Friday, June 24, 2011

Water, Weights & Real Exercise: Take the Burden OFF of your Body

I bounce out of bed Monday mornings at 5am to do kickboxing in my living room. Who is this person? It's me. And I'm approximately 137 pounds of awesome.

I should be feeling good. And I do! But I still get down in the dumps about the numbers sometimes.

When The Biggest Loser winner and runner-up, sisters Olivia and Hannah, weighed in at the finale at like 127, 128 lbs after 8 months of literally living in the gym--for some reason I vowed I could get to the 120's, too.  So I decided to work out harder and eat better to try and get there. Well, I worked out hard, and my energy level skyrocketed in comparison to where it was. I added in a lot more strength training and varied my cardio a lot. My "workout weeks" were averaging between 2-3 hours of exercise weekly, which for me was very inconsistent. Now, thanks to how much better I'm feeling and great technological inventions like The Gymbox , I am now averaging between 4-6 hours of intense workout time weekly! I used to aim for 4 days a week, now I'm at 6, and I even had a string of 8 workouts in a row (don't worry, one of those days was a lot less intense).

I did drop a few pounds, really noticed things getting firmer and tighter, my clothes were fitting better, and I really saw my abs come out! But then, while these things were happening, the number started to go back UP to where it was! I wondered why. I was definitely burning a ton more calories and eating all the right foods. I have heard about people not used to exercising putting on weight at first until their bodies get used to it. A common adage in the fitness world is "muscle weighs more than fat" -- which, when taken literally, doesn't make all that much sense. Five pounds of muscle weigh exactly the same as five pounds of fat. Similarly, a square inch of muscle really does weigh more than a square inch of fat. Muscle is simply more dense.But the two look and "hang" on your body in two drastically different ways. Behold:



Each of the above-pictured replicas represents five pounds. However, it is obvious that one takes up significantly more space than the other. One is also a lot "prettier" than the other.  I know which one I'd like to have in my body!

But I still hadn't figured out why I had gained weight... why does muscle weigh more? I was about to find out.


Water in the Body

I am almost done with my fitness nutrition certification course through ISSA. One of the things I have recently learned about was water content in the body. Did you know that muscle cells contain 75% water, whereas fat cells in adipose tissue contain only 25% water? All of a sudden, the fact that I had been trimming down but supposedly gaining weight made more sense. The stronger my muscles get, the larger the muscle cells become, which means they require more water. Obviously women's muscles, due to hormones, don't get indefinitely large.

Water is also used to repair torn muscles. So when I spend an hour lifting weights, and wake up the next two days practically unable to walk, this could very well be the muscles swollen with water trying to repair themselves. Water metabolizes fat and makes muscle more elastic. So drink up!
Exercise: What counts?

Don't be fooled as many Americans have-- as THIS article in Time magazine reveals, the most frequently reported moderate activities were food and drink preparation (25.7%), followed by lawn, garden, and houseplant care (10.6%). What is exercise, anyway? Most Americans would say that it is anything where you are moving. That could be true. But what does it take to get the health benefits? You have to get your heart rate up. It doesn't matter if you're vacuuming. If vacuuming gets your heartrate up, it's exercise. Do it often. What does NOT count as exercise is this: sweating. Just because you are doing something that makes you sweat (I sweat while cooking, while taking a stroll around the block with Ben, and even while sitting at my computer sometimes!!) only indicates your body temperature--not your heartrate--has increased and your body is trying to cool itself down.

Ok... so how much exercise do I need to fit into my already-busy schedule?

According to the CDC, you need a MINIMUM (stress the MINIMUM) of either ...

1. Two hours and 30 minutes of moderately intense aerobic activity each week (like brisk walking or cycling)
AND
muscle-strengthening activities on two or more days of the week that work all major muscle groups--legs (including the booty!), hips, back, abdomen, chest, shoulders, and arms.

OR

2. One hour, 15 minutes (75 minutes) of vigorous intensity aerobic activity (jogging, running, Spinning, kickboxing, boot camp)
AND
muscle-strengthening activities on two or more days of the week that work all major muscle groups--legs (including the booty!), hips, back, abdomen, chest, shoulders, and arms.

OR

3. An equivalent mix of both options 1. and 2.
AND
muscle-strengthening activities on two or more days of the week that work all major muscle groups--legs (including the booty!), hips, back, abdomen, chest, shoulders, and arms.


So what doesn't count? Anything that doesn't get your heartrate up. Cooking. Shopping. Light gardening. You get the idea. Get that heart pumpin'!! It feels so good.

You can read more CDC guidelines by clicking here. The more time you put in, the more benefits. Getting your heart muscle and the rest of your muscles strong will make you not only look better, but FEEL better and BE actually BETTER. The top two leading causes of death in our country are heart disease and cancer. You know it wasn't always like this. Eating is very, very important to good health, but so is exercise. So if you're a healthy-eater that doesn't do their body good with at least the minimum amounts listed above, change something! We reap what we sow, so... sow what you know!

1 comments:

Hannah {Culture Connoisseur} said...

The fat is nastaaay. Me no likey.

You look great at your current weight! I can't imagine you dropping into the 20's. You look very healthy as is.

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