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What are your unpopular opinions about health / fitness?
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Christine_72 wrote: »Alatariel75 wrote: »vegaslounge wrote: »Christine_72 wrote: »@vegaslounge I must admit, I would be annoyed if a coworker constantly brought in treats while i was trying my best to lose weight. My willpower is only so strong before i cave, i don't need added temptation placed in front of me at my place of work.
I do not, under any circumstances, dismiss this. Hell, it's taken years of conscious effort on my part to build up willpower in regards to foods I like. But, IMO, the onus is not on the treat-bearer for you to resist their treats. I just feel it's a weirdly self-centered view of the world that people are out to derail you by bringing in something for the office to enjoy. If it's an office of two people and you've told your sole workmate, "please don't bring in treats" and they keep doing it– yeah, that's could be a little weird. But I think in a larger setting, to quote a preeminent scientist and space explorer, "the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few".
Adding a third cent, the workplace sabotage mindset is, IMO, the same as the "I've completely changed the household's diet without their input or consent because of my personal decisions, and they aren't supporting my changes! Help me tell them they're wrong!" I lived through that– Mom put us on Atkins when I was young and by week three I was literally ready to shank my best friend for her hunk of soggy cafeteria baguette. I myself became a strict vegetarian at 15 (I'm 32 now) and guess what? My parents still ate meat and cooked the way they always did, it was up to me to work out how to eat around that. None of my boyfriends have been vegetarian, few of my friends are, and aside from some joshing from my older brothers (which is what older brothers just DO), I can't say I've ever encountered any personal problems from this. Hell, I went to a BBQ last year and the only thing I could eat was a potato. I ate my potato, enjoyed the company, and the sun rose the next morning on schedule.
I guess I just don't get the idea that my weight loss/etc is anyone else's concern or responsibility but mine. The vast majority of people couldn't give a figgy pudding about what you do in your personal life, just as you probably don't know or particularly care about what they do.
Exactly. I work in an office with 45-ish staff. Lots of people bring treats in, including me, and it's simply not about me.
Can I ask why people bring in food for other people? Genuinely curious question. I've never worked at a place where people bring food in to feed their coworkers.
Why? To be nice, and friendly. Most people like treats. A few don't, for whatever reason. It seems rational, to me, to assume that people who don't want the treat will simply not eat one. Yeah, if people individually harass non-treat-eaters, that's different, and over the line.
In the large (around 100 people) office where I spent most of my career, it was common for people to bring treats on their own birthday - not required or expected, just common. Also, it was common, when there was a new hire, for the manager to bring treats, put them near the new person's cubicle, and send out an email suggesting others come get a treat and introduce themselves to the new person.
It's just a nice gesture, not a nefarious plot.22 -
It's just a nice gesture, not a nefarious plot.
I want this on a bumper sticker.
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I like to bake and I live alone so I took treats in to work to indulge my love of baking or to try out something new. I also took in leftovers from parties.
It is a choice between eating it all myself, throwing it away, or giving it to co-workers. Co-workers won.
Exactly. I live alone as well and it would take me two months to get through the usual yield of baked goods recipes. I don't need 48 freezer-burned cookies taking up my freezer space and my coworkers don't appear to be paranoid psychotics, so, have a cookie!
Or don't, dude. I honestly won't take offense.7 -
@sijomial @lemurcat12 @amusedmonkey
I did not mean thise new to exercise. Low intensity initially will help prevent injury.
By "cardio" I meant what most people think of when they hear the term- steady state cardio. Technically all exercise, aerobic and anaerobic (weightlifting included), is cardio because they all offer cariivascular benefits.
The article doesn't convince me. It didn't specify the details of what exactly was being compaired and didn't specify the intensity. The only comparison I saw was in another link in the article that mentioned 50min @ 70% VO2max compared to 6min @ 105%VO2max.
I'll add that I believe the benefits of strength training are not simply limited to comparing calories burned.7 -
amusedmonkey wrote: »amusedmonkey wrote: »amusedmonkey wrote: »
I'll stick with my strong heart and plentiful food from weightlifting and HIIT. More bang for the buck.
