Is walking 30 minutes a day really benefical?
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The well-known benefits of cardio exercise begin at only 20 minutes a day at an elevated heart rate, so walk briskly. You can improve your cholesterol, BMI, mood, heart disease risk, bones and muscles.0
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Walking is exercise...you're srsly asking whether getting regular exercise is beneficial?0
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Just to clarify, I asked because I wanted to know is it really the best method to stay fit? Won't the body adapt?0
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theskyrimjedi wrote: »Just to clarify, I asked because I wanted to know is it really the best method to stay fit? Won't the body adapt?
Who said it was the best? You seem confused about understanding what exercise is and what it can do for you. There are two issues you might wnat to consider, losing weight via exercise and then getting fit via exercise. Start off with what you can manage, then build up endurance and intensity. Your body adapts, which is why you keep pushing it and increase fitness along the way. that might mean going further faster or lifting heavier weights.
Here are a few links which might give you a better overview
http://www.nhs.uk/Livewell/fitness/Pages/Whybeactive.aspx
http://www.nhs.uk/Livewell/fitness/Pages/physical-activity-guidelines-for-adults.aspx
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Dude, you wanna know the best exercise? The very best and most perfect exercise?
The one you do regularly and consistently over a long period of time. That's it. No exercise is good if you don't do it, and if you do it regularly, it's good.0 -
When it comes to burning calories your body doesn't adapt... burning calories is like eating calories... it doesn't matter if you eat 100calories of carrots or carrot cake... it still 100 calories..
the same burning calories.. walking, jogging or running... remember exercise no matter what form is better then sitting watching tv...^^0 -
theskyrimjedi wrote: »Just to clarify, I asked because I wanted to know is it really the best method to stay fit? Won't the body adapt?
best for what?
best for power lifting? no- absolutely not.
Best for someone with a lot of weight to lose with bad joints? quiet possibly- yes.
is it "best" for something- is way to generic of a question.
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theskyrimjedi wrote: »Just to clarify, I asked because I wanted to know is it really the best method to stay fit? Won't the body adapt?
You don't understand your own question0 -
Beneficial for what?
Starting out for exercise? Always. Gets habits down.
For adding extra calories to the day, so you can eat slightly more and have the same deficit? Yes. But as you lose weight, if you don't speed up, it'll be less and less. And at some point there will be a top speed reached anyway.
For heart health? At first. But eventually it won't be a load on the heart anymore, so no more need for improvement. Actually, if you lose weight and reach that max speed you can do, eventually it will be an easier load than it used to be. You can lose cardiovascular improvement.
It would be like squatting 200 lbs always, and then losing 30 lbs, but still only squatting 200. You just took 30 lbs off the muscles for work, they will get weaker, and faster in a diet.
For mental health? Probably always.
For physical improvements? For short time, but most have been walking since kids, doesn't take much to improve to point body can keep doing it for a long while, and 30 min will quickly become NOT very long.
And is this 30 min possibly going to eventually take time away from other potential workouts? That could actually be bad if you could do a more useful workout for your goals with that time, but don't.
If this is the potential start of your exercise routine - do it!0 -
It's about 200 cals burned better than sitting on the couch watching TV!
My first 3 months involved walking at least 30 mins, twice a day. From there, as I lost weight and got more fit, my activity grew, which meant I lost more weight and got more fit ... a nice self-reinforcing pattern.
ETA: Just caught up with the rest of the thread. "Is it the best?" is irrelevant. It is great, it is easy to do ... put on shoes and head out the door ... and you can choose to keep at walking - improving it with greater distance and/or pace - or you can supplement it with other activities. I started out with just walking, because knee issues and weight limited me from doing anything else. I still walk - did a 2 hour hike yesterday, and I walk around town rather than drive as much as possible - but I also now go to the gym and use the elliptical and hit the weights ... because walking enabled me to get to the next level. If you want to see my whole story go read this.
The "best" exercises are the ones you do, and just about any exercise is better than no exercise.0 -
That's how I got started! 30 minute walk every weekdays, and I lost over 50 lbs just doing that. Of course, you'll have to watch our calorie intake, too.0
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Hell yes, walking 30 minutes is good for you. Try this. Go to the gym and hop on a treadmill. Set the incline for 10%. Now walk. Watch how many calories you can burn in just 30 minutes! By the way, use a heart rate monitor for all your cardio work. It takes the guess work out of the picture.0
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Yep, do it. Up until 5 weeks ago I hadn't exercised in over 6 years (at all!) and when I started using MFP I was determined to "do this thing" and do it without delay. I had delayed and procrastinated so much before.
