Wednesday, April 3, 2019

Cardio vs. Strength Training: What’s Better?

If you could only choose one, should you strength train or do cardio? Trick question! You don’t have to choose, and you shouldn’t. Both types of exercise are important not just for maintaining a healthy weight, but for your overall health. That’s why the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommends 150 minutes of moderate-intensity cardio each week, plus two strength-training sessions.

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Here’s a rundown of why both strength training and cardio work benefit your health and your weight loss goals, with easy ways to fit both into your busy life.

Why you need cardio:

cardioAlmost 80 percent of Americans don’t achieve the CDC’s 150 minutes of cardiovascular exercise per week, meaning they miss out on a ton of benefits: Reduced risk of cardiovascular disease, of course, but also decreased risks for diabetes, osetoporosis and premature death.

If you vary the pace of your cardio work, it can be supercharged: Interval training, where short bursts of harder work are alternated with easier work or total rest have been found in multiple studies, according to Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, to burn more fat and increase cardiovascular function better than steady-state, medium-paced work.

Why cardio alone isn’t good enough:

Some studies seem to suggest that cardiovascular exercise, by itself, is better for weight loss than combining it with strength training. In an eight-month study of 234 overweight people conducted by Duke University Medical Center, researchers found that those who did cardio alone lost 1.76 kilograms, while those who did a combination of cardio and strength lost slightly less, 1.63 kilograms. Members of a third group, who did just strength training, actually gained about 2 pounds during the study.

strength trainingBut if you look a little deeper, the cardio-only group lost weight, but they didn’t lose lean body mass—meaning they lost muscle, not fat. The combo group gained .81 kilograms of muscle, and the strength-only group tacked on more than two pounds of muscle—meaning they lost fat overall. And a body with less fat and more muscle not only looks good, but burns more calories at rest and can help protect against disease, reduce fall risk and lower your overall risk of death.

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An easy way to do it:

Walk! You may think you have to sprint or jog to get all these benefits, but walking does a lot of good. While your watch may be telling you that 10,000 steps is somehow magical, you don’t need that many to get benefits: For every 1,000 steps you take each day, you can reduce your risk of “functional limitation” in the future due to arthritis by 16 to 18 percent (https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/06/140612085120.htm).

And walking can help keep weight off: One study conducted by Hopkins Medicine found that “moderately active” people lowered their levels of dangerous visceral fat by 7.4 percent compared with inactive subjects . And you can even get the fat-burning benefits of interval training while walking: Try changing your pace by as little as five inches per second for bursts of one minute, followed by one minute of slower walking. According to Biology Letters, when study participants did this, they burned 20 percent more calories than when they walked the same pace throughout their walk.

Why you need strength:

Having muscular strength means you can do more than just pick up a barbell. The American Heart Association recommends strength training because it improves cardiovascular function, lowers your heart disease risk, Walkingincreases resting metabolism and improves your “psychosocial well-being.” But that’s not all! Strength training improves cognitive function, according to the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, and even works productivity.

And, of course, it can help stave off weight gain: In a Harvard study, researchers found that men who did 20 minutes of daily weight training had less age-related belly fat gains than those who did the same amount of cardio work.

Why strength training alone isn’t enough:

It’s possible to increase your heart rate while performing strength work so that you’re “doing cardio” while lifting weights, but for many of us, it’s unlikely that we’ll elevate our heart rate enough during strength training to match the 150 cumulative weekly minutes needed to realize the cardio benefits described above. And if you do, it’s possible you’re sacrificing strength work—that is, your strength training isn’t challenging your strength enough, and has “turned into” cardio. You need both!

