DailyDirt: You Know The First Guy To Run A Marathon Died Immediately After, Right?
from the urls-we-dig-up dept
Everything in moderation... including exercise. Exercise is undoubtedly good for you if you compare it to a sedentary lifestyle, but running marathons every day isn't going to do you any favors. But where is the optimal sweet spot for exercise? It's not the same for everyone, but it looks like most Americans aren't doing enough. Fortunately, the right amount probably isn't as much as you'd think.- If you're exercising just to live longer, then you should probably optimize your workout because too much of a good thing has its risks. Any amount of exercise is better than none at all, but the minimum recommended dose isn't exactly clear. Still, it looks like walking for 450 minutes per week is about where the benefits plateau for a broad study of thousands of adults. [url]
- Some studies showed that exercising strenuously more than three times a week correlated with increased vascular risk. The benefits of moderate exercise peak at about 4-6 sessions of walking/gardening per week. [url]
- Exercise isn't going to help you lose weight necessarily. There's plenty of data to suggest that our bodies adapt to exercise -- and metabolisms slow down as people lose weight. Exercise is still good for you, but again, after some point, the benefits peak -- so for significant weight loss, you need to exercise and change your dietary habits. (duh?) [url]
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Filed Under: diet, exercise, fitness, health, minimum recommended dose, weight loss
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People Have Been Running Marathons—And Ultramarathons—Long Before The Greeks
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Malware
https://archive.is/o/zmHVC/www.adobe.com/go/getflash/
08 30a-04 15p
The link to update flash is:
https://get.adobe.com/flashplayer/
Unfortunately some legitimate sites are careless about what ads the use.
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The first guy to run the 'Marathon' had also just fought a pitched battle,
You do that, and then run the marathon in full armor.
Good luck!
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You get out what you put in, apparently.
So if you do exercise, so something you'll enjoy doing.
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Re: You get out what you put in, apparently.
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Exercising
Walking slowly, exercising with very light weights - I don't really see much benefit. Walking faster (like, trying to keep up with my oldest daughter), working out with weights that challenge me a bit, big benefit.
I can almost make a chart of length of time versus quality of exercise for maximum benefit (at least, for me) and less time but more challenge (to a point) versus a long time but less challenge - same benefit.
Be interested in seeing a controlled study about that.
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"The studies also found that prolonged or intense exercise is unlikely to be harmful and could add years to people’s lives."
"At that point, the benefits plateaued, the researchers found, but they never significantly declined. Those few individuals engaging in 10 times or more the recommended exercise dose gained about the same reduction in mortality risk as people who simply met the guidelines. They did not gain significantly more health bang for all of those additional hours spent sweating. But they also did not increase their risk of dying young."
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Re: your lifespan would be extended by roughly the amount of time you spent exercising
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Re: Re: You get out what you put in, apparently.
Different people need different things to maintain a healthy body and life. Exercise as a specific activity is a great thing for most people, but there are those for whom it's the exact opposite.
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Re:
"Pheidippides is said to have run from Marathon to Athens to deliver news of a military victory against the Persians in the Battle of Marathon. ...
He ... ran the 40 km (25 mi) from the battlefield near Marathon to Athens to announce the Greek victory over Persia in the Battle of Marathon (490 BC) with the word νικῶμεν (nikomen[9] "We have won"), as stated by Lucian chairete, nikomen ("hail, we are the winners")[10] to then collapse and die."
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