Advice needed for bad knees
Twoody79
Posts: 5
I need some suggestions, I have bad knees (partly from my time in the military, and partly to the extra weight). I have already had one knee surgery in '06 and really need to have another soon. I am currently unemployed (not by choice), and I can't afford to join a gym and I don't have access to an indoor pool. Even if I could join a gym, I have two small boys at home and can't pay for childcare. Right now, the only cardio I am getting is from using my Wii Fit. I usually do steps for up to 30 minutes but after a few days, I can feel the soreness setting in. I tried walking outside for a while but my knees would swell up for days. I would like to know if someone out there knows of some good cardio that I can do that won't just kill my knees but will also give me a good calorie burn. I can usually burn somewhere between 450-500 calories with various exercises on the Wii Fit if I use it for an hour and a half or more a day. But I can't exercise until my husband comes home from work and it takes time away from my family (which is a small acrifice for my long-term goal but still...). Any advice would be appreciated. Thanks so much.
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Replies
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I was going to advize using a swimming pool but after re-reading your post I see you can't get access to one
here is a bump!0 -
Ohhh that's rough if you can't get to a pool. Do you ice your knees immediately after exercising? CVS has a great clay ice pack that's relatively inexpensive. I slap one of those on my knees as soon as I get home from whatever. It should help keep them from swelling. Also make sure you're stretching. Strengthening your hammys, inner thighs and lower abdominals should also help, at least a little bit. I know that's not really calorie burning, but you should think of getting your knees strengthened first, THEN work on building up your calorie burns.0
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If I didn't know any better. I would think I posted this. My knees are junk. I have a baby (but only one). My husband is out of work. So we can't afford gyms or childcare. I wrap my knee with an ace bandage. It adds extra support & is cheaper then buying a brace (we already had on in our first aid kit).
Also, I use youtube for work outs (as well as ondemand). Before I do my workouts I put a blanket on the ground. The extra padding helps assorb some of the shock.
Another tip is keep hydrated - makes a big difference.
Good luck0 -
cycling. my knees were crap, but cycling helpped me build cardio, with the added benefit of the low impact work out that helped build my knee strength.0
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HIGHEST PRIORITY ADVICE: Do NOT consider knee surgery (if it has been suggested) until you have lost all those fat pounds. Most of the time, those who end up with knee surgery are either heavily overweight or they're morbidly obese. When we are unkind to our bodies and pile on the extra pound after pound, all that extra weight is taking a toll on all the joints in our bodies (hips, knees, ankles, feet as well as all the other joints). We are given a certain size body frame (our bones). When we pile on more weight than the body frame is designed to carry, the joints are going to scream by giving us struggles with pain. The constant aggravation of those joints from all those extra fat pounds can possibly do a fair bit of damage.
The wise and ETHICAL orthopedic surgeon will tell the patient to go home, lose that 100 lbs. of extra weight you're packing around. When you've done that, come back and see me for another evaluation. Then, we will be able to determine if you really "need" the surgery.
SECOND HIGHEST PRIORITY ADVICE: Stay with your program, faithfully. Do that one meal at a time/one day at a time. I have listed below what I send to new MFP members:
Welcome to my Heart Healthy World
The Making of the New You
Welcome to the beginning of your new, healthier lifestyle. You have embarked on a great program where you are the only one “in charge” of your own personally developed nutrition and exercise program on My Fitness Pal (MFP).
From my age of 18 until the present, more than a 55 year adult life span, I have lost and re-gained from between 30 to 75 pounds in my life so many times (the yo-yo dieting syndrome), if I had not done that I would weigh over 800 pounds (IF I was still alive).
On 15 November 2010, a good friend and I were visiting ladies in our church and I was telling her how depressed I was over my frustration in trying to stop being overweight. She told me how one of her adult sons (she & her husband raised 10 children) had lost a whole lot of weight using this free online food and exercise diary program. I went home that afternoon and checked the web site carefully and said, “YES”! I started the program the next morning.
From that first day, 16 November 2010, I started accurately weighing or measuring (depending upon the food/fluid item), leveling off all excess quantities & recording it all on MFP. You may look at my photos and statistics and scoff while thinking that I didn’t have very much weight to lose. Please consider this, 35 extra pounds on my short, very small body frame is not much different than 75 or even 100 extra pounds on a taller person with a larger body frame. It has taken me more than nine very long, very slow months to shed all but the last 1.1 pounds.
