![]() |
CatholicMom.com |
| Celebrating Catholic Motherhood | |
|
Home *
Blog *
Faith *
Parenting *
Adoption
*
Catholic Kids *
|
|
|
| Fitness
Focus from CatholicMom.com
For Weight Loss Success, Women Should Get Off Their Cardio Machines If the title of this article shocks you, well it was meant to. Many women spend hours and hours each week working up a sweat by walking, running or using a machine like the Elliptical Trainer. They end up spending all of their devoted exercise time to aerobic conditioning, which leaves no time remaining for anaerobic workouts. They in return end up "spinning their wheels". They're stuck at the same weight with little or no positive movement toward their weight loss and fitness goals. Yet, if just a couple of short strength training sessions were added to replace some of their cardio workout time, they could break-through plateaus and reap a wealth of health benefits. There are many, many benefits
to strength training. It has the potential to: Unfortunately, many women are
still either uneducated about the amazing benefits of strength training
and/or afraid that they will "bulk up" and therefore they
avoid resistance exercises. According to a study published in 2006
by Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, only 17.5% of As shown above, there are numerous
reasons why women should begin incorporating strength training into
their workout routines today! But as history has shown, benefits such
as preventing diseases and improving overall health are not usually
the driving force behind change. Visible Moderate aerobic exercise, such
as walking, has a metabolic cost of 5-7 per minute on average (in
other words, it burns 5-7 calories). Moderate to vigorous strength
trainings has a nearly equal metabolic cost at 5-8 per minute. So
both walking and strength training can promote an equal The benefits are both proven and clear, but some women still fear that they will get big, bulky looking muscles and look more masculine then they prefer. This really is a myth. In reality women simply do not have the necessary quantities of testosterone to build muscles like a man. It is a rare case when a woman has the potential for above average hypertrophy (increase in muscle size). Also, often times a woman adds
strength training to her exercise regimen and begins to see the numbers
on her scale go up instead of down. This is immediately seen as a
failure to many and the abandonment of the program occurs. In this
case, using the scale to determine progress can Since women tend to correlate success and the scale readings so closely, it is highly recommended that women simply not weigh themselves regularly, Instead they should use other measurements, such as body fat percentage to gage progression. It's very common for women to actually "weigh" their self-esteem when stepping on the scale rather than tracking their true health improvements. Now that you know how important strength training is to overall health, here are some tips for getting started: . Don't go overboard and abandon
your cardio sessions. Aerobic exercise is equally important and should
be done 3-5 times per week.
1/19/07
|
CatholicMom.com Recommends:
|
|
Home * Faith * Parenting * Catholic Kids * Book Club * Music * Videos * Shop to Help * Contact Us * Search |
|
Contact Us: Lisa, CatholicMom.com 2037 W. Bullard #247 Fresno, CA 93711 |
www.CatholicMom.com
www.ChristianColoring.com www.SamaritanWomen.org www.SASFresno.com www.stanthonyfresno.org www.lisahendey.com |
copyright 2000-06
CatholicMom.com Home Page