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Beat
the Top 5 Exercise Excuses
The trick to beat exercise procrastination is learning how
to counter the excuses that keep you from exercising. "By
adjusting your thinking, you can overcome any hurdle,"
says Michael Sachs, Ph.D., a professor of exercise and sport
psychology at Temple University in Philadelphia. Taking
control of your workouts not only helps you get the body
you want, it also makes you feel more in control of your
life. So stop making excuses-and start making progress!
1: I'm Too Tired
"Unless you're incredibly sleep deprived or jet-lagged,
there's no reason not to exercise when you're tired,"
says Sachs. In fact, working out will rev you up. Robert
E. Thayer, Ph.D., and his colleagues at California State
University, Long Beach, found that just 10 minutes of brisk
walking can give you up to two hours of increased energy.
If possible, work out in the morning. A.M. exercisers are
better at sticking to a fitness regimen, say researchers
at the University of California, Berkeley. If early evening
is the only time you have, try drinking a cup of coffee
beforehand. The caffeine jolt will get you to the also improve
your workout performance.
2: I'm too busy
Many people don't exercise because they feel weighed down
with work, but a good sweat session will make you more productive
on the job. You'll have less stress, a clearer head and
a better perspective. "You can actually get more work
done after your workout than before," says Mark Anshel,
Ph.D., a performance counselor with LGE Performance Systems,
a corporate training center in Orlando, Florida.
A recent study at University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
suggested that people who thought they were too busy to
exercise really did have the time but chose not to make
it a priority. Figure out how to incorporate physical activity
into your workday. Try exercising at lunchtime, when many
of us can steal away without missing too many calls or meetings.
3: I feel as if I'm getting sick
Feeling under the weather doesn't have to keep you from
the gym. Research from Ball State University in Muncie,
Indiana, shows that working out with a head cold isn't harmful.
The study, which divided volunteers with colds into two
groupsone that exercised every other day and the other
not at allfound no difference in the duration or severity
of volunteers' symptoms. "While exercise may not improve
or shorten your cold, it certainly won't make it any worse,"
says lead study author Thomas Weidner, Ph.D.
4: I'm bored with my workout
Boredom is one of the major reasons people give up exercise,
according to sport psychologist David E. Conroy, Ph.D.,
an assistant professor of kinesiology at Pennsylvania State
University. If you've done the same routine day after day
for months, it's time to try something new.
To keep yourself interested, try varying your activity.
Experiment with new moves from magazines or books, or sign
up for a class you've never tried, like kickboxing, African
dance, yoga or Pilates.
5: I'm too stressed or moody
Instead of adding tension to your life, exercise actually
reduces it. Studies show that when faced with nerve-racking
situations, regular exercisers are less likely to experience
chest or joint pain, anxiety or depression. Working out
can buffer stress simply because it acts as a distraction.
University of WisconsinMadison kinesiologist Bill
Morgan, Ed.D., compared the effects of meditation, hypnosis,
exercise and resting quietly to determine which had the
greatest ability to promote relaxation. He found that by
diverting people's attention away from their worries, exercise
was most effective at lowering tension levels, with its
calming effects lasting up to five hours.
If you're in a bad mood, a good workout can improve italmost
instantly. In a study conducted by the department of exercise
science at the University of Georgia in Athens, researchers
found that women with high levels of anxiety experienced
marked relief after riding a stationary bike for 40 minutes.
Many researchers attribute the exercise-induced mood lift
to several biochemical changes in the body, including a
rush of endorphins to areas of the brain that control emotion
and behavior (a phenomenon called runner's high).
Article Source: Fitness Magazine
Article Author: N/A
Net Reference 118
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