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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:
·
Lower resting heart
rate
·
Reduce blood pressure
·
Improve cholesterol
profiles
·
Reduce intra-abdominal
fat, which in turn can help lower the risk of heart disease, diabetes and
hypertension
·
Help preserve bone mass
·
Increase calories
burned which helps promote weight loss
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 adult women performed
strength training.
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 and measurable physical improvements such
as a decrease in the scale tend to be the most motivational. So, let’s take a
closer look at how strength training helps promote weight loss.
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 amount of calories burned during the
actual activity. But, there’s an extra benefit to strength training: you burn
calories after you’ve stopped working out! Resistance training recruits both
slow and fast twitch muscle fibers so the metabolic rate stays elevated longer.
This means that you are burning calories long after you’ve stopped working out.
One study showed an increase in metabolic rate even the next day post exercise.
The study also showed that 24-hour post-exercise fat oxidation after strength
training increased by an amazing 93%.
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 be very misleading. An increase does not
necessarily indicate fat has been gained. The exact opposite is more likely the
cause. Muscle tissue weighs more by volume than fat tissue. A pound of fat
occupies 18% more space than a pound of muscle.
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.
·
Start by adding in two
strength training sessions per week.
·
Choose weight sizes
that will fatigue your muscle after about 8 repetitions
·
Select exercises that
will work all of your major muscles
·
Include a variety of
different strength training equipment like dumbbells, machines, balls and bands
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