William Penn Life, 2003 (38. évfolyam, 1-12. szám)

2003-04-01 / 4. szám

HealthPage Make exercise a habit Forget the myths: you CAN make exercise a fun part of your daily life by Melissa Sperl, WeightWatchers.com "I don't think exercise will ever be an 'easy-come' habit for me. More like a necessary evil. Some days I like it, some days I hate it but I feel so much better because of it. That's what keeps me going." Sound familiar? All but the part about keeping it going, perhaps? For many, exercise has a perpetual position at the bottom of the to-do list, occasionally rising to the top for two­­or-three-day bouts of good will. You know you have to do it. You know it would help you lose weight faster. You know you need it for good health. But, at the risk of sounding like a whining four year old, you just don't like it. Don't worry. We can help. Forget the myths First of all, these common miscon­ceptions about exercise may be what are holding you back: Myth # 1. Exercise is never fun. Not only can exercise be fun (do you hate playing catch with your kids? walking through the woods?), it can help fill gaps in your life. For ex­ample, "if you're around people all day long, you can choose an exercise that allows you some alone time," says Robyn Stuhr, exercise physiolo­gist with the Women's Sports Medi­cine Center at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York City. If you sit in front of a computer, maybe exercise can be a social thing for you. If you never see your husband, exercise with him. Find something that works for you on a personal level, too, and that will make exercise more fun. Plus, you'll be more likely to do it if you look forward to it. Myth # 2. Exercise is a major disruption. "The bottom line is that exercise, unlike diet, is something you have to make yourself do," says Stuhr. "Everybody has to eat every day, but you have to purposely set aside time to work out. And its very easy to let other things get in the way." But there's a bonus to working out that you won't notice until you do it. When you exercise, you get more energy. And when you stop (like many of us yo-yoers do), your energy level starts to drop, so it's even harder to jump back in. Sticking with it helps, even if that causes scheduling problems in the short term. Make It a Habit Making anything a habit, from exercise to eating right, is a matter of having enough "want power," says Palma Posillico, general manager of training and development for Weight Watchers International. "Life gets in the way, so unless you do something proactively, it's very easy to make excuses." But there is a new tool from Weight Watchers that can help: It's called "Switching," and it can specifically help you replace bad habits (in this case, being sedentary) with good ones. • First identify the habit you want to change. Maybe you want to stop being a couch potato. • Picture yourself involved in the negative habit; make the image as unattractive as you can. • Then, in the lower-right-hand comer of your mind, put a picture of the new you, the way that you would rather be. Make it a bright, colorful picture of you walking, for example. (It works sort of like a picture-in-a­­picture TV screen.) • Make the ugly one big and bright and the good one small and dark, then switch them. Then switch five times more. Do it really fast, and clear the screen after each switch. Try these other tricks for making exercise a habit, too Understand that you have to start slowly, says Stuhr. An hour-long power aerobics class on your first day will only discourage you, maybe hurt you, and send you back to square one. Find an exercise buddy. A work­out partner can be immeasurably helpful, because you have a responsi­bility to your friend not to talk your­self out of exercising. Make sure you choose a buddy who's in about the same shape as you, though. Pick an exercise you like, then commit yourself to trying it consis­tently for at least three months. If you still think you hate it after that amount of time, give yourself permis­sion to say, okay, this isn't working. Then pick something different and repeat. Copyright 2003 Weight Watchers Interna­tional, Inc. Copyright 2003 WeightWatchers. com, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Health Links For more information on starting and maintaining an exercise program, visit the website of Weight Watchers International at: O www.weightwatchers.com Williu Fen Life, April 2003 5

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