Connect with us

Fitness

The Right Way To Lose Weight

Published

on

The Right Way To Lose Weight

If your best efforts at losing weight aren’t panning out, you’re far from alone.

Advertisement

Cleveland Clinic is a non-profit academic medical center. Advertising on our site helps support our mission. We do not endorse non-Cleveland Clinic products or services. Policy

One poll discussed in Psychology Today suggests that, on average, people try 126 fad diets in their lives. And each attempt averaged just six days.

You can’t blame people for not keeping it up. A lot of those diets touted by celebrities and endorsed on social media encourage cutting out whole food groups, eating inordinate amounts of specific foods or severely cutting back on foods to the point of near starvation.

Advertisement

You just can’t keep up that kind of lifestyle. And your body deserves to be treated better than that.

So, how do you do it? How do you lose weight and keep it off?

We talked with registered dietitian, exercise physiologist and psychologist David Creel, PhD, about how to lose weight the right way.

The truth about weight loss

Carrying excess weight isn’t ideal for your health. Obesity is connected to a host of health conditions that can severely affect your well-being. That includes:

So, losing weight and achieving a healthy body mass index (BMI) can be a noble goal for people who are at risk for these conditions and others.

Advertisement

But there’s a lot of advice out there about how to lose weight. (A whole heck of a lot, really.)

Here’s the simple truth: For weight loss to be successful, you need to develop healthy habits that you can live with and be happy with for the long-term.

Because losing weight and keeping it off is a commitment. It will take time. You’ll have bumps in the road. And that’s OK.

“Losing weight isn’t a linear experience. You’ll have ups and downs. But if the overall trend is downward, that’s when you know you’re having success,” Dr. Creel shares. “That’s why we have to think about how to lose weight as a lifestyle.”

In a nutshell, healthy, successful weight loss goes something like this:

Advertisement
  1. Set reasonable goals.
  2. Expend more calories than you take in.
  3. Eat nutritious foods that give your body all the nutrients it needs, with less of the stuff it doesn’t.
  4. Get your heart pumping with aerobic exercise.
  5. Maintain or build muscle to help your body burn calories at rest.
  6. Explore the ways emotions affect your eating and physical activity.
  7. Get enough sleep to allow your body to function at its best.
  8. Expect that you’ll need to make adjustments.

Dr. Creel walks us through each of these steps so you can create a weight-loss plan that’ll work for you.

1. Set weight loss goals

Although losing weight can be exciting and encouraging, Dr. Creel suggests staying focused on actions more than outcomes.

Setting reasonable and manageable lifestyle goals means paying attention to what we have the most control over — our behaviors. You may hear it referred to as a SMART goal — specific, measurable, attainable, relevant to the things that are most important to you and time-bound.

You might set goals to walk 30 minutes five times per week, include vegetables with dinner and stop eating after 7 p.m. Concentrate on the areas that will impact your health and weight the most.

“It can depend on your starting weight and your lifestyle, but these modest changes often lead to one to two pounds of weight loss per week,” Dr. Creel notes. “Weight loss is likely to taper off over time, but if you pay attention to the non-scale victories — like better sleep, more energy and improved fitness — you’re less likely to get discouraged.”

2. Understand how weight loss works

Weight loss is, at its core, a matter of burning more calories than you take in.

Advertisement

“We’re all unique beings, and our bodies have different needs,” Dr. Creel points out. “But at the end of the day, the most basic concept of losing weight is that you need to achieve a calorie deficit.”

Here’s what that means.

Our bodies use calories from the foods we eat to power our systems, giving us energy to do everything from running a marathon to digesting our food and pumping our hearts.

When you take in excess calories, your body stores them as fat.

But when you eat fewer calories than you use, your body starts to take energy from your stores. That’s a calorie deficit. That’s when you start to lose weight.

Advertisement

Take in way too few calories, and you’re at risk for undernutrition and a host of health concerns.

So, losing weight is a balancing act. A Goldilocks scenario of taking in and putting out not too much and not too little, but juuuuuust right. And it’s different for everyone.

Get the right number of calories

We each have different calorie needs. So, what may suffice as a filling diet for one person may be too much, or not enough, for someone else.

The right number of calories for you can depend on a host of factors, including:

  • Your current weight.
  • Your goal weight.
  • Your height.
  • Your age.
  • Your muscle mass.
  • How physically active you are.

How do you know that you’re getting the right number of calories for weight loss?

Dr. Creel offers up a rough idea of what may be healthy for some people. “When we know how many calories you’re burning, we might suggest getting about 500 calories a day fewer than that. That will typically yield about a pound of weight loss per week. But really, it should be a more individualized approach.”

