Wednesday, December 23, 2020

7 Winter Workout Tips for Cold Weather Exercise

In winter, your daily brisk walk can quickly turn from “feel the burn” to “feel the brrrrr” as temperatures plummet. But don’t let a little cold stop you from doing winter workouts! Cold weather exercises may actually help you lose weight faster.

According to AccuWeather, “Regardless of exercise, studies have shown that being outside in cold weather can transform white fat, specifically belly and thigh fat, into calorie-burning beige or brown fat.” They explain that brown fat burns calories to generate heat and keep you warm. So try to get outside this winter, even just for some fresh air and a brisk walk!

The hardest part of winter workouts is the first few minutes you spend out in the cold. It’s like jumping into an unheated pool in early summer, before the sun has done its magic. You’re cold for a little while but as you move around, you literally get warmed up.

Of course, there are ways to exercise smartly and safely that will make your winter workouts pure enjoyment. Here are seven fitness tips to follow.

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1. Wear layers.

a woman doing outdoor yoga workouts in winter

You may want to put on that puffy down coat to handle the plunge into the cold, but you’re going to want to leave it by the roadside in short order. Outdoor winter workouts going to generate a lot of heat, so you’ll feel much warmer than the thermometer would have you think. You’re going to sweat and when that sweat evaporates, you’re going to feel colder again, says Mayo Clinic. That’s why they recommend a series of layers that you can easily remove and add will take care of that. Start with a base layer made of polypropylene which will wick sweat away from your body. (Cotton does just the opposite.) Add a jacket that’s made of wool or fleece, then an outer waterproof layer that’s breathable, so you aren’t trapping sweat inside. Experiment to see what combo works best for you.

2. Protect your extremities.

a woman and man running in winter, surrounded by snow

Unfortunately, exercise doesn’t generate much heat for your head, ears, hands or feet. According to Harvard Health Publishing, it’s all concentrated in your core. Mayo Clinic recommends a headband to protect your ears, a hat for your head, gloves for your hands and warm socks for your feet. Think layers for gloves, too. Start with a thin sweat-wicking polypropylene glove covered by wool or fleece gloves or mitten that you can pull off and on. If it’s really cold, wear thermal socks on your feet and consider a ski mask, scarf or balaclava for your face and head.

3. Get colorful.

a woman running while it’s snowing

Consider wearing bright colored outerwear or reflective gear. It’s not only cold in the winter, it can be pretty dark. You want motorists, cyclists and winter sports enthusiasts on the same trail to be able to see you.

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4. Apply sunscreen.

a woman applying sunscreen during a sunny day before doing winter workouts

It’s not just to protect you from the hot rays of summer sun. The winter sun can burn you too, particularly if there’s snow on the ground which reflects the sun’s UV rays.

5. Stay hydrated.

a woman taking a break from winter workouts by drinking some water

According to Nutritional Needs In Cold And In High-Altitude Environments, military studies of soldiers in arctic climates have found that you can lose as much if not more body fluid in cold weather as in hot. For one thing, cold weather exercising can make you sweat which can lead to fluid loss. You also lose fluid when you’re breathing. Plus, you’re more likely to not replace the fluid you’re losing when you exercise in the cold because you don’t feel the same thirst sensation you do when it’s warmer. Keep a water bottle with you and drink even if you don’t feel thirsty.

6. Keep an eye on the temp.

a woman and man running in the snow on a sunny day

You can risk frostbite if the temperature drops to low or if the wind chill makes it feel that cold. “At wind chill levels below minus 18 F (minus 28 C), frostbite can occur on exposed skin in 30 minutes or less,” according to experts at Mayo Clinic. Likewise, hypothermia—an abnormally low body temperature—is also a risk. The symptoms of hypothermia include exhaustion, shivering, fumbling hands, confusion, memory loss and slurred speech, says the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It can occur when temperatures are very low, but also if it’s warmer (above 40 F) but you’re chilled from rain, snow or sweat. Hypothermia is a medical emergency.

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7. Warm up your muscles.

a person stretching outside on a cold winters day

Cold weather plus cold muscles is a recipe for injury. Static stretching should be avoided. You want to do some simple, dynamic stretches and moves that wake up your joints and get your blood flowing. Do a few arm swings and circles, high steps or lunges before you start out, says experts at Harvard Health Publishing.

Pair your winter workouts with a convenient meal delivery service! Get started with Nutrisystem today >

The post 7 Winter Workout Tips for Cold Weather Exercise appeared first on The Leaf.



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How do you deal with the holidays and anxiety of your diet/weight loss during them?

