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Waning
desire for winter PT equals hibernation
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Don’t
let the winter chill stop your exercise urge. Photo by Clint
Heyer
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By
Sgt Rob Orr
Once again winter is upon us, and with it comes the cold and the
desire to hibernate and stay indoors in front of the heater.
Traditionally winter is a period where gymnasium attendances drop,
as does the amount of outdoor activities.
Lunch time sees only the hardcore fitness enthusiasts outdoors
braving the cold, with bright red faces and runny noses.
The indoors gym junkies, dressed in several layers of clothing
depending on how far into their training program they are, methodically
grind through their program.
The cold and impending darkness of winter creates several fairly
major hurdles to a health and fitness lifestyle.
Increased logistics
The first is the increased logistics. There are more clothes to
change into, out of, and wash after training.
There is a preference to train indoors hence the requirement
to travel to the gymnasium and then share equipment.
Combine these logistical increases with the bodys preservation
instincts, such as decreasing energy-demanding activities and
consuming more energy in order to:
The desire to partake in physical activity wanes rather dramatically.
So how do you fight nature? In two ways. The first is to concentrate
on your dietary lifestyle.
Remember the energy in versus energy out equation; less physical
activity means less energy out, therefore less energy should go
in.
This does not necessarily mean less food, (and definitely does
not mean missing meals) but rather make your meals value for money.
For the foods that go in, you should ensure that they provide
the body with nutrition rather than just energy.
A rather effective plan of attack is to use the bodys instincts
against itself.
Remember the decreased desire to make the effort to put on bundles
of clothes and go out of the warm house into the cold?
Well, if you only have healthy foods in the house, the chance
that you will make the effort at 8pm to get dressed and drive/walk
through the cold and dark to get some junk food will certainly
decrease and you would resign yourself to the piece of fruit instead.
Now for decrease in activity
If you are not going to the mountain, make the mountain come to
you.
Increase your activity during the day. Deliver internal mail by
hand, walk stairs, get out of your chair every 30 minutes and
just walk for a few minutes.
At home get rid of the remote control, get off your glutes and
change the channels yourself, wash and dry the dishes rather than
use the dishwasher.
Rather than a lock-in on the weekends, go window shopping and
walk around for hours.
Get active, every little bit helps (eg doing the dishes) over
a six-month period.
So in a nutshell, fight off the drowsy affect and win the food
and activity battle.
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