Winter
Exercise:
EXERCISE RESOLUTION -- DO SOMETHING YOU LIKE TO DO
MANHATTAN
-- Struggling with your New Year's resolution to attend aerobics class
five times a week, or run two miles a day?
A Kansas
State University professor says if you haven't been active, and you
are beginning a new exercise program, take it slow and start out by
adding activities you enjoy.
"I think
you have to get away from the idea that you have to go and start a structured
exercise program because it's the new year," said David Dzewaltowski,
head of K-State's kinesiology department. "Fifty percent of those who
start an exercise program drop out within the first few weeks. A few
stay eight weeks or so, but after six months most people drop out of
those programs. And the reason they drop out is because they try to
start an activity they think is the best thing for them to do."
Dzewaltowski
says a much better strategy is to find something you like to do that
happens to include activity. However, the catch is that the lower the
intensity, the longer you have to do it.
"An hour's
worth of gardening, depending on how hard you're gardening, may be equivalent
to a 20-minute walk," said Dzewaltowski. "So you can get rid of exercise
by working real hard three days a week, or by just building activity
throughout the day and increasing your active lifestyle.
"If you
are starting an exercise program and you haven't been active, I would
recommend during the winter months to start increasing your activity
and do more things that you enjoy," Dzewaltowski said, "whether that
is walking outside, going to the mall and doing more walking, or taking
the stairs more often."
Find
an activity that fits into your lifestyle that you can do for 30 minutes
most days of the week, Dzewaltowski added. "You could break that 30
minutes up so you're doing 10-minute walks or 10-minute sessions of
exercise in your house -- those sorts of things."
Dzewaltowski
cites the Centers for Disease Control and the surgeon general's recent
report advocating moderate activity for 30 minutes on most days of the
week.
"This
means getting out and moving, maybe with brisk walking for 30 minutes
on most days of the week," he said. "And if you are already doing that,
it would be important to add a vigorous exercise session three days
a week, and try to reach your target heart rate."
-30-
January
1997