An easy way to do it:

People using dumbbellsIf you’re going to the gym, lift light weights. Studies have found that lifting weights to failure—continuing the movement until you can’t do another repetition—is the most important factor in building muscle strength and size, whether the load is heavy or light. One study of this kind showed that men who lifted 30 to 50 percent of their maximum weight for sets of 20 to 25 repetitions gained as much strength and size as others who lifted 75 to 80 percent of their maximum for eight repetitions per set. So if big, heavy weights make you nervous, stick to the smaller stuff. And if training to failure, be safe: Consider using a machine or a really light dumbbell so that if you truly fail, the weight isn’t putting you in danger.

No gym membership? No problem! Your body weight provides plenty of resistance. The act of getting in and out of a chair without using your hands for assistance is a strength training exercise—and it helps build muscle power, which can increase your ability to avoid a fall as you age. Try these five simple power-building exercises to start.

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OK, which should I do first?:

If you’re going to perform cardio and strength work in the same day, studies vary on which you should do first. One study published by Ace Fitness found that if you perform weight training first, your cardio workout can be harder than it would normally—resulting in an increase in pulse of 12 beats per minute compared to when the cardio’s done first. In that case, it would seem that the answer is cardio first is better.

But other studies have shown the opposite: Performing cardio first can use up the fuel you’ll need for strength training so you won’t get the same benefits. Doing weight training first can also mean you burn more fat while doing cardio, since weight training can use up the carbohydrates in your body in advance of your aerobic work.

So the real answer is: It depends on your goals, and more importantly, your preferences. If you find you prefer cardio work first and it’s the only way you have enough energy to also do your strength work—stick with that. If when you do strength traninig first, you feel like you have more zip to finish your aerobic session, do that. If all things are equal and weight loss is your goal, do your strength work first.

The post Cardio vs. Strength Training: What’s Better? appeared first on The Leaf.



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13 Healthy Snacks to Beat the Afternoon Slump (Flex-Style!)

Anxiety, Depression and Vertical Heterophoria

I apologize in advance for the wall of text coming. I'm on mobile and will try to break it up as much as possible. I also apologize for this not being weight loss related (I've been keto 4 years, down 65lbs) but I truly want to try and reach out to people and maybe help someone find their solution.

I've posted before about my driving and general anxiety that came on very suddenly almost 7 years ago. I was fine one day and not the next. I loved driving, it was my "think" time. I was very social and loved going places and meeting new people.

One day, after a short drive down the interstate and while stopped at an intersection, I got very dizzy, my vision blurred and I had a massive panic attack. Every time after that when I drove the panic attacks would come on almost immediately. After that, even being in a vehicle would cause vertigo, dizziness, nausea, panic attacks, racing intrusive thoughts, constant squinting trying to focus and headaches. It was like someone had flipped a light switch- I was fine, then I wasn't.

Then I became unable to do my own grocery shopping and had to pay others to do my errands. I was miserable and isolated. I felt like an utter failure as a person and a mother. I eventually lost my job, my house and my car because I could no longer drive or even stand to be in public without feeling awful. Lights were too bright and everything made me dizzy. At this point even being in a moving vehicle was torture so I couldn't go anywhere. Eventually I became depressed because of my isolation but I kept on.

Everyone I talked to told me I needed meds. Doctors told me the same thing but I had this strong feeling that something was physically wrong with me, not chemically. For the last 6 1/2 years I searched and searched and nothing fit. I had never been in an accident, not had anything particularly scary happen, no head injuries.... so what happened?!

Last year while, again, searching for my answer I found an eye condition called vertical heterophoria. I got excited. Could it be my eyes?! I had almost every symptom and it made total sense. As soon as my husband got home we went to the local walmart eye center to have me examined. The Doctor told me there was nothing wrong with my eyes and that I should get my head examined instead. I am quoting him! I cried all the way home, ugly snot tears.

Since then I kept reading about vertical heterophoria. It just made too much sense. I found out that your regular eye Dr can't diagnose this because there isn't anything wrong with your eyes individually, they just don't work together. You can still see but your eyes are constantly straining.

I filled out a survey online for the specialist in Michigan and the next day I got a call. They had an office in Kentucky and wanted me to come in!