Advertisement

A visit to a healthcare provider, like a registered dietitian, is going to be your best bet to determine how many calories you should be taking in when you try to lose weight.

If you’re looking for a more down-and-dirty DIY estimate of your calorie needs, The U.S. Center for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) MyPlate Plan or the NIH body weight planner can suggest how many calories would be appropriate for you to maintain your weight or lose weight.

Examples from the MyPlate calculator:

Age
25
Sex
Male
Height
5 feet, 9 inches
Current Weight (pounds)
220
Activity level
High
Calories to maintain weight
3,200
Calories to lose weight
3,000
30
Sex
Female
Height
5 feet, 3 inches
Current Weight (pounds)
180
Activity level
Little
Calories to maintain weight
2,200
Calories to lose weight
1,800
40
Sex
Male
Height
6 feet
Current Weight (pounds)
250
Activity level
Moderate
Calories to maintain weight
3,200
Calories to lose weight
2,800
50
Sex
Female
Height
5 feet, 8 inches
Current Weight (pounds)
190
Activity level
Moderate
Calories to maintain weight
2,400
Calories to lose weight
2,200
55
Sex
Male
Height
6 feet, 2 inches
Current Weight (pounds)
250
Activity level
Little
Calories to maintain weight
2,800
Calories to lose weight
2,400

Some smartwatches and wearable fitness trackers can also tell you how many calories you burn, both through exercise and your regular biological processes. That can give you a good starting point to know what you need to maintain or lose weight. Subtract about 500 calories a day from that number to give you an estimate of how many calories per day you should take in.

When you know how many calories to aim for, it can help to keep a food journal, either on paper or in an app. That can help you keep track of when you’re eating and when. And it will give you a good idea of the health benefits of the foods you’re eating.

Advertisement

3. Follow a manageable weight-loss diet

The backbone of a healthy diet for weight loss is to eat more natural foods and fewer processed foods.

That’s the basic tenet of the Mediterranean diet — largely considered to be the healthiest eating pattern around. It stresses eating:

Hitting the right number of calories isn’t enough. The quality of those calories is also important.

Think of it like this: A can of soda has about 150 calories. An apple has about 95 calories. A difference of just 55 calories.

But the calories in an apple come with nutrients that you don’t find in soda. Like fiber and antioxidants. What’s more, the apple will fill your belly and satisfy your hunger in a way that soda can’t.

Advertisement

“You can have a soda and a refill (300 calories) and still eat a full meal,” Dr. Creel illustrates. “But if you were to drink water and have three apples (285 calories) with your meal, you’re going to consume way fewer calories overall because those apples will be much more filling.”

In short, natural and less-processed foods fill your body with what it needs — without the stuff it doesn’t.

Some people swear cutting out carbs can help aid weight loss (the keto diet). Others will tell you carbs are fine in moderation. Both can be true — though a no-carb diet can be tough to keep up long term.

Although people can lose weight with lower-fat or lower-carb eating, Dr. Creel says that the types of carbs and fat are most important. Healthy fats tend to come from plants, nuts and seeds rather than animals. And healthier carbohydrates are less processed.

In broad strokes, try these swaps to get started with cleaning up your diet:

Advertisement
Less of this
Beef
More of this
Chicken, turkey, fish and nuts
Butter
More of this
Olive oil
Cakes, cookies and candy
More of this
Fruits and vegetables
Soda, lemonade, juice, sweetened tea and alcohol
More of this
Water
White bread and pasta
More of this
Whole-wheat bread and pasta
White rice
More of this
Brown rice

Remember, weight loss is a marathon, not a sprint. Depriving yourself of your favorite foods and labeling them as “off limits” is a recipe for discouragement, backsliding and guilt.

Rather than vowing never to eat another slice of cake or have a soda, work them in sparingly. And remind yourself that an occasional treat is OK. It’s not a reflection of your willpower or your worth as a person.

4. Get cardio exercise

Remember, losing weight comes down to expending more calories than you’re taking in. And exercise is an important factor in burning those extra calories.

The American Heart Association recommends getting at least 150 minutes of moderate-intensity cardio exercise each week. That’s the kind of exercise that gets your heart pumping and makes you breathe faster than usual.

Although people lose weight in a variety of ways, those who keep it off tend to exercise regularly, Dr. Creel explains.

Advertisement

“I’ll typically advise people who are looking to lose weight to ratchet up their workouts to something more like 250 to 300 minutes per week — or an hour-long workout four to five days per week,” he says. “But there are no hard-and-fast rules that are right for everyone. If you have a very active lifestyle, like a physically taxing job, you probably can get by with less. If you have a desk job, you may need more.”

