Monday, May 3, 2021

Walking vs. Running: Which is Better for Weight Loss?

If you’re trying to lose weight, you might feel like you have to start running. It’s the way seemingly everybody gets fit … or tries to: In a survey from 2017, 60 million Americans were running for fitness, and 80 percent said their reason to continue doing so was to stay healthy.1

And exercise is invaluable to your health: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends that Americans get 150 minutes of exercise per week to reduce their risk of cardiovascular disease, diabetes, osteoporosis and premature death. Even with all those benefits, almost 80 percent of Americans don’t hit that 150-minute mark.2

To reach those weekly minutes—and add to your weekly calorie burn, increasing your overall weight loss—you could run, but you could also slow things down and walk. So … which is better? Should you walk or run for weight loss?

8 Tips to Burn More Calories by Walking

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Factor 1: Which one burns more calories?

a man and a woman talking to each other in the park

For calories per minute, jogging beats walking: According to the American Council on Exercise, a 180-pound person will burn 13.9 calories per minute while jogging, compared with 9.7 calories per minute while walking. So if this 180-pound person exercised for 20 minutes, they’d burn 278 calories. A walk of the same time would burn 194 calories.3

You can catch up by walking for longer: By walking just nine more minutes, our 180-pound person would burn more calories than they did on the 20-minute jog. For many dieters, 30 minutes of walking is easier than 20 minutes of jogging.

The calorie burn of both running and walking can get a boost if you vary your tempo during your workout: Interval training or HIIT, where short bursts of higher-intensity work are alternated with easier work, has been shown in multiple studies to burn more fat and increase heart function better than medium-paced, steady-state cardio work.4

Whether you’re running or walking, try alternating one minute of slightly harder efforts with one minute of easier efforts. In one study, when scientists had walkers increase their pace by as little as five inches per second for one-minute bouts, the walkers burned 20 percent more calories than when they walked the same pace throughout their walk.5

No matter which of the two activities you do for burning calories, make sure you’re not eating them all back and more once you get home: Runners often anecdotally gain weight while training for big races because big runs give them bigger appetites. They also overestimate how many calories they’ve burned: One study found that after a moderate-intensity run, people overestimated how many calories they burned by 300 to 400 percent!6 In another study, that type of overestimation led runners to eat 20 percent more calories in a post-run meal than they’d burned on the run.7

Your Solution: The NuMi app. It’s the free Nutrisystem app that will not only help you determine how many calories you’re actually burning during exercise, but can also help you find post-run or -walk snacks that fit into your daily plan.

Factor 2: Which one will help me lose weight faster?

a woman stepping on a scale

According to one huge study, it depends on if you’re a man or woman, and how much weight you have to lose. In the study of 50,000 people, men lost significantly more weight from running than walking, as did women who were in the top “quartile” of BMI—those who had the most pounds to lose.8

But for women in virtually every other category, walking was just as effective for weight loss as running was. For both men and women in the highest starting weight categories, walking led to about half the weight loss benefit that running did—meaning running was more effective but walking was still very effective, too.8

And for people in those high-starting-weight groups on down, that can be more sustainable: Up to 79 percent of runners are sidelined by an injury at least once per year.9 And if you’re injured, you can’t get the weight loss benefits of the exercise. So walking could be a safer long-term bet.

So You Want to Start Jogging? How to Begin

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Factor 3: Which one burns more belly fat?

a man measuring the circumference of his waist with a measuring tape

You might think this one’s a no-brainer: It’s running, right?

Not so fast—literally. While high-intensity training can burn more body fat overall, low-intensity exercise, like walking, is more effective in specifically targeting belly fat.10 It makes sense that walking burns fat, too: Slow-twitch muscle fibers, which you use for lower-intensity, endurance movements like walking, use fat for fuel.

“Submaximal” exercise, performed at about 60 percent of your maximum effort, may be the most fat-burning of them all. In one study, people who performed this “submaximal” cardio were able to reduce fat in their butt and legs even when scientists were injecting estrogen into those body parts, a process that usually triggers fat gains.11

Whether you choose to walk or run to fight fat, adding strength training is a powerful partner to your cardio moves: In one study, men who did 20 minutes of daily weight training had lower levels of age-related fat gains compared to guys who did the same amount of cardio work.12

So mix it in! Take a walk or run break halfway through and do a set or two of lunges, bodyweight squats, pushups or step ups onto a bench. The muscle-building you’ll get will help boost your fat burn.