We made all the plans and went up there this past Wednesday. I was an absolute WRECK on the ride up there. It's a 10 hour drive from where we live and just a 30 minute ride is torture for me. God bless my husband and kids for being there to support me or I wouldn't have made it.

The next day I went in for my exam. They did 5 different tests and scans of my eyes. Then the Doctor did a few more test where I had to cover one eye and follow a laser on a scoreboard and read. He put these crazy looking glasses on me and we started figuring out which prisms I could see through. Almost as soon as he had the right ones in there I felt my mind relax. I was so calm! Before I had the glasses on I couldn't see the last two lines of the eye chart and the board I was reading off of looked weird. After wearing them just 20 minutes I could read almost everything! I had no idea my vision was so bad. Everything was beginning to clear up and look so sharp. He showed me a chart of something near and far with green lines where I should see and red where I did see. I was no where near where i should be. I'm looking past everything! When he had to take the glasses off I got so dizzy I thought I would faint. My whole world spun around. I couldn't afford to get the glasses right then ($650 with no insurance) so I set up payments with them for over the phone since we live so far away. He told me, for the ride home, to cover 1 eye and that should help a little. A LITTLE?! I was able to sit up and enjoy the ride home! See the mountains and cities and traffic. I felt a little wobbly but I was calm. I probably said "this is amazing" 100 times on the way home.

Within the next couple of weeks I should have my glasses and the Dr said to wait 2 weeks for my eyes to fully adjust and then I could start driving. I'm already making plans to take my kids fishing and hiking, to the water park and getting a job! I've missed people! Once I have my glasses I will post an update.

The Dr told me that some people are so off balance that they walk in the office with a cane and once they have their glasses they walk straight out! That's amazing! I told him my story and he understood it all.... everything I had went through was all my eyes and he seemed genuinely excited to help me. He also said that I was most likely born with this and as I got older I was less able to compensate and my eyes and brain eventually said no. Looking back, that makes sense. I've had subtle symptoms since I was 18 (32 now) and never considered my eyes or even that anything was wrong, until I couldn't drive.

I hope this post reaches someone out there who feels stuck and hopeless like I did. Specialists for this seem pretty spread out but it is worth the trip and the money to feel better. To truly address the problem! It is all worth it.

TL:DR- for almost 7 years I thought I had anxiety, turns out my eyes don't play well together.

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Day 2 of the rest of my life!

Today is my second day and I’m excited to actually put effort into this. I am 24F, 249 pounds, 5’3” and it’s time for a huge change. My goal is to make it through today.

Every day this will be my goal. To track my calories, get a little exercise, drink enough water, and go to sleep at night knowing that I did my best for the day.

Overall, my weight loss goal is to be about 135 pounds. I have never seen this number in my adult life, in fact the lowest I have ever been is 175 and I thought I was disgustingly fat back then (lol if I only knew) so it’s going to be difficult but I’m finally ready to put in the work.

Any words of encouragement or advice on keeping motivation would be very helpful. If you’re on this sub then I wish you luck and I want you to know that you’re doing great!

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The greatest SV, all the pettiness and more good things to come.

My flair is horrifically inaccurate, so: 23F, 5’6”, sw: 199 cw: 169.0 gw: who knows tbh

My ex didn’t come to my college graduation, and broke up with me soon-after. The day of the breakup, I hopped on the scale (in the afternoon, natch) and saw 199 and went “huh... well that’s no good boss?”

MFP, increased my step goal, got a food scale all the right first steps. Went to a stage combat intensive seminar and was amazed by what my body could do at 185 instead of 200 (my rapier and dagger footwork got wayyyyy crisper from college!!), hit a plateau, cooked a lot, but ate less, all good steps to take.

I thought I would see him at a theater event in the city, so I wore the dress I wore for graduation. He was not there but I found some confidence. Wild.

Christmas to about mid February was a big plateau. I remember doing the Pokémon challenge on this subreddit (team eevee!!!) and just maintaining between 179 and 176. Not bad but not great. As soon as the challenge ended, I whooshed.