Now, chances are you’re not going to go from limited amounts of exercise to hitting the gym for an hour five days a week immediately. Your body isn’t ready for that. And your life isn’t set up to accommodate that major of a shift. So, ease into it.

“This is about making a lifestyle change — not trying something for a bit and burning out. So, start slowly and build up,” he encourages. “Find activities that you enjoy and that fit into your life on a regular basis.”

Try these aerobic workouts to get your heart pumping:

  • Walking, hiking and slow running.
  • Swimming.
  • Cycling.
  • Cardio machines, like treadmills, ellipticals and steppers.

How do you know if your exercise is too intense? Or too cozy?

Try talking when you’re exercising. If you need to pause your conversation here and there to catch your breath, that’s moderate-intensity exercise. You’re right on track.

Advertisement

If you can carry on a conversation easily, it’s time to push a little harder. If you’re gasping for air, ease up.

5. Maintain or build muscle

Muscle is imperative for losing weight. That’s because muscle works to burn more calories, even when you’re not doing much of anything. So, when you build muscle, you’re making your body composition work in your favor.

“Muscle is metabolically active. Your muscle burns through calories much faster, even if you’re just sitting on the couch,” Dr. Creel explains. “The more muscle mass you have, the quicker you burn calories.”

What’s more, when you work to lose weight, what you really want to lose is fat, not muscle.

There are two important elements to maintaining muscle mass as you lose weight:

Advertisement

1.) Eat plenty of lean protein. Healthy sources of protein help to build and repair muscle. So, protein is a critical component of healthy weight-loss eating. How much protein you need depends on a variety of factors. But most people will be well served to make protein count for around 25% to 30% of the calories they eat each day. On a 1,600-calorie diet, that would equal 100 to 120 grams of protein per day.

2.) Engage in strength-training exercise. That can be activities like yoga, Pilates, barbells, free weights or calisthenics, all of which help to tone and strengthen muscle. Aim for at least 20 minutes of strength-training exercise twice per week.

“Strength training doesn’t usually burn as many calories as cardiovascular exercise. But the benefits of maintaining muscle are of utmost importance,” Dr. Creel clarifies. “And if cardio exercise is hard for you, strength training is sometimes an easier gateway into physical activity.”

6. Check in with your emotional well-being

Emotional eating is real. It’s a natural coping mechanism for some people to turn to food when they’re feeling stressed, bored, frustrated or any number of emotions.

Here’s why: Strong emotions, like stress, release the hormone cortisol. And cortisol can heighten our cravings for sugar, fat and salt. It’s a biological response that’s trying to protect you by fueling your body to prepare to fight off tigers or other threats to your life.

Advertisement

But for most of the stresses we feel in our modern lives, downing a pint of ice cream isn’t going to solve the problem. We may know that intellectually … but your body reacts the same way regardless.

What can you do when you feel that pang to reach for food — not for hunger, but strictly for comfort? Step away from the fridge and try some quick relaxation strategies:

  • Take a walk.
  • Do some breathing exercises.
  • Try some meditation.

Food journaling can also help you understand patterns in your emotional state and how they relate to eating.

“I like to encourage people to keep track not just of what they’re eating, but also how they’re feeling at mealtimes or when they reach for that snack,” Dr. Creel recommends. “That can help you to see patterns and gauge whether you’re eating because you’re hungry or if you’re turning to food for comfort.”

7. Sleep well

While they may not seem related, sleep and weight loss go hand in hand.

“If we aren’t getting good rest, your hunger hormones (ghrelin and leptin) can get out of whack. You actually feel hungrier when you’re not well-rested,” Dr. Creel shares.

Advertisement

Aim to get enough sleep (between seven and nine hours a night for most adults). And keep to a regular sleep schedule.

8. Expect to change course

Often, you can see results from your weight loss efforts quickly. Then, it stalls. And you wonder if your scale is working. You might even question whether it’s worth it to keep it up.

That’s all part of the process.

It’s easy to get discouraged if the number on the scale doesn’t reflect your hard work. And sometimes, it won’t. Weight doesn’t always reflect the effort you put in.

It can be tempting to lose hope. To throw in the towel and head to the nearest drive-thru.

Advertisement

Resist the temptation. Chances are you’re doing great.

There are a few reasons you’re not seeing the results you expect.

For starters, weighing yourself between daily and weekly is important for you to understand how your efforts are working. But rather than focus on the day-to-day numbers, which can be emotionally charged, focus on trends.

Has it been a week since you lost a pound? That’s nothing. Has it been a month? That might be a sign that your weight loss has hit a wall. But there’s