When we are young, fitness comes easily. We play sports or are active in our daily life. But sometime during middle age, our fitness tends to decline. And in our retirement years we may begin to really pay a price for letting our fitness wane. This doesn’t have to happen. Here are some tips that will help to make your story a happy one of continued fitness throughout life.
Try to keep your workouts limited. You should keep them to under an hour, if possible. After an hour, your body starts to produce a stress hormone that can actually start to eat away at your muscle and will block testosterone, which leads to less muscle development and does not produce a very good workout.
When recovering from an injury, you should try and work out as soon as possible. Start out with only a few minutes here and there to test out if you are truly better. If you are, then you should start working out and build up the strength that you had lost while injured.
Do not schedule regular periods of rest and recovery during your workout sessions. Instead, take periodic breaks only when you feel that you need them, regardless of the time spent performing exercises. However, you should rest less frequently in the earlier stages of your workout program, then more frequently as you begin to grow fatigued. Otherwise, you risk cutting your total workout time down unnecessarily.
When you work out your biceps it may help to bend your wrists backwards when doing curls. This kind of grip can help you to isolate your bicep work much better, focusing on one muscle rather than using your forearm strength as well when curling. It’s important to make the distinction between isolation exercises and compound exercises.
Even though it is vital, sleep is often overlooked when one plans a fitness regimen. The modern world tends to encourage one to sleep less and less. This is a mistake if one wants to get fit. Sleep is crucial in restoring the body and maintaining energy levels. Get at least seven hours of sleep every night to stay fit and healthy.
Fitness should become something that you learn to live and not just something that happens at the gym. As you become more aware of all the health traps around you, it will become easier to live a healthy lifestyle and not just do a few healthy activities now and then.
To improve your fitness, try working out a little each day. This is more beneficial than just doing an exercise ‘binge’ once a week. Incorporating exercise into your daily routine will make it easier to keep to your exercise momentum going, and means you won’t dread and try to avoid an overly long workout session.
We hope these tips on fitness have given you a lot of good ideas. Applied well, this knowledge can help you avoid debilitating conditions later in life or to minimize the conditions that cannot be wholly avoided. Fitness is like holding a rope taut, not letting it go slack. Keeping fit throughout life is its own reward.