Tag Archives: obesity

Why Post-Holiday Fitness Resolutions Fail

By the end of January many of the holiday resolutions to exercise and become more fit will be broken.

Most people know that exercise is good for them. What gets in the way is emotions not determination.

Read about the Top Reasons Those “Get Fit” Resolutions Don’t Stick

Women may be more self-conscious than men about going to a gym. Women may feel more intimidated by the equipment, feel pressure to exercise in trendy clothes, and feel uncomfortable about exercising in front of the opposite sex.

I got some advice many years ago from a friend when I first started going to a coed gym. She told me that the men in the gym were far more interested in their bodies than they were in mine – and she was right.

And some other thoughts:

  • Avoid an all-or-nothing approach. Instead of committing to daily classes at the local gym, you might start by making smaller, incremental changes, such as taking the stairs or parking at the far-end of the parking lot.
  • If you really can’t find the time to exercise for an hour, break your exercise into more manageable (10-15 minute) chunks.
  • Small changes to diet can also add up to big weight loss.
  • And if you miss a day of exercise or break your diet, pick up where you left off. It’s not the end of the world.
  • If a big gym makes you uncomfortable, look for a specialty gym that caters to just woman or to your age group.
  • Or skip the gym and find an activity you really love – dancing, swimming, bicycling, walking….

National Institutes for Health (NIH) has several guides to help you choose a good mix of exercise activities which include strength-building, endurance, and balance.

For kids, fitness aids academic achievement

The research is out there – physically fit students do perform better academically!

New York City

A report released in July by the New York City Health Department and Department of Education shows that physically fit students tend to outscore their peers who are less-fit on academic tests.

Test Scores

Test Score Improvement

Read the press release  or download the full report .

Texas

In March, a report by the Texas Education Agency  showed that physically fit students are more likely to do well in school and less likely to be disciplinary problems.

 Read the press release.

Exercise and the Brain

In his book,  Spark: The Revolutionary New Science of Exercise and the Brain, John Ratey, a Harvard clinical associate professor of psychiatry, argues for more physical fitness for students as a cure for not only their obesity but also their academic performance.

What Next…

For parents, teachers, school administrators, and legislators (and just about everyone else) the answer is clear. Part of the answer to increasing achievement test scores, school performance, and other measures is incorporating more physical activity into the lives of kids. The answer is not decreasing phys ed programs in order to spend time on academics. But it is not just more physical activity as part of the school curriculum. That increased activity must be part of their non-school lives as well.