Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Walking is CRAZY good for you. Increases your NEAT and makes maintaining weight so much easier, not to mention cardiovascular health. It’s so underrated.
What is NEAT?
Anonymous wrote:Walking is CRAZY good for you. Increases your NEAT and makes maintaining weight so much easier, not to mention cardiovascular health. It’s so underrated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love walking . I try to get 15000 steps daily although that largely depends on my day and the weather. I agree it’s amazing exercise. However, I don’t think it’s enough. As we get older we need weight bearing exercises and strength training is essential
Curious how you're getting in that many steps on a daily basis? Genuinely, no snark here. Do you live in the city and walk everywhere, or do you go on productive walks every day? On those days when I don't "go for outdoor walks" I'm lucky to clear 5000 steps.
Anonymous wrote:I love walking . I try to get 15000 steps daily although that largely depends on my day and the weather. I agree it’s amazing exercise. However, I don’t think it’s enough. As we get older we need weight bearing exercises and strength training is essential
Anonymous wrote:Voluminous studies have also clearly established that the most effective long term treatment of chronic pain is gentle movement- especially walking.
Maybe using our bodies as millions of years of biology intended is actually good for us? So far the research shows that walking benefits us significantly in terms of sleep, mood, pain, cholesterol levels (especially boosting hdl and lowering triglycerides), blood sugar regulation and building/maintaining bone density.
But sure naysayers, go ahead and decry the value of walking.
No, walking cannot outpace a poor diet. No exercise no matter how intense will make up for binge eating, or eating a diet high in ultra processed foods which research shows compels most people to eat ~500 calories more daily than they do on a clean diet of minimally processed foods. 90% of weight loss is what you put down your gullet, period.
But yes an overweight or obese person who walks daily will be healthier than a slender person who is sedentary. All the research is showing us this. It’s not rocket science - health is about much more than the numbers on the scale or on your clothes tags.
Anonymous wrote:The human body is evolutionarily optimized for walking. It's how our ancestors avoided starvation. Not walking is betraying your nature, like a bird refusing to fly.