Anonymous wrote:I feel like I always gain weight in the colder months. I still work out but for some reason I feel hungrier soon as it gets cold. Maybe its an evolutionary thing? My body always seems to want extra fat for the winter. That, in addition to eating more over the holidays anyway, I always have a few lbs to lose by the end of winter.
Anonymous wrote:The sunlight resetting your circadian rhythms and regulating insulin
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is likely it isn't the "exercise". Rather, it is the calories you are burning from generally being more active throughout the day in the warmer months.
Yes, this. I think you are underestimating the extra everyday movement.
But what movement? Other than spending my hour working out OUTSIDE instead of INSIDE, I still spend the same number of hours inside at a desk, then driving home, then cooking dinner, then cleaning up… etc. Nothing else changes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is likely it isn't the "exercise". Rather, it is the calories you are burning from generally being more active throughout the day in the warmer months.
Yes, this. I think you are underestimating the extra everyday movement.
Anonymous wrote:It is likely it isn't the "exercise". Rather, it is the calories you are burning from generally being more active throughout the day in the warmer months.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Exercising outdoors is harder - you deal with wind/drag, hills, constant adjustments - irregularities in a path, other people, animals, etc.
I don't think it's enough to account for a change in pants size, but sure it burns a few more calories.
+1
You are doing 100% of the work verses a treadmill which is a machine and therefore so.e of the "work" is done for you because, you know, it's a machine.
Even that subtle difference in a treadmill verse outdoors can cumulatively add up to weight loss.
Are all things truly equal though? Driving home from the gym verses a warm-diwn lap outdoors, for example?
The rolling hills of a neighborhood verses a man-made incline of a treadmill?
Anonymous wrote:Exercising outdoors is harder - you deal with wind/drag, hills, constant adjustments - irregularities in a path, other people, animals, etc.
I don't think it's enough to account for a change in pants size, but sure it burns a few more calories.