let's start with the muscle-building scenario. "Doing cardio first will
induce fatigue that may compromise technique and possibly increase risk of
injury," explains Fabio Comana, director of Continuing Education for the
National Academy of Sports Medicine. Exhausting oneself with a big run right
before weights and resistance training doesn't just up the risk of injury, it
also means you'll have less energy to throw into a really good weight training
session.
On the other hand, if you're looking to lose fat, Halevy recommends doing
interval cardio training before getting started on weights. As he explains, the
cardio will deplete your body's supply of glycogen -- the stored form of
glucose in muscle cells and a primary material in our energy storage. Once
glycogen is depleted, the body turns to more long-term storage sources, like
fat.
"If your goal is strictly a lean body -- not to be strongest, or most
powerful, but achieve maximal leanness -- I always recommend implementing
high-intensity interval training at the beginning of each workout," says
Halevy.
But that doesn't mean weights aren't important for fat loss. In fact, when
it comes to analyzing the percentage weight loss that's comprised of fat versus
lean tissue like muscle, weights have cardio beat overall.
"Resistance training should always be a consideration," explains
Comana in an email. "Mother nature will help us lose lean tissue naturally
(23 percent in women between ages 30 and 70), that we need to preserve. Diet
and cardio also results in lean tissue losses (68 percent fat, 22 percent
muscle / lean tissue). Whereas diet and resistance leads to 97 percent fat
loss, and only 3 percent lean tissue loss."
There may be other reasons for doing cardio first. As Comana points out,
many more people are familiar with cardiovascular exercise, so it will seem
less intimidating and is thus more likely to happen. If the weight room is
daunting enough to prevent a workout session, it's worth getting started on
cardio and working your way up. And if another health goal -- say Type 2
diabetes or hypertension prevention or treatment -- is the priority, Comana
recommends cardio over resistance. "Some diseases are better managed with
cardio first, then introducing resistance training later," he told Healthy
Living.
It's important to get the opinion of a doctor and certified personal trainer
or exercise professional before proceeding, but the takeaway is simple: if
you're exercising, no matter the order, you aren't doing anything wrong.
Depending on your goal, you may want to choose one type of exercise over the
other. Of course, you could alternate days and avoid the question entirely.
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