Enough beating around the bush! Which is better, running or walking?

a close up of a woman’s legs as she runs in nature

The real answer depends on you: Whichever one you’re more likely to stick to is the exercise type that’s best for your weight loss goals. Studies show that about 50 percent of exercise program participants drop out in the first six months.13

What makes people stick to their programs? A big factor is doing something they enjoy,14 or as scientists put it, “anticipated positive feelings” associated with physical activity makes you more likely to do it.15 So if running sounds good to you, and you can hoof it without getting hurt—that’s great! If walking sounds better, that’s great, too.

You’re more likely to stick to an exercise style you’ll enjoy, and there’s a bonus: Enjoyment also leads to enhanced results.16 So which one is better? You decide!

4 Tips for Enhancing Your Treadmill Workout for Weight Loss

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Sources: 

  1. https://www.statista.com/topics/1743/running-and-jogging/
  2. https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/fastats/exercise.htm
  3. https://acewebcontent.azureedge.net/assets/education-resources/lifestyle/fitfacts/pdfs/fitfacts/itemid_2666.pdf
  4. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8897392
  5. https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/full/10.1098/rsbl.2015.0486
  6. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21178922/
  7. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24680797/
  8. https://journals.lww.com/acsm-msse/Fulltext/2013/04000/Greater_Weight_Loss_from_Running_than_Walking.13.aspx
  9. https://bjsm.bmj.com/content/bjsports/41/8/469.full.pdf
  10. https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s40279-017-0807-y
  11. https://journals.physiology.org/doi/full/10.1152/ajpendo.1998.275.5.e853
  12. https://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2014/12/using-weights-to-target-belly-fat/
  13. https://www.scirp.org/%28S%28351jmbntvnsjt1aadkposzje%29%29/reference/ReferencesPapers.aspx?ReferenceID=1387726
  14. https://academic.oup.com/abm/article-abstract/38/3/180/4569495?redirectedFrom=fulltext
  15. https://bmcwomenshealth.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/1472-6874-14-49
  16. https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11002-014-9301-6

The post Walking vs. Running: Which is Better for Weight Loss? appeared first on The Leaf.



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I start counselling today

stats: CW 284, SW 325, GW 150

well, tonight.

I've been really feeling low last few months about my weight loss situation. back in sept 2020 I got a gastric ballon with which I lost 30lbs. since the ballon (only 4 months long), I have gained and lost, gained and lost, gained and lost non-stop. most recently I had gotten to 280 after sooooooooo long of being stuck on 288 only to gained back 4lbs the last 2 weeks. I had a 3 month long period which F-ed up my progress/mental health/determination and discipline and I have struggled with binging and making myself sick. not the mention the lingering low self esteem, negative thoughts about my body and lack of self motivation to do the hard work to lose weight. and most recently I got super sick which completely took me off track. for some reason I have REALLY set some HIGH goals for myself this month and nothing went to plan AT ALL. I missed work, I missed work outs and I ate a shit ton of junk/take aways. "failing" this months plan really threw me off track mentally.

I come here often. I see the amazing 100lbs+ losses, I see the meal plans/pics, the positives vibes, and all I do is come here and post about hard everything is, how difficult I am finding it and how terrible this process has been going for me. which - to be real - hasn't been untrue but it also hasn't been helpful to me.

I only recently got a job and have been wanting to restart counselling for the longest time. I finally can do that now. I am hoping and praying for the strength, determination, discipline and consistency to now make moves toward my goal weight. I am on the mini pill now which has stopped the period issues (temp solution till I get out of the morbidly obese category), after a lot of agonising and crying about calorie counting I have decided to settle on 1500-1600 cals (even though I truly hate doing it with a passion but I know it works), resolved to work out 5-6 days a week, starting counselling tonight to talk through some shit and now that I have some money (finally) I need to get out of the house as much as possible cos being inside all day is slowly driving me insane.

