Anonymous wrote:6 miles? I’m 5’4” and 10000 steps is 4 miles according to my tracker.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s hard. And don’t believe the people who tell you it’s easy-those people think it’s easy because they work at jobs that make it easy to get steps in. I will make 10k if I take a total of 60 minutes to walk during the day as dedicated walk time. That gets me about 7k right there and I can easily hit 10 that way.
I don’t know how the people walking dogs are hitting it just with that? walking a dog takes like 5-10 minutes.
I will say that you shouldn’t set your goal to 10k off the bat if you aren’t even getting close. I would say set it to get 1-2k more than you usually do and scale up from there.
Haha, I always wonder about the dog too. I must have the laziest dog ever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve posted this before, but it takes me about 10 minutes to briskly walk 1000 steps. I take my step goal and break it up into 3-4 segments throughout the day and set a time to hit them. Like 2500 by 9:30, 5000 by 1:00, 7500 by 5, and 10K by bed. It also has the benefit of making sure I can get up from desk: I am one of the people who could sit down and not move for 10 hours. This has caused tremendous issues for my back. Forcing to get up periodically has really helped my back too.
So you walk 1 hour and 40 minutes every day... briskly.
Yes, likely. Sometimes less because I run or go to an exercise class instead. It sounds like a lot but imagine if you walked for 10 minutes instead surfing the internet . . .
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve posted this before, but it takes me about 10 minutes to briskly walk 1000 steps. I take my step goal and break it up into 3-4 segments throughout the day and set a time to hit them. Like 2500 by 9:30, 5000 by 1:00, 7500 by 5, and 10K by bed. It also has the benefit of making sure I can get up from desk: I am one of the people who could sit down and not move for 10 hours. This has caused tremendous issues for my back. Forcing to get up periodically has really helped my back too.
So you walk 1 hour and 40 minutes every day... briskly.
Anonymous wrote:I’ve posted this before, but it takes me about 10 minutes to briskly walk 1000 steps. I take my step goal and break it up into 3-4 segments throughout the day and set a time to hit them. Like 2500 by 9:30, 5000 by 1:00, 7500 by 5, and 10K by bed. It also has the benefit of making sure I can get up from desk: I am one of the people who could sit down and not move for 10 hours. This has caused tremendous issues for my back. Forcing to get up periodically has really helped my back too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How is everyone tracking steps? I got an Apple Watch last year and that’s when I learned I was walking a lot fewer steps than I thought using other trackers. So now 10K seems like a lot.
I got a tracked watch (Fitbit) and found the opposite—many more steps than when using my phone to track. Presumably because it is always in and I don’t always carry my phone around. So it’s counting walking around the house, up and downstairs etc
Agree with other posters that 10k steps is more like four miles
I used a Fitbit for years and got steps for folding laundry. The arm movement is more sensitive to count as a step. Apple Watch is more accurate I think with forward motion and distance.
Anonymous wrote:It’s hard. And don’t believe the people who tell you it’s easy-those people think it’s easy because they work at jobs that make it easy to get steps in. I will make 10k if I take a total of 60 minutes to walk during the day as dedicated walk time. That gets me about 7k right there and I can easily hit 10 that way.
I don’t know how the people walking dogs are hitting it just with that? walking a dog takes like 5-10 minutes.
I will say that you shouldn’t set your goal to 10k off the bat if you aren’t even getting close. I would say set it to get 1-2k more than you usually do and scale up from there.
Anonymous wrote:Under-desk treadmill changed my life! I love it so much, and I never sit at work any more. I now easily get at least 10k steps/day and some days up to 20k-30k. I walk slowly but consistently throughout the day.
Anonymous wrote:I work from home and have a treadmill. It’s amazing how many steps I can get during the day (while legit working.) basically, if I’m not on camera I’m (slowly) walking.