Guest guest Posted January 7, 2006 Report Share Posted January 7, 2006 Hi, If you have a heard rate monitor, energy monitor or some kind of step counter, wear it at home. Compare a normal day with a slightly increased activity. It does not need very much to make a difference… I have been recording my energy consumption for almost a year now. I use a heard rate monitor + Bodymedia activity monitor and a Metpro program. My experience at the moment is the same what and Ralph Giarnella wrote. Physical activity is very much more than just going to gym or jogging. I use 4 week period for my diary. Here is a example of my energy consumption from last summer. Total energy 1050 METh (100 000 Kcal) work 300 METh (30 000 Kcal) going to work 50 METh (30 000 Kcal) All sports 250 METh (25 000 Kcal) Other activities 200 METh (20 000 Kcal) If you look at all sports, it is about 25% of my energy, but to get there I have done 15 hours of sports every week. (Many “sports”, but a lot of golf:-) To make my point more clear I will take one small item from “other activites”. I walk my dog two times a day for a 15 minute walk. In 4 weeks that add up to 40 METh (4 000 Kcal). Very important thing about low intensity is that you can do it for long time and do more things that by doing high intensity physical activity. After jogging I like to rest and I feel very contempt about my self. I feel like I have “taken my medicine”. During this year I have lost about 22 kg and people ask me how. My advise is, “do not sit down”, be active, do something that keeps you and your thoughts away from food. (That’s why I started to play golf:-) – but also I am more active at home – like vacuuming… I will write a report on my experience, but it will not be published until year 2007. So low intensity is good for burning fat, but also the fact that we can do it more is important. BUT AS WE ALL KNOW: To improve your aerobic condition or strength you need some moderate or high level intensity physical activity. Here is one Finnish reference for energy consumption. http://ffp.uku.fi/cgi-bin/energynet03/index.pl?language_id=2 Hannu Leinonen Jyväskylä, Finland -----Alkuperäinen viesti----- Lähettäjä: Ralph Giarnella Lähetetty: 6. tammikuuta 2006 21:49 Vastaanottaja: Supertraining Aihe: RE: Re: Fitting in Training with Work? --- wrote: > lee, I love your advice. You are so correct > about moving and feeling > good about it! > Work can also include any housework done while at > home, and many things > constitute > exercise; scrubbing, vacuuming, hauling groceries. > Using good body > mechanics > while doing these activities helps prevent > repetitive stress injuries, and > it's amazing how many > calories one can burn by just cleaning house. > I am going to add your 300 squats/25 push ups to my > day. > Thank you! > > > Sacramento, CA > There are numerous studies that have shown that the difference between individuals who are lean vs those who are overweight is the amount of spontaneous physical activity each group has. The most recent and most thorough study is outlined in my quotation below. For most individuals weight gain over the years is caused more by decrease in daily activities rather than an increase in dietary calories. In today's efficient society very few individuals perform truly manual labor. For most of us we spend most of our day sitting down or just standing around. Does anybody walk to the grocery store anymore? Our children don't walk to school anymore, they don't even walk to the park to play. Carpenter's don't use hammers anymore they nail guns, telephone repair men don't climb the poles they have power lifts etc. We have so many energy saving device from riding lawn mowers to powered snowblowers, escalators and elevators. We have drive in banks and drive-in pharmacies. We don't have to go to the mall to shop anymore, we use the internet and have Fedex deliver the goods. The energy saved by these devices becomes fat in our bellies and our butts. When I was growing up in the 50's the only exercise facility in town was the local YMCA. Worker swould take the bus to work and walk from the bus stop to the factories. The only students bused to school were the middle school and high school students. Most mothers did not have a car to drive so in order to play we had to walk or ride our bikes to the nearest park to play sports. Studies have shown that people in the suburbs are fatter than city dwellers. The city dwellers have to walk to the subway and walk from the subway to work. The city dwellers do a great deal more of walking than the suburbanites. Many suburban towns do not even have sidewalks. How many people do you see driving around the parking lot trying to find a parking space just a little closer to the store entrance. My advice to my patients who wish to lose weight is to first keep a diary for a week to see how much time they are sitting down or lying down vs standing or actually moving from one place to another. I then advise them to try to walk more in their daily activities. A pedometer is a good motivator to see how many steps you take each day. Most indiviudals overestimate the amount of activity they actually accomplish every day. A good workout in a gym might burn between 500-800 calories in an hour- done 3 x weekly that is 1500-2400 calories. If you walked 2-3 miles daily you would be burning roughly the same amount of calories. The workout in the gym should be a supplement to every day activities and not a replacement. If you could just burn an extra 100 calories a day through increased activity that 100 calories multiplied by 365 is 36,500 calories or roughly 10 lbs of fat. Ralph Giarnella MD Southington, CT <<WASHINGTON - Thin folks who tap their toes while they work and fiddle during routine activities could be burning hundreds more calories a day than plumper couch potatoes. Researchers at the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota designed a study to test if some people are born to stay seated while others are restless enough to make themselves thinner. Everyday activity adds up. They found obese people sat for about 150 minutes more per day on average compared to lean subjects, who burned 350 more calories daily. The naturally leaner subjects didn't necessarily sweat more at the gym. They simply were active, whether cleaning the house, walking to work or twiddling their thumbs at " non-exercise activity thermogenesis, " or NEAT. The study's lead author, endocrinologist Dr. Levine, explored links between inactivity, low metabolism and obesity in the hopes of devising new treatments for obesity. " Our study shows that the calories that people burn in their everyday activities – their NEAT – are far, far more important in obesity than we previously imagined, " said Levine. For Levine, the results suggest if people can return to the activity levels of the 1950s then the U.S. has the potential to trim expanding waistlines. Standers versus sitters In the experiment, 10 lean subjects and 10 healthy, mildly obese adults (BMI of 33 or higher) wore customized undergarments embedded with sensors that monitored their posture and movements every half second, 24 hours a day for 10 days. The participants had to eat all of their specially prepared meals at the hospital, with no home-cooked treats or restaurant food allowed. Investigators performed special metabolic tests on them. They found obese participants sat or lay down an average 2.5 hours more per day than their lean counterparts. On the other hand, burning more NEAT calories could translate into 33 fewer pounds over a year, the researchers said. The lean volunteers were then fed an extra 1,000 calories to see if they'd become more sedentary, but they didn't. And obese volunteers who shed pounds continued to prefer the couch instead of being active, such as using a treadmill while watching TV. The study appears in Friday's issue of the journal Science. Copyright ©2005 Canadian Broadcasting Corporation - All Rights Reserved >> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.