Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Fitness Myths Busted!
SELF.comBy Lucy Danziger,

Renee my workout partner sent me yet another GREAT article- Enjoy! (I'll comment in Blue)

Shoehorning your workout into a few days a week is challenging enough—don't make it tougher by buying into those nagging exercise misconceptions that may divert your attention from pursuing your better body goals. SELF went to the pros to poke holes in these popular fitness myths that pervade gyms, pools and exercise classes. Arm yourself with the facts to keep you slim, strong and even smarter.

MYTH: Muscle turns into fat

REALITY: Muscle and fat are two completely different tissues that have different functions, so it's physiologically impossible to turn one into the other. If you stop exercising, your muscles atrophy, so you lose the tone you worked so hard to create. And if you eat more calories than you burn, you'll gain fat.

MYTH: You need to exercise 30 minutes straight to get fit.

REALITY: Three 10-minute cardio stints offer the same healthy payback as a single 30-minute one. If you are trying to peel off pounds, of course, the more you do, the faster you'll succeed. But don't feel guilty if all you can squeeze in is a few minutes here and a few minutes there—it all adds up. Short on time? Ratchet up the intensity of your workout: Go hard for 30 seconds on the elliptical or jog for a minute in the middle of your walk to maintain your fitness level and your habit. And remember, anything you do—whether it's a brisk 5-minute walk or carrying heavy groceries to your car—for any period of time, provides some benefit.

Phew. I don't know about you but It's hard for me to carve out 1/2 hour for a single activity no matter how good my intentions are. But while doing school work I can take 3- 10 minute breaks, or walk puppy in the morning for 10 then afterwork walk him to the dumpster for another 10 (see I'm a total multi tasker- exercise for me, puppy, and house cleaning of some sort! Wahoo!) and go on a walk to get the food moving after dinner. Great tip! Baby Steps I tell you Baby steps (Not the What about Bob kind of Baby steps)



MYTH: Overweight people have a sluggish metabolism.


REALITY: Though some folks do have metabolic disorders that slow their metabolism, fewer than 10 percent of overweight people suffer from them. In fact, the more you weigh, the more calories you'll burn during exercise at the same relative workload as a slimmer person. If you notice the scale climbing higher, worry about your activity level, not your metabolism.
Don't worry chubbies, this is NOT your metabolism.

MYTH: Lifting heavy weights make women bulk up.


REALITY: Women don't have enough of the muscle-building hormone testosterone to get bulky, even using heavy weights. The truth is, some people will gain muscle faster than they lose fat, so they may look bigger until they shed some of the flab and reveal the slim, toned muscles underneath.
Refreshing, I think about this everytime I am choosing how much weight and the reps. I'm the type I like to lift heavier weights so I feel the muscle really burning. Makes me feel tough and like i'm more likely to get results- I know its all in the brain, but now I dont have the little voice in my head saying, "less weight you don't want to look like a musclehead" (like you can see the muscles under the chub but i'm getting there!!)

MYTH: You can't lose any weight by swimming.

REALITY: OK, it's true that long-distance swimmers who navigate colder waters tend to retain body fat for insulation. But ask anyone who laps it up while training for a triathlon: You will sizzle off pounds in the pool, since swimming burns 450 to 700 calories an hour! One reason you might not shed flab doing freestyle? If you throw in the towel and cut your workout short.
HOLY MOLY look at the amount of calories!! but it's true. Swimming laps for a half hour is a LONG time-an hour is even longer. The Olymp Mike Phelps swims i dont know 6+ hours a day. That is awesome...Is that human?

Can't loose weight by swimming? BAH! See pic of Phelps below... then repeat that statement. Makes me want to be a swimmer. Could I live with having those abs? Um... YEAH!



MYTH: Stretching before exercise prevents injuries and enhances performance.


REALITY: Researchers are still scratching their head over this one, since studies have yet to show conclusively that limbering up has any effect on staving off strains and other injuries. But they do know that stretching regularly can make bending, reaching, twisting and lifting easier. Best move: Save your stretching for post-exercise, when muscles are warm.

I find if I do a warm up- (Bruiser says a proper warm up is 8 minutes and you shouldn't gyp the time on the warm up) then My muscles seem limber and ready to go. No stretch required, or I stretch in between sets to ease the burning...burn baby burn!

MYTH: You burn more calories exercising in chilly weather.

REALITY: If you shiver through a long run in the frigid winter air simply to experience the extra calorie burn, you might want to come in from the cold: You do torch a few extra calories during the first few minutes, but once you get warmed up, the caloric expenditure is the same whether you're exercising in Siberia or the Sahara. Try a treadmill circuit workout with a great playlist to keep you going!


MYTH: When your body gets used to an exercise, you'll burn fewer calories doing it.

REALITY: Unless you've adjusted the intensity, you'll burn as much jogging or cycling today as you did last week, last month, even last year. Experts say that this principle only applies to exercises that we're naturally inefficient at, such as using the elliptical machine: After five to six sessions, you'll be smoother in your movements and expend fewer calories—but the difference is only about 2 to 5 percent.


MYTH: The calorie readout on machines is accurate.

REALITY: If only! Research has shown that some types of machines can be off by as much as 70 percent. The culprit? Contraptions such as the elliptical machine haven't been around long enough for exercise scientists to develop the appropriate calorie-burn equations. On the upside, stationary bikes and treadmills, the grandfathers of the gym, generally give a fairly precise reading, particularly if you enter your age and weight. Rather than swearing by what the machine says, use the calorie readout to monitor your progress. If the tally climbs during the same workout for the same duration, you're working harder and getting fitter. An online calorie calculator can give you a sense of which activities burn the most.


Thwart: The stud brought these home from work...Need I say More? Oh, and you don't want to know how long they DIDN'T last. It'll make you sick.


1 comment:

  1. So I have become super discouraged. I go to the gym every day except Sunday. I have been seriously watching what I eat, and packing in the protein, trying to avoid the fat. No more weight loss in the last two weeks. How frustrating is that? I know I am building muscle because my boots are now tight around my calves, but who wants big calves. Not me. Talked to the trainer today and seriously almost started crying. I have never worked so hard, so consistantly at anything. Most things come pretty easy to me, or I get the hang of it before long. Being thin has not. The trainer tells me today that maybe I am cutting back too many calories. That my body may be in preservation mode because I am burning 400-500 at the gym and consuming around 1200. So now I am supposed to eat more? I so don't get this. I am clueless about what the magic formula is. Cailtin my friend is thin as a rail, and she eats more, and exercises less than I do. What is up with that? Grrr...why why why. I am working hard enough to literally work my ass off, and yet, there it is still in all its glory. I'm about to throw in the towel and look into lipo. Kidding, but I wish I wasn't. Man if I had money.

    P.S. Tried spin class. Crazy hard and my butt bones are KILLING ME from the dang seat. But I walked out feeling like I had really worked. I like that feeling.

    ReplyDelete