Not in my experience. Can't sustain HIIT long enough to burn any meaningful amount of calories, and whatever I burn I eat back twofold or more because it increases my hunger substantially. Now don't get me wrong, no one has to do cardio (or weight lifting, or HIIT for that matter), but you can't call any form of exercise a waste of time because there are clear benefits to being active, health and otherwise.
Yes, sitting on your *kitten* is a much greater waste of time.
Since I don't like exercising in general, I'm going to spend the least amount of time possible to get the greatest benefit which means high intensity. I just want to get it over with so I can get back to thing I enjoy.
And that's totally alright! It's just, this sounds more like preference than opinion.
Nah, I still am not a fan of cardio(but it's better than nothing). I believe there are much greater benefits from high intensity exercise.
How do you know you don't burn as much calories doing HIIT? I believe that much shorter, high intensity exercise may not burn as much at the time, but the residual calorie burn from greater muscle stimulation lasts much longer resulting in more CO.
EPOC (Excess Post Exercise Oxygen Consunption) for HIIT is 14%, for Low Impact Steady State it's 7%. That's the % of residual burn of calories burned during. FWIW. HIIT can't be done for very long so the overall burn is not that big. If you could do 30 minutes of HIIT, your Butner with EPOCH would be about the same as 60 minutes of LISS but who can do 30 minutes of HIIT??
This would depend on the intensity of the HIIT. And as @GottaBurnEmAll stated not all "HIIT" is equal. To me, HIIT means the intervals are 100% all out.
That is the HIIT I'm talking about and in exercise physiology circle based on studies, that is the commonly accepted number. This was discussed in detail on the Lyle McDonald article sjomial linked to. It is also the number Dr. Brad Shoenfeld uses. It pretty objective and not really the subject of much speculation as to variance.
Less that 100% all out would not technically be HIIT but would be considered interval training. The EPOC would fall somewhere between LISS and HIIT depending on intensity. All HIIT is not equal because the Marketing woo machines call everything HIIT today. Things like 1 hours HIIT classes. If you can do it for 1 hour, it ain't HIIT!!
PS: The link sjomial gave is the 2nd in a series of in depth article about the subject and references a lot of the current research. If that is the link you are kind of dismissive of in one of your posts above, I suggest you didn't read it thoroughly. There are links to both the initial article in the series and the following ones at the bottom of the one posted.8 -
I would rather walk for 2 hours than HIIT for 30 minutes.4
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I would rather walk for 2 hours than HIIT for 30 minutes.
IF, you could do HIIT for 30 minutes. Most can't, including me, and it's really recommended one doesn't. A typical program is 5 minute warm up, 5 intervals covering about 15 minutes, 5 minute cool down. If I did HIIT for 30 minutes, I'm sure I would be dead.3 -
I would rather walk for 2 hours than HIIT for 30 minutes.
IF, you could do HIIT for 30 minutes. Most can't, including me, and it's really recommended one doesn't. A typical program is 5 minute warm up, 5 intervals covering about 15 minutes, 5 minute cool down. If I did HIIT for 30 minutes, I'm sure I would be dead.
yeah, I would still rather walk for 2 hours than do that.6 -
I would rather walk for 2 hours than HIIT for 30 minutes.
IF, you could do HIIT for 30 minutes. Most can't, including me, and it's really recommended one doesn't. A typical program is 5 minute warm up, 5 intervals covering about 15 minutes, 5 minute cool down. If I did HIIT for 30 minutes, I'm sure I would be dead.
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I would rather walk for 2 hours than HIIT for 30 minutes.
IF, you could do HIIT for 30 minutes. Most can't, including me, and it's really recommended one doesn't. A typical program is 5 minute warm up, 5 intervals covering about 15 minutes, 5 minute cool down. If I did HIIT for 30 minutes, I'm sure I would be dead.
yeah, I would still rather walk for 2 hours than do that.
No argument from me on that! But it can be useful for a short number of weeks to increase VO2 max if you are looking to improve endurance performance. That is the best use of this protocol. Eg, soccer players, sprinters, MMA fighters and Boxers.
I've done it for short periods and likely will again when I want to improve my LISS performance. But it is not a protocol to be loved. It's main benefit besides VO2 max improvement is that it is time efficient for busy folks.0 -
I would rather walk for 2 hours than HIIT for 30 minutes.
