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What Is
Fitness?
Aristotle
helped define the standards of fitness 2,500 years ago when he
taught that a thing that suits its purpose well is fit.
Fortunately for us, the cardiovascular system, lungs, skeleton,
muscles, endocrine system and all the other amazing components
of the body function for our purpose: to live
well.
Exercising aids
fitness in numerous ways, each involving one or more of those
systems.
Increased
physical activity causes the heart to work harder than at rest.
That increases blood flow, floods tissues with fresh oxygen and
removes cellular waste products.
Exercise causes
the lungs to draw in extra oxygen to bathe the tissues and help
power the heart. Exhalation removes carbon dioxide, a waste
product of certain biochemical reactions.
Regular,
moderate exercise helps raise HDL (High-Density Lipoprotein)
cholesterol (the 'good' type). It helps regulate blood sugar
levels and converts stored fat into sugars that are used to
provide energy. That process also prevents
obesity.
The other
benefits of a regular fitness program are more obvious and
usually among the more direct goals of most people who make the
effort: increased muscle mass, toned legs, buttocks, arms,
stomach and healthier looking skin. Along the way, the
individual receives the added value of greater strength,
improved balance, higher endurance and (often) a better frame
of mind.
Different types
of routines will emphasize one area more than another. Aerobic
routines help the cardiovascular and pulmonary systems, weight
lifting focuses on building muscle tone and mass, yoga and
Pilates helps balance, flexibility and muscular control. But
each of these, and several more, help more than just the
intended focus group. The body is an integrated system and
improving one area almost always has beneficial consequences
for others.
All those
benefits, at least to a moderate degree, can be had for minimal
daily effort. Moderate intensity activity for 30 minutes per
day, at least five days per week, will go a long way toward
optimizing fitness.
A brisk walk,
taking the stairs up one or two flights, a short daily jog,
jumping rope and many other simple activities can be carried
out with no special equipment or training.
More intense
activity, done properly, can raise that level even further. A
vigorous tennis game, a few laps in the swimming pool, an hour
on the treadmill or exercise bike, or any of a dozen others,
can raise your fitness to a peak with only a moderate
investment of time and money.
For the truly
committed there are, of course, a thousand and one classes at
the gym, and every conceivable kind of home fitness equipment
to fit a variety of budgets. A daily routine using free
weights, followed by a good jog around the park will keep all
systems functioning well.
And, as
Aristotle taught all those centuries ago, to function well is
to live well.
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