To begin, you should have the proper tools for accuracy and ease of staying with your program. Those are:
A digital food scale
An individual set of 4 measuring cups: ¼ c, 1/3 c, ½ c, 1 c
An individual set of measuring spoons: ¼ tsp., ½ tsp., 1 tsp., 1 tblsp.
A small, straight blade spatula or knife for leveling off all excess quantities
START THINKING DIFFERENTLY but do NOT think “diet”. Use the lighter, lower calorie mayonnaise (that has olive oil). Look at the various brands of lower calorie margarine spreads that also have olive oil. SHOP DIFFERENTLY in the SUPERMARKET. Allow a lot more time when you shop. Do NOT pick up items and put them in the shopping cart until you have carefully READ every single label. REMEMBER THIS: All ingredients are listed in order of highest quantity to lowest. If the first 4 items on the ingredients say: salt, sodium, corn syrup or any form of sugar, dextrose, maltose, or other sugar forms, buy something else. High sodium contents will prevent you from losing weight well & can cause water retention as well as cardiac overload. When we’re packing around all those extra pounds, our hearts are already over-worked. All our body systems work as a team so when one organ system is out of whack, so is everything else. Prepared or frozen foods are nearly always overloaded with sodium and fats. Low calorie is not always low sugar nor low fat. “Healthy” is not always labeled correctly. Once you become an avid “label reading shopper”, you will learn which items work best for you and which ones to avoid.
Beware of well-meaning family members, friends or even co-workers who think they know what is best for you. You are the only person who knows how you feel and what will help you become successful in achieving your personal healthy goal. I believe in your unique ability to be successful. You can and will succeed if you keep following your program faithfully by taking things one meal at a time/one day at a time on a continuous basis. I have had some former MFP users complain about “too much counting”. It does not take me any more extra time to take the proper measuring spoon to level off my single PORTION of mayonnaise or mustard that it used to by just dipping the spoon in the jar and dumping a lump of stuff on the plate, the food or the bread. Then we have, what I call, the “enablers”. Those are the people who consciously or even sub-consciously, are out to keep you from being successful. They’re the “Oh, just one little piece of this dessert I made just for you won’t hurt you”. Or, I made all your favorite recipes for your birthday, Christmas dinner, etc. Just tell them that you’ve developed some difficult ALLERGIES and are under medical supervision (do not tell them anything more than that). You don’t have to tell them that the “allergies” make you “break out in FAT”. Then we have the proverbial, “You’re getting so thin, you’re going to get sick and end up in the hospital” types. They may even try to carry on by telling medical horror stories how someone they knew who ended up dying because of blah, blah, etc. Change the subject quickly and keep the conversation light and comfortable.
MFP tells us how much of each items chosen is ONE PORTION. It is up to us to tell the computer how much of the portion we plan to have or did have. I call this program a “no brainer” because the computer does all the work for me. All I have to do is look up the item in the database and select the correct product. Watch out for all the idiots who’ve monkeyed around with the database by putting in their own screwball versions of many items. As you first begin, keep that product label handy as you do your food diary recording so you can check before you add that item to your diary. As time goes on, you’ll understand how this works better.
You will soon get into the mode of thinking of “eat this…not that” of the items that you enjoy having that are working to help you reach your successful heart healthy ultimate goal.
GOAL SETTING: Please be extra kind to yourself and not set impossible goals. Think in terms of short-term, reachable goals for now. I started by using Dr. Mehmet Oz’s “Just 10” program, i.e. thinking in terms of just reaching the next set of 10 pounds off short-term goal.
I’m personally in this for the “long haul”. That means, I will be doing this for the rest of my life as long as the program is available and I have the capability of using it. If I stop keeping a daily food diary or stop weighing, measuring, etc., I know that I’ll end up piling the fat pounds right back on and never get them off again. Last November, I was in a full-blown DIABETES state and was sick all the time. I refuse to put my body through that ever again.
You WILL be successful because you’re a WINNER. I strongly believe that and believe in your ability to keep on winning.
Remember, you are in charge~~~no one else can ever take your place!
Fitzie 63 (Retired coronary care/rehab RN)0 -
yoga0
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Thanks so much for the advice already. I have thought about cycling, maybe I will give that a shot. I just hate to go alone (irrational fear that something will happen and no one will find me....weird I know). My hubby has talked about getting those baby rickshaws that attach to the bike so we can go as a family. I appreciate all of the inspirational stories as well. I know that with all of your support and that of my family that I can do this one way or another. I have already shed 16.5 lbs in the last 2 1/2 months. I know I can continue my path. I love this website and all the people I have met and been encouraged by through it.0
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