Yesterday I went on the scale and said “huh, you know... your ex weighed 170 or so. And said he felt ‘weird’ that he was dating someone who weighed more than him. Dick. But you’re so close to that, that’s a solid associative thing to be proud of when you hit sub 170.”

And then this morning there it was. An even 169. No decimal. No nothing. Exactly 30 pounds down. And, to add insult to injury I only lost from my band and not my cup volume in bra size, so my boobs look bigger than when he and I dated which I LOVE. What can I say, I’m petty as hell.

My next steps: manageable goals. All around. Keep on the right path. Join the weight loss challenge that starts this weekend. Job interviews keep coming, keep chugging along until something sticks (my next interview is at a place with regular health initiatives and they pick up your gym bill!! Fingers crossed!!), cook well, eat well, do well.

I met a guy and I continue to hope that goes well. Gotta take this new body for a test run at least, and at most, idk he seems to be a gem. But that’s a slow thing.

I have a play opening in New York City in December. It’s just for a weekend but it’s all mine, and there’s a premiere day and swanky parties and mingling to be had. I want to be in the 159-150 range for that, anticipating a plateau or two, but lower would be even better lmao. I will buy a new dress. I’ll look great. I’ll have pictures taken and reviews written. I may even have some arm candy for a night, but I don’t know. As much as new prospect is VERY cute, I sort of want my picture taken alone, just me for my work on a red carpet, on a stage, with my cast...

I want pictures alone to show my ex who totally still stalks me on Facebook and insta (whateverrrrr) that I don’t need anyone to take me far and make me better.

Is it a scale victory? A non scale victory? A little of both? I’m not sure yet. But it’s my life to live, and I’m doing the Damn Thing™️.

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Three lessons from my dietician

Hi loseit, I recently made another appointment with my dietician (board-certified, insurance approved, works with diabetic patients usually) since I'm headed towards maintenance. She has such an awesome, positive, non-judgmental attitude towards nutrition and weight loss. I loved it so much I'd quickly like to share the main points:

  1. Don't restrict fats too much. It's tempting to get rid of fat as you're trying to reduce your calorie intake, but, apart from being necessary and keeping you satiated, she mentioned new research that shows very positive metabolic effects of certain vegetable fats compared to animal ones. So even if that olive oil put you over your budget, you did your body some good with it.

  2. Mindful eating!! I'm so bad at this, it sounds so easy but it's so hard to stick to. I still scarf down huge amounts of food in minimal time, it's just salads instead of pasta. She agrees that there's no way around being aware of calories and portion sizes, but in the long term, mindful eating and listening to the signals your body gives you is key to finding a healthy relationship with food.

  3. Her tip for me, terrified as I am of starting maintenance: don't change anything about your routine. Just add back in one thing at a time that you really really love but haven't been allowing yourself, or have restricted during your diet. Again, sounds simple, but the thought really puts my mind at ease. I'm going to start my regular cappuccinos again and try to be more relaxed about it. :)

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Confused about Calorie goals

Since I started working on losing weight in November last year I've gone from 109.5kg to 99.5kg (my goal weight is about 80kg so I'm getting there). However over the past 3 weeks I've only lost .3kg (I had been losing about 1kg/week except when I havent been actively working on weight loss) despite keeping up with my goals and exercising more and keeping a better balance of carbs/protein/fats.

One thing that bothers me in trying to work out why this might be (even though it could be a perfectly normal plateau or even more likely due to my thyroxine dosage being stuffed up in the past few weeks so it's probably stuffed up my metabolism) is how different some of the calorie estimates are. E.g. myfitnesspal says for me to lose 1kg/week my goal should be 1500 calories a day (which is what I've been doing), another calorie calculator says for the same weightloss I should be on 1385 calories a day and another says 1742 calories. Does anyone know which calorie calculator is most reliable?

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