Hey everyone! I have been on my weight loss journey since November 1 2020. I am a 22 year old female, starting weight was 257 and I am now 234. I have been doing really good with my dieting and exercise since I started, with only one or two days of slip ups. I can’t stop thinking about tomorrow and Christmas day. I am anxious and I just can’t settle myself. I’m scared that when I see all of the food on Christmas eve, i’ll just eat it all. Part of the reason i’ve been doing so good is because I’ve been avoiding going out to eat and not having any terrible food in my house to binge on. I am not going to be eating the best on Christmas eve and Christmas. My family is having pierogies, soup, some vegetables, and bread for eve and lasagna for Christmas day. I will try smaller portions because I don’t want to skip my grandmothers homemade pierogies that I only get once a year. I’m just so scared that this will set me back and i’ll gain like 5 pounds or something. I had a slip up in my diet a while ago and it made me gain 1.6 pounds that week, and I didn’t eat that bad!! Well, not as bad as I used to eat. I’m just stressed, anyone else?? I weigh myself every sunday and record it. I hate that I may not lose this week and have the potential to gain. I just can’t get over it! What do you guys do to ease your mind?

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Official one year mark. 317 lbs. -> 224 lbs. Size 44 ->36. XXXL -> XL. Small concession for a crap year.

I've posted not too long ago, but these two pictures are officially one year apart. My journey began when my wife and I separated. A year later we're nearing the end of a divorce I don't want. In February she told me she wasn't attracted to me anymore. And when I looked at recent pics versus when we met I was disgusted.

I immediately began changing my eating habits and I quit smoking weed. I was definitely one of those who ate way too much stoned.

I took several hits throughout the year that would give me a boost to work harder. In May I found out my wife was texting a male coworker and was hanging out alone together. That was right around the time she stopped trying to work things out. That's also when I took things more seriously and went to a weightloss clinic my job paid 80% of. It was great in the beginning but it was basically meal planning. Once I was seeing consistent results I stopped going.

In August I got really drunk one night and suicidal. I called my wife and she heard me cock a gun. I didn't use it but ended up in a behavioral hospital and my wife later filed a protective order which was denied. I got rid of my guns and quit drinking. That made a big difference too. After that week my weight loss increased a lot faster.

In September my wife filed for divorce and I was given another boost to work hard. 2 weeks later a mutual friend confirmed she had already been dating someone. I forgot to mention in January I was diagnosed bipolar with severe depression and anxiety. I was (still am) on all kinds of drugs, many of which cause weight gain. So when I found out about my wife my depression hit hard. So I'll be honest, about 15 of those pounds lost we're because I simply couldn't eat. I was basically doing a 24 hour fast each day. I'd drink one protein shake and that was it for 24 hours.

After all that about a month ago I got Covid and lost my sense of taste and smell. That made it a little easier to not eat bad foods.

I'd like to say I was in the gym every other day but my workouts were minimal. Mostly walking a mile or two here and there. Bought an elliptical I've used 5 times since May and I used resistance bands a few times a month. So this has mostly been dieting.

My brother in law (6'10" - 250 lbs. former semi-pro basketball player) suggested I lose a little more weight before he begins to train with me. So my next years goal will to work on definition and gains. I'm just proud of where I am today given everything going on. From here on out, I'm doing this all for me and to be able to keep up with my little girl.

https://i.imgur.com/afehoMq.jpg

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i'm scared i'm going to be like this forever

i'm female, 5'2" and weigh 231lbs. over the last three years, i've done so many diets, i can not count them anymore. low carb, vegetarian, vegan, keto, carnivore, caloric restriction in general, dinner cancelling, ... et cetera. i'm currently doing keto again and although i initially lost a few pounds – which were most likely water weight – i've already gained back some of it. i'm in ketosis, i weigh/track my foods and i have a caloric deficit.

i know how weight loss works because i've lost 74 lbs in 2016 but i've gained back all of it (and more) due to being abused by feeders. this made me develop hyperinsulinemia but i'm afraid it ruined my body even further – to the point where i'm not able to lose weight like i was before.

i don't know what to do.

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I never though a doctor would tell me that I'm not fat enough

Some background: I was always a heavy child and reached my peak weight of 270 my freshman year of high school. I began dieting and exercising, and by senior year I was down to under 200. I was even more active in college and reached the best shape of my life in those years. Then I got a sedentary job, I got older, my metabolism slowed, and I gained back a bunch of that weight. Now I'm on my second weight loss journey.

I'm posting because of something I saw in the news lately. The county I live in has been detailing their plans for distributing the Covid vaccine.

Group 1a includes frontline workers (nurses, doctors, paramedics, etc) and elder care residents. That group is being vaccinated now.

