So, is housework considered exercise or is it not?
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How often do you clean? Do you straighten up a little each day, or do you spend one day a week doing each room all at once? That should be your answer.0
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DEPENDS hours of moving heavy furniture yes!!!! 30 minutes of folding clothes and mopping ummmm no0
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And now that you just totally demeaned anyone that got off the couch...what about the person that is so morbidly obese that they can't walk to the end of their driveway to get mail? I'd be pretty damn proud of them if they swept the floor. Or how about someone that DOES break a sweat going down the stairs, because they never thought their legs would carry them...all of you rockin' the six packs on their high horse, completely deflated someone that thought they were doing awesome...good job guys, way to be raging douche bags.
ummmmmm ...
so should the obese person who got off their *kitten* to get the mail get a medal or something?
I think the points being made is that a person that is obese more than likely cleaned when they are obese, and now that they are losing weight that the cleaning they were already doing is not exercise as it is already included in their daily lifestyle...
are we talking cycling like long distance 10+ miles stuff....or taking the bike out for five minutes in the park or something...
I don't see too many obese people cycling where I live...maybe that is just me though....
Does the above indicate - should I reacquire a bicycle and enough comfort in my knees to do so again - that I shouldn't log two hour-long bike rides, 5x a day, as exercise, because I did that activity while I was obese, by the strictest technical definition of the term?
if you did it then and you do it now then it is already built into your active setting of sedentary, lightly active, active, etc....IMO0 -
I do not.0
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I wouldn't count it unless I was doing a lot of yard work, washing cars, etc. To me, I have to laugh when I see people logging anything that is basically them off the couch. If you mark your activity level as moderate or light, it should already account for some of this.
I don't think 'laughing' is very helpful or supportive.
Like others, I only log it if I've done something out of the ordinary. That said, when I started here, I was a slug who sat on the sofa eating so every little bit helped I think it's a personal choice whether you log it or not. Only you know if you've done a lot and want to log it.
It's not for me (or anybody else) to laugh because they are off the couch....being off the coach is GOOD! Get up, move, let the housework lead to a walk and improving your fitness. Not everybody is confident enough (or has enough money) to pound it out at a gym...
Getting off the couch is to be encouraged, not laughed at!!0 -
OK, first of all, I don't count ordinary housework. But who am I to judge?
I once spent an entire afternoon at three warehouse stores (Costco, Lowes, Idea). I figured later that I must have walked at least two miles. Granted I was walking slowly most of the time, but walking still burns 100 cal per mile. That's way out of the ordinary for "sedentary" and should count, shouldn't it. If I had the dog on a leash and walked two miles anyone would count that.
Everyday housework is, for me, part of the day and part of my base calories burned. To say that a shopping trip, pushing a lawnmower for an hour, or some other activity is or is not "exercise" is up to the individual. How serious are you about logging everything else. Are you just trying to be hyperaccurate, or are you trying to justify a Snickers bar?
David0 -
And now that you just totally demeaned anyone that got off the couch...what about the person that is so morbidly obese that they can't walk to the end of their driveway to get mail? I'd be pretty damn proud of them if they swept the floor. Or how about someone that DOES break a sweat going down the stairs, because they never thought their legs would carry them...all of you rockin' the six packs on their high horse, completely deflated someone that thought they were doing awesome...good job guys, way to be raging douche bags.
ummmmmm ...
so should the obese person who got off their *kitten* to get the mail get a medal or something?
I think the points being made is that a person that is obese more than likely cleaned when they are obese, and now that they are losing weight that the cleaning they were already doing is not exercise as it is already included in their daily lifestyle...
are we talking cycling like long distance 10+ miles stuff....or taking the bike out for five minutes in the park or something...
I don't see too many obese people cycling where I live...maybe that is just me though....
Does the above indicate - should I reacquire a bicycle and enough comfort in my knees to do so again - that I shouldn't log two hour-long bike rides, 5x a day, as exercise, because I did that activity while I was obese, by the strictest technical definition of the term?
if you did it then and you do it now then it is already built into your active setting of sedentary, lightly active, active, etc....IMO
Well if you rode your bike 10 hours a week and then sat on the couch the other 168 hours of the week then yes, that would be sedentary..
All I said is if you did it before and you did it now it would be included in whatever your activity level is...0 -
I've logged it when it's something that I do for a few hours. We all have different views as to what is considered exercise, use your judgment and go with it.0
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In the begining, I counted anything that took more than 15 minutes. I was RIGHT AT my goal each day and lost an average of 2 pounds a week.
I stopped doing it around the time I changed to "Maintain weight"
Of course, I set my goal based on Sedentary Activity and logged the calories I burned at work.0 -
I personally do not count housework as exercise. Housework is a daily activity that my body is accustomed to doing. Exercise to me is above my normal daily things. I might count yardwork because I dont do it everyday.0
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Did you sweat? Raise your heart rate for an extended amount of time? Scrub enough to hurt? Clean for longer than an hour?
Yeah, that I would log.
Edit: Typonese
LOLOLOOLOL.
That damn heat.0 -
I don't. I think that falls into your type of lifestyle that you choose in your profile (active, etc.)0
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Not in my book. It's every day living.0
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In my world? No.
Do I judge anyone who counts it? Nope not at all. I know for some people it is not a normal thing and that it takes extra effort.0 -
If you're an extremely sedentary person with no (fitness) ambitions... perhaps.0
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yees mine goes under cleaning- light0
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extremely sedentary person with no ambitions... perhaps.
WOW THATS BOLOGNA
I EXERCISE OVER 60 MNINUTES A DAY WALKING, ELIPTICAL AND OTHER STUFF AND I STILL COUNT CLEANING0 -
only major yardwork- the kind when I have to stop every 15 mins to rehydrate, my heart rate is up and I'm sweating my nonexistent balls off. Living in SC in the summer, mowing my lawn on a hill, yes, that counts. Lopping off branches, hauling them, anything intense gets counted.0
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extremely sedentary person with no ambitions... perhaps.
WOW THATS BOLOGNA
I EXERCISE OVER 60 MNINUTES A DAY WALKING, ELIPTICAL AND OTHER STUFF AND I STILL COUNT CLEANING
Just my opinion. Doesn't sound like we have the same fitness ambitions, lol. Why not count your light cleaning in tdee if you're doing other more challenging cardio?0
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