I don't know if any of the above sounded positive lol, but it is meant to be. my point is, I feel like I have been focusing SO MUCH on the negatives of weight loss, I turned it into a chore. but it isn't a chore. it is a benefit in life to be able to have the ability to wake up and work on me for me, to better me (my health). I want to focus on the wins and not the losses. I want to wake up with energy again, not overthink so much and just keep losing this weight. so please, wish me luck <3

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from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/3tgaEEk

Losing weight very slowly lately

Hello all! I've been "dieting" (Not constantly) for the last 4 years, I've dropped from 150KG to 98KG, however for the past few months, I struggle to lose more than 1-1.5KG per month. I am eating on average 1400 calories per day, but some times I might get about 1100. I do not workout much, just walking once in a while for like 30 minutes. I've been thinking that my metabolism might have slowed down from being in caloric deficit for way too long, but I am not sure what to do about it. One of the things I read in google is doing HIIT exercises, and I am thinking of doing some short high intensity runs for about 30 seconds to keep my heart beating at a very fast rate, which they say it can boost metabolism, but I am not sure what else to do. I've been trying to build some muscle aswell using weights but I injured my hands, so I am stuck at the moment. Should I take any supplements? What can I do to speed up my weight loss journey? Thank you for your time!

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My old, go-to foods just don't do it for me anymore.

F 5'8" SW: 195 CW: 147

It's a little sad for me, but also I guess I should listen to my body. For the last few months when I've allowed myself a splurge on calories I found that the meal was incredibly disappointing. Ordering a burger from my favorite restaurant, blah. Getting a pasta dish from an Italian place I frequent, blah. Even McDonald's! My trusty friend McDonald's, I got my go-to McDouble and Mcnuggets and completely hated it! What is happening to me?!? I've been on this weight loss journey for a year focusing on CICO and in that time I think I've completely re-written my taste buds. Obviously this is something good haha every instance I thought to myself "a salad would have been less disappointing than this".

Has anyone else found they can't even enjoy foods the way they used to?

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from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/3nG7gSf

25 lbs down (229 to 204) in just over 2 months!

https://imgur.com/a/PcSbqzg

Hello! I am a 26yo (M) and I wanted to share my weight loss efforts from the past couple months. I loved weight training but hated watching what I ate. Due to being laid off in the winter I sat at home, ate, and gained a bunch of weight. I decided I needed to change, and so I gave myself a calorie deficit and committed to only eating three times a day with absolutely no snacking. 2 months later and I need to buy all new work clothes because nothing fits! I don't do any fancy meal prepping, I just follow my calorie goals and make an effort to hit my macros every day. My biggest vice was nighttime snacking, and cutting that out has been crucial for not binging and gaining everything back. I only drink water, with the exception of whey with almond milk post lifts. I lift five days a week with my non-lifting days being some light cardio work just to get my heart rate up.

Don't overcomplicate the process, and find something that you can stick to!

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Maintenance Monday: May 3, 2021

If you've reached your goal weight and you're looking for a space to discuss with fellow maintainers, this is the thread for you! Whether you're brand new to maintenance or you've been doing it for years, you're welcome to use this space to chat about anything and everything related to the experience of maintaining your weight loss.

Hey everyone, here's your weekly discussion thread! Tell us how maintenance and life in general is going for you this week! And if you missed last week's (or simply want to reread), here's a link.

If there's a specific topic you'd like to see covered in a future thread, please drop a comment or message!

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from loseit - Lose the Fat https://ift.tt/33abiIZ

re-losing weight

hey guys!! i hope this topic is appropriate.

about 2-3 years ago i lost about 50lbs. i loved my body then. but i was so obsessed with it that i fell into super restrictive eating habits. obviously i couldn’t keep that up, and ended up regaining the weight. i’m probably the same weight now or more than before.

i know this happens to lots of people. but for the past few years i’ve just not been able to restart weight loss again. any advice? how do you get the motivation to re-lose? i just can’t seem to do it. i’ve been trying and trying but have no desire to do 1200 like i did before, and i think my mind feels it’s “all or nothing.”

thanks all!

(edit: my flair is from years ago also. lol)

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