IF, you could do HIIT for 30 minutes. Most can't, including me, and it's really recommended one doesn't. A typical program is 5 minute warm up, 5 intervals covering about 15 minutes, 5 minute cool down. If I did HIIT for 30 minutes, I'm sure I would be dead.
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Right now my one and only concern is losing fat. Once I get to a healthy weight I will shift focus to increasing my athletic abilities once again. But until then, fat loss, and muscle maintenance as a result, is the only consideration.2
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I would rather walk for 2 hours than HIIT for 30 minutes.
IF, you could do HIIT for 30 minutes. Most can't, including me, and it's really recommended one doesn't. A typical program is 5 minute warm up, 5 intervals covering about 15 minutes, 5 minute cool down. If I did HIIT for 30 minutes, I'm sure I would be dead.
yeah, I would still rather walk for 2 hours than do that.
Me too. Gasping for air and feeling like I'm about to fall over because my legs feel like jelly does not an enjoyable workout make, for me.
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Christine_72 wrote: »I would rather walk for 2 hours than HIIT for 30 minutes.
IF, you could do HIIT for 30 minutes. Most can't, including me, and it's really recommended one doesn't. A typical program is 5 minute warm up, 5 intervals covering about 15 minutes, 5 minute cool down. If I did HIIT for 30 minutes, I'm sure I would be dead.
yeah, I would still rather walk for 2 hours than do that.
Me too. Gasping for air and feeling like I'm about to fall over because my legs feel like jelly does not an enjoyable workout make, for me.
Opposite for me. Not being able to walk or lift my arms after a workout makes me feel like I've accomplished something. Sort of a twisted inspirational boost.1 -
Christine_72 wrote: »I would rather walk for 2 hours than HIIT for 30 minutes.
IF, you could do HIIT for 30 minutes. Most can't, including me, and it's really recommended one doesn't. A typical program is 5 minute warm up, 5 intervals covering about 15 minutes, 5 minute cool down. If I did HIIT for 30 minutes, I'm sure I would be dead.
yeah, I would still rather walk for 2 hours than do that.
Me too. Gasping for air and feeling like I'm about to fall over because my legs feel like jelly does not an enjoyable workout make, for me.
Opposite for me. Not being able to walk or lift my arms after a workout makes me feel like I've accomplished something. Sort of a twisted inspirational boost.
My logic is a bit twisted, but being able to eat 600-800 calories more after a 60-90 minute easy pace run makes me feel like I accomplished something. I wouldn't be able to burn even 20% of that with HIIT.4 -
amusedmonkey wrote: »Christine_72 wrote: »I would rather walk for 2 hours than HIIT for 30 minutes.
IF, you could do HIIT for 30 minutes. Most can't, including me, and it's really recommended one doesn't. A typical program is 5 minute warm up, 5 intervals covering about 15 minutes, 5 minute cool down. If I did HIIT for 30 minutes, I'm sure I would be dead.
yeah, I would still rather walk for 2 hours than do that.
Me too. Gasping for air and feeling like I'm about to fall over because my legs feel like jelly does not an enjoyable workout make, for me.
Opposite for me. Not being able to walk or lift my arms after a workout makes me feel like I've accomplished something. Sort of a twisted inspirational boost.
My logic is a bit twisted, but being able to eat 600-800 calories more after a 60-90 minute easy pace run makes me feel like I accomplished something. I wouldn't be able to burn even 20% of that with HIIT.
I mostly just lift. Every set to failure. Running hurts my feet and gives me flashbacks to my childhood, being the fat kid and running 2 miles every morning to try to lose weight. Didn't work. My parents owned an Italian restaurant...2 -
Christine_72 wrote: »Alatariel75 wrote: »vegaslounge wrote: »Christine_72 wrote: »@vegaslounge I must admit, I would be annoyed if a coworker constantly brought in treats while i was trying my best to lose weight. My willpower is only so strong before i cave, i don't need added temptation placed in front of me at my place of work.
