The
Way to Wellness: Your 7-Day Program
An essential part of self improvement is physical wellness.
And the key to this is a regular exercise routing. But this
can be difficult both to start and to maintain. Here's your
quick-start guide..
How many times have you gone to sleep at
night, swearing you'll go to the gym in the morning, and
then changing your mind just
eight hours later because when you get up, you don't feel
like exercising?
While this can happen to the best of us, it doesn't mean you
should drop the ball altogether when it comes to staying fit.
What people need to realize is that staying active and eating
right are critical for long-term health and wellness -- and
that an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.
The more
you know about how your body responds to your lifestyle choices,
the better you can customize a nutrition and exercise plan
that is right for you. When you eat well, increase your level
of physical activity, and exercise at the proper intensity,
you are informing your body that you want to burn a substantial
amount of fuel. This translates to burning fat more efficiently
for energy.
In other words, proper eating habits plus exercise equals
fast metabolism, which, in turn gives you more energy throughout
the day and allows you to do more physical work with less effort.
The true purpose of exercise is to send a repetitive message
to the body asking for improvement in metabolism, strength,
aerobic capacity and overall fitness and health. Each time
you exercise, your body responds by upgrading its capabilities
to burn fat throughout the day and night, Exercise doesn't
have to be intense to work for you, but it does need to be
consistent.
I recommend engaging in regular cardiovascular exercise four
times per week for 20 to 30 minutes per session, and resistance
training four times per week for 20 to 25 minutes per session.
This balanced approach provides a one-two punch, incorporating
aerobic exercise to burn fat and deliver more oxygen, and resistance
training to increase lean body mass and burn more calories
around the block.
Here's a sample exercise program that may work for you:
When starting an exercise program, it
is important to have realistic expectations. Depending on your
initial fitness level,
you should expect the following changes early on.
- From one to
eight weeks -- Feel better and have more energy.
- From two
to six months -- Lose size and inches while becoming
leaner. Clothes begin to fit more loosely. You are gaining
muscle and losing fat.
- After six months -- Start losing weight
quite rapidly.
Once you make the commitment to exercise
several times a week, don't stop there. You should also change
your diet and/or eating
habits,' says Zwiefel. Counting calories or calculating grams
and percentages for certain nutrients is impractical. Instead,
I suggest these easy-to-follow guidelines:
- Eat several small
meals (optimally four) and a couple of small snacks throughout
the day
- Make sure every meal is balanced -- incorporate palm-sized
proteins like lean meats, fish, egg whites and dairy
products, fist-sized portions of complex carbohydrates like
whole-wheat
bread and pasta, wild rice, multigrain cereal and potatoes,
and fist-sized portions of vegetable and fruits
- Limit your
fat intake to only what's necessary for adequate flavor
- Drink
at least eight 8-oz. glasses of water throughout the day
- I
also recommend that you take a multi-vitamin each day
to ensure you are getting all the vitamins and minerals your
body needs.
I suppose that's all I can think of for
now. I should extend my thanks to a doctor friend of mine.
Without him, I wouldn't
be able to write this article, or keep my sanity.
Enjoy life,
we all deserve it. And we'll enjoy it to the full if we have
a healthy body. Just bear in mind my caution about starting
an exercise program if you have doubts about its effects on
you. Consult your doctor first if that is the case.
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