Anyhow, I was UNfit so I just walked half an hour, slowly, like an afternoon stroll to check out the neighbourhood. Very low key, no stress to blow me out of this exercise thing straight away.
From there, I just tricked my mind as above for a week or so that I was just going for a gentle stroll (every day) until I could manage more and more each week.
Today I have just finished walking a total of 14kms (8.7 miles) throughout the course of the day in 4 separate lots (to save my bad knee). I like to see how many kms I can walk and how many cals I can burn in a whole day and today's challenge was to burn more calories than my food "budget" (1240) ... I burned 1997 cals over 14 kms (8.7 miles) in 3 hrs total and I STILL walk slower than most.
Do it It's good for your mental health to just get started.0 -
I attend college full time, hoping to major in Physical Therapy and minor in Exercise Physiology.
Above is from the OPs profile, something's amiss here.0 -
granturismo wrote: »I attend college full time, hoping to major in Physical Therapy and minor in Exercise Physiology.
Above is from the OPs profile, something's amiss here.
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Just walking a quart of a mile daily down and up a steep hill means I no longer look for a power chair at Lowes or Wal-Mart. Now I can walk a mile OK which was impossible not too long ago.
When one gets older walking and keeping down the weight it a good way to stay out of a nursing home. I have friends that had to go to nursing homes just because they were too heavy for family to manage at home.
Walking is key to a healthy life in my case.0 -
yes that is what I started out doing and lost about 40lbs on my way to losing over 100lbs
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The body adapting is a good thing!
I completed a 21 day challenge last January, 40 minutes treadmill a day. Didn't lose any weight. But shortly afterwards, I had to run all over a hospital to find my dad's room, and my little legs just knew what to do! I'd gained stamina and mobility. I won't trade that up any day soon.
Since then I've gone on two 5K walks and I am now running (Learn to Run, C25K).0 -
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I have a hard time considering someone active if they aren't taking at least 10,000 steps per day but I have a bit of a walking bias.0
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I have a hard time considering someone active if they aren't taking at least 10,000 steps per day but I have a bit of a walking bias.
I have been told by a couple of the PT's at my gym, they prefer you to increase every 2 to 3 months, (switch your body up) say the 10K is just a base after about 3 months you should aim for 10, 500 then graduate up, to 11K then 11,500 until you can stay at 12K a day. Well to that, I am pretty happy with myself, if I can do a whole week, per day at 10 to 11K. The base being somewhere between 4.50 miles to 5.50 miles a day, do the best you can.
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I say inch (walk) up to your new norm. A ten minute-a-day walker can likely hardly imagine hitting 10,000. But once you're there it feels easy.
http://www.ted.com/talks/emily_balcetis_why_some_people_find_exercise_harder_than_others0 -
When I first started losing weight, the only activity I was comfortable with was walking. I walked for 25-30 minutes everyday as fast as I could. Slowly it started getting longer. And I kept getting lighter. My skin tone cleared. My focus and concentration improved. My digestion got way better. Slowly I started getting into other activities like Aerobics, Circuit training etc. But even today, walking is my first love when it comes to exercising.
Without questioning the benefits, just do it!0 -
theskyrimjedi wrote: »Just to clarify, I asked because I wanted to know is it really the best method to stay fit? Won't the body adapt?
It's good exercise...but really, what is "best" for your fitness is going to be highly dependent on your fitness goals and aspirations. Walking is good, general exercise...but it's not going to help you run a marathon for example.
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It is beneficial to general cardiovascular health. However, for weight loss the body will quickly adapt. In order to have it help you lose weight, you need to gradually increase the intensity. Start by walking slowly, then increase speed or walk hills, then increase speed even more or walk steeper hills, then start adding in some intervals of jogging (it can just be 30 seconds at a time, followed by walking however long you need to recover), then more jogging or faster jogging, etc.
I have had this problem in the past. Whatever I do to start works for a while, then I just stop losing weight. But now when that happens I ramp up the intensity and start losing again because my body has become more efficient and what I was doing is no longer a challenge for it. I have found high intensity intervals VERY effective...and you need to spend less time working out.0
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