Okay,
let's just accept the fact that if you want to lose weight, be healthy,
or both, you need to get some sort of exercise program going. This has
been proven over and over again.
Yes, you CAN lose
some weight without exercise, but your health will not improve, and you
may find you have created some new problems if all you do is alter your
diet in order to lose weight. Also, trying to lose weight without
changing the way you have lived your life will prove the old adage to
be true:
"Keep doing what you've been doing and you
will keep getting what you have been getting."
So,
to set about changing what "you have been getting" out of life, at
least in terms of health, fitness, and weight loss, you will need to
get into some sort of exercise program.
THE PROBLEMSThere
are a few problems that people encounter when they start
exercising...particularly if they have not been exercising for a while
or even worse, are beginning an exercise program for the first time.
1.
They have trouble finding the time to exercise.
2.
They have difficulty making exercise a habit
3. They
are dissatisfied with the results of their exercise program.
4.
They injure themselves.
SOME SOLUTIONS1. Many people find
that until exercise becomes an integral part of their life, it is
difficult to "find the time" to exercise. There are two points here.
Engage
In Opportunistic Exercise
This
is the
sort of exercise that can be factored into each day's activities. While
parking a few feet farther from the store can be a great way to
introduce some physical activity into your daily life, one such event
once in a while will not make a great difference. On the other hand, it
IS a start, and one of the hardest hurdles to overcome is actually
STARTING some sort of exercise program.
Putting
several of these events into your week, parking farther away, taking
the stairs, carrying the groceries in from the car, standing up during
phone calls, or walking in place while watching TV, for example can get
you started on the road to feeling better, looking better, and better
health.
Make
A Commitment To Exercise
There
is an old saying that work will expand to take up the resources
committed to it. In other words, if a business is
doing perfectly well with one phone and a combination fax/copier and
then gets several multi-line phones and a
high-speed copier, the employees will soon find they "cannot get along"
without these additions.
Our lives are similar. In
our example, if the boss finds a need to cut costs, the employees
will soon find that they CAN function without the high-speed copier,
just like they did before.
In our lives, if we make
a commitment to exercise, we will be able to "make" the time available,
probably by changing something in our lives, but
the bottom line will be how important the exercise is to us.
2.
For most of us, one of the hardest aspects of this whole exercise thing
is making it a habit. If it is not a habit, we
will probably start "forgetting" or "having something else to do" and
the exercise will eventually fade into the
background and be forgotten.
It will be even harder
to make something distasteful or time-consuming into a habit. A good
tip here is to begin small and concentrate on
getting used to the exercise as a regular part of your daily routine
before
you worry too much about all the other aspects.
In
other words, start
with something simple that you can easily insert
into your life, something that will be easy to remember to do
regularly. Once the exercise IS a habit, you can
expand it and you will soon find that you begin to get uncomfortable if
you miss it.
A good point here
is that the benefits of regular exercise express themselves in many
ways, and if you move from being a non-exerciser
to a regular exerciser, you will actually begin to enjoy your exercise
experiences.
3.
Unrealistic expectations plague many who try to begin an exercise
program. The reality is that even the finest
exercise program will take time to become fully effective and even then
the intensity and breadth should increase and the
weight decrease at a measured pace. Added to this is the fact most
people
do not really know how exercise works and what to expect.
If
you are
starting slow as I advise and gradually increasing
your effort, gains in fitness will be slow. Weight loss will also be
slow, but, over time, a good exercise program will
help your weight loss program, your overall health, your mental
outlook,
and provide defense against many conditions and illnesses.
NOTE:
If you are beginning an exercise program as part of a weight loss
program, don't be surprised if you gain weight for
a while. This is normal. Ignore your scale and concentrate on how you
feel and how your clothes fit. Even though you may
be gaining weight, you might actually be shrinking as lean tissue
replaces
fat.
4. Related to the item above is the potential
for injury. Unrealistic expectations occur because of ignorance
and lack of experience. The same is true for injuries. People either
try to do too much too soon, or simply perform
exercises improperly or with the wrong equipment. A good brisk walk can
feel good from the first day of your new exercise
program, but not if you walk too far, too fast, too soon, or wear
the wrong kind of shoes.
Remember, how much you CAN
do is not necessarily how much you SHOULD do.
I have
a friend who has started exercise programs several times since I have
known her. Every time, she tries to start out
doing as much as she can. Later she begins to feel sick because she is
in poor condition, and then feels washed out and
experiences pain over the next few days. That's the end of her exercise
program until the bug hits her again a few months later.
Start
slow, build up slowly, but keep on doing it and you will reap the
rewards of a regular exercise program.
Donovan
Baldwin is a Dallas area writer. He is a
graduate of the University of West Florida, a member of
Mensa, and retired from the U. S. Army. Find more weight loss
information at:
http://cinch-weightloss.web-home.ws/Go to
Health Articles indexGo
to Male-Sexual-Health.com homepage