Group 1b includes people with pre-existing conditions such as cancer, COPD, etc. I was looking at the list of conditions that qualify a person for group 1b and I was surprised to see that obesity (BMI > 30) was listed.

I usually don't bother checking my BMI, but this made me curious. So I plugged my current stats into a calculator I found online and I came out at 27.6! Honestly, it made me feel pretty happy. Sure, I have to wait longer for the vaccine, but finding out that I'm not medically obese anymore has helped motivate me to keep going.

So yeah, as a former fat kid and currently overweight adult, I never thought I would hear doctors tell me that I'm not fat enough! 😂

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NSV: Too skinny to be eaten if we got in a plane crash!!! LOL

Last night, my boyfriend and I did a social distance "get together" on Zoom where we played games like JackBox and whatnot.

At one point, we were supposed to point at people who we'd eat if we got in a plane crash - Lord of the Flies style (we wrote on paper/dry erase boards since we were on Zoom). No one said they'd eat me! My boyfriend was like "man why wouldn't you eat ImAKillerQueen - she looks tasty!" lol and they were like "no offense but she's really tiny and wouldn't give us much meat. But [our friend] Drake tho, Drake thicc"

Such a stupid NSV, but I've never been called "tiny" and I'm truly honored to not be chosen to get eaten in a plane crash scenario. Lol

---

Since the rules say I need to include details on NSV posts...

I started my weightloss journey in the first week of May 2020, and have lost 65 lbs (steadily 2lbs a week). I did this by slowly reducing my calories to approx 1200/1300 (or more depending on exercise) & slowly adding more exercise to my daily routine. For the most part, all I do is find ways to eat the things I love, but making healthier substitutions and being serious about portion control. I try to think of my meals of fruits or veggies with a side of proteins, grains, and starches. Making the high volume, low-calorie fruit/veggie the star of the meal really helped shift my healthy eating mindset. I eat this healthier lifestyle very consistently. Because no food feels “off-limits”, I don’t feel the need to regularly have cheat days. I genuinely and truly eat what I enjoy every day. My “cheat days” are very special occasions; boyfriend’s birthday, my birthday, Thanksgiving, Christmas, anniversaries.

I find that the most important thing in my journey has been finding exercise & foods I love - developing sustainable habits that foster a lifestyle change rather than doing some sort of crash diet. I'm sure we all know that the most important way to get weight off and keep it off is to make changes we can stick with.

For anyone interested, this is a very sciency article about the habit changes that help with sustainable weight loss: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5764193/

And here is a really good tool for calculating how many calories you need to eat to lose weight: NIH Body Weight Planner http://BWplanner.niddk.nih.gov

Edit for some more details:

As I look forward to 2020:

I am less concerned with body weight now, and more concerned with maintaining my weight loss, achieving a body fat % and muscular look. I have looked at pictures of 5’5” women at 18-20% body fat, and I think that’s the body I want to aim for.

I recently started reading Thinner Leaner Stronger by Michael Matthews, and I have found the book informative and it describes a diet & workout plan that I am comfortable with. I plan on following The Year One Challenge for Women by Michael Matthews because, again, it describes a workout and nutrition routine that I am comfortable with and appears to foster the kind of body I aspire to have.

I am hoping to finally get a General Practitioner, and make sure that I have no deficiencies and make sure all my body levels (blood sugar, blood pressure, heart, etc.) are doing well.

I have DEXA Scan scheduled for Dec 27 just so I can see where I really stand in body composition. That would be useful info.

Most importantly, I just hope to keep up the habits I have successfully fostered in 2020.

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Finally have something worth sharing

Hey all,

I’ve(M30) followed this sub now for a while and joined cause I wanted new tips on my own weight loss and dieting and goals. I’m 5’4” and Back in high school I wrestled in the 145-152# range. By the end of high school that was the 152-160# range and ever since I graduated I’ve been slowly but surely gaining weight... catching myself and losing a small amount of it... and then putting it back on again. The lowest I’d gotten before was 155# about 6 years ago, and that felt and looked pretty good, but I inevitably put it back on and reached 182# (the most I ever weighed was 190# so that was always in my mind).

Well... I’ve been hitting the gym and running and lifting weights and watching my calories and macros, and today I’m super excited to say that I have entered the 130s for the first time since I can remember @ 139.6# !!!

I’d plateaued for a while so finally breaking passed the 150# mark and being well below my wrestling weight and still looking healthy is mind blowing and I’m so happy, and proud of myself, and am so thankful for all of you and your posts that keep me motivated and provide many tips and inspirations!

To date I’ve lost 33 pounds since August of this year when I was ~172.5.

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