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Cross Training for Fitness and Fatloss
Presented By Jimmy Oakley
http://maybrockpublishing.com
For information about Fitting
Exercise into Your Busy Schedule
check out fittingexercise
The numbers on your scale do not indicate whether you are
fit or fat. Far more significant than your total body weight is
the composition of your body tissue. If a man’s fatty tissue is
bigger than 14% up to 15% of his body mass, or if a woman’s is
more than 20% to 22%, he or she is overweight, or more
precisely, overfat.
A small amount of fat is needed for padding the internal
organs and as insulation under the skin. Excess fat leads to
such diseases as diabetes, gout, high blood pressure, coronary
artery disease, and gallbladder problems. There are very few,
very fat persons. The reason is that the fittest, not the
fattest survive.
The problem now is focused on how to resolve the problem.
The problem with most people who want to lose weight is that
they have the propensity to concentrate more on getting those
numbers lower than what they are seeing now. What happens next
is that they strive harder to achieve a lower weight, according
to the “ever reliable” result of the weighing scale.
It would be more important to think of the human body as a
heat-exchange engine that works on the basic principles of
energy physics. The caloric balance equals the total calorie
intake minus the total calorie expenditure.
Some of the calories people ingest are used for basal
metabolism. As people get old, their bodies require fewer
calories for this basic upkeep. Some calories are excreted as
waste products. Some go into “work metabolism,” the energy
expenditure required for any physical activity.
Hence, if people take in more calories than are used by
these functions, there is a definite caloric excess. By the
laws of physics, energy is transformed rather than destroyed.
In this case, each excess of 3,500 calories is changed into a
pound of fat. If people want to reverse this process, they have
to burn up 3,500 calories to lose a single pound.
Winning the War Against Fat
When you think of fighting fat with exercise, you probably
think of hours of hard, sweaty exertion. If this is the case,
then, you will not get any farther. This is because people who
are so much into losing more by exerting more effort tend to
get bored easily.
Why? Because experts contend that when people exert more
effort than what they are capable of doing creates a tendency
to develop weariness and ennui. Hence, they give up, stop doing
their routine exercises, and end up sulking in the corner with
a bag of chips that seems to have all the bad calories in this
world.
Now, you might ask, "What should be done instead?" The
answer: cross training.
After some intensive studies and experimentations, health
experts were able to come up with the concept of incorporating
cross training in order to overcome or break the monotony or
dullness in an exercise program.
Cross training refers to the integration of diverse
movements or activities into a person’s conventional exercise
routine. The main purpose of incorporating cross training into
an exercise program is to avoid overdoing excess muscle damages
and to put a stop to an imminent boredom.
Three of the most commonly used activities whenever a person
decides to engage into cross training are swimming, running,
and cycling.
In cross training, distance is one way to extend your
activity as your condition improves. For this reason, you need
to traverse a measured distance.
If possible, swim the course and measure the distance. If
you will be using a running track, such courses usually are a
quarter-mile per lap for a complete circuit.
Cross training offers a variety of benefits for fitness and
fatloss. It builds up the strength and endurance of the heart,
lungs, and blood vessels. It has also some tranquilizing effect
on the nerves, and it burns up calories as much as it makes
your “losing weight” more bearable.
Cross training has three basic components:
1. Endurance exercises to condition the heart, lungs, and
blood vessels and to induce relaxation. These begin with a
careful planned walking and jogging regimen, depending on
fitness level.
2. Exercises to strengthen the muscles, particularly those
important to good posture. These include some activities that
are selected to encourage some people who are already burnt out
with a particular routine.
3. Exercises to improve joint mobility and prevent or
relieve aches and pains. These consist of a series of static
stretching positions that are safe and effective for most of
the people who wish to try to lose some fat.
Indeed, cross training is a great way to modify the concept
of exercising and losing fat without having to endure
monotonous activities. In fact, the idea of exercising is to
like what you are doing, hence, if you engage into cross
training, you will be aware of it that you have already achieve
your desired weight.
Boiled down, cross training is, certainly, one way of having
fun.
Arthors Bio:
Jimmy Oakley is publisher of http://maybrockpublishing.com and
is also an accomplished arthor and writer.
His newest ebook release is titled
"Addiction Education, You have Questions, I Have Answers!",
a comprehensive authority guide and addiciton resource
that is sweeping the addiction community in it's new
found popularity. Jimmy invites you to subscribe to his
exceptionally informative new 10-part ecourse by
visiting http://addictioneducation.net/ecoursesignup.html. Or visit the books main website at
http://addictioneducation.net
.
To find other selections Jimmy has published,
visit please http://maybrockpublishing.com.
Visit Jimmy's blog at http://jimmyoakley.com for
enlightening up to date information about marketing and other
miscellaneous topics of interest.
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