I do not, under any circumstances, dismiss this. Hell, it's taken years of conscious effort on my part to build up willpower in regards to foods I like. But, IMO, the onus is not on the treat-bearer for you to resist their treats. I just feel it's a weirdly self-centered view of the world that people are out to derail you by bringing in something for the office to enjoy. If it's an office of two people and you've told your sole workmate, "please don't bring in treats" and they keep doing it– yeah, that's could be a little weird. But I think in a larger setting, to quote a preeminent scientist and space explorer, "the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few".
Adding a third cent, the workplace sabotage mindset is, IMO, the same as the "I've completely changed the household's diet without their input or consent because of my personal decisions, and they aren't supporting my changes! Help me tell them they're wrong!" I lived through that– Mom put us on Atkins when I was young and by week three I was literally ready to shank my best friend for her hunk of soggy cafeteria baguette. I myself became a strict vegetarian at 15 (I'm 32 now) and guess what? My parents still ate meat and cooked the way they always did, it was up to me to work out how to eat around that. None of my boyfriends have been vegetarian, few of my friends are, and aside from some joshing from my older brothers (which is what older brothers just DO), I can't say I've ever encountered any personal problems from this. Hell, I went to a BBQ last year and the only thing I could eat was a potato. I ate my potato, enjoyed the company, and the sun rose the next morning on schedule.
I guess I just don't get the idea that my weight loss/etc is anyone else's concern or responsibility but mine. The vast majority of people couldn't give a figgy pudding about what you do in your personal life, just as you probably don't know or particularly care about what they do.
Exactly. I work in an office with 45-ish staff. Lots of people bring treats in, including me, and it's simply not about me.
Can I ask why people bring in food for other people? Genuinely curious question. I've never worked at a place where people bring food in to feed their coworkers.
At one of my workplaces a large segment of the workers were Indian and pretty much all from the same region there. They'd bring in foods for themselves and others. To them food has always been about sharing with others and in effect resulted in teambuilding. (and yes it was an awesome team!)
There was always a huge potluck in our lunch cafeteria It is where I learned to appreciate real good Indian food. When they found out I loved trying new foods they adapted and on a regular basis brought in something special for me to try.
Most cultures work around food sharing to build trust and understanding - often it is a case of the one time of the day where units (teams/family) come together to share food and stories. And really I think it derives from that9 -
Christine_72 wrote: »I'm probably a bit tetchy when it comes to this subject.. I'm married to a "feeder", he is constantly making treats and offering me chips, crackers etc etc. Makes no difference whether i say no thanks or not!! He seriously conflates food with love and caring. "This is how he shows he loves me" is what he always says. I've begged him to find other ways to show his love for me. He is not and never has been overweight, so my pleas fall on deaf ears.
I get this, wholeheartedly. My family is all from the Southern US and "food = love" is a cultural drive for us and has been for hundreds of years. I do it too, I love to cook for friends and family because it shows how much I care for them. But, I do think this cultural/family mindset can turn into an excuse for shoving your own desires and expectations on somebody else (I'm using the 'general you', @Christine_72, I'm not specifically calling you out). It's like because you grew up in a certain culture or live in a certain relationship, all hope is lost and you're doomed.
Bee. Ess.
You yourself are responsible for what goes into your mouth. If someone isn't literally forcing food down your throat, I have a hard time accepting that it's anyone else's responsibility for your diet. If they ARE force-feeding you...for cripes' sake, call the cops already! Why are you posting these concerns on a free message board?!
As I said, I honestly don't think the vast majority of people you interact with day-to-day give a crap about what you eat or if you're trying to lose weight, etc etc. To think otherwise seems bizarrely self-indulgent and to post "saboteur!" threads seems pretty egotistical.10 -
Also, I am very jealous of all you folks who have potluck-happy Indian coworkers. I'd kill for some decent saag paneer in my little pocket of SE Georgia.10
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Aside from larger retail stores I've never worked anywhere where treats weren't brought in. It's a pretty normal part of office culture. I worked in a customer facing career for quite a while (property) and at Christmas we'd be overrun with chocolates and biscuits and wine from the clients. Because it's a nice thing to do and humans inherently see food as a socially bonding thing.
The fact that I'm trying to lose weight isn't my colleagues or clients problem, I am but one person in a company of however many and to think everyone should bow to my will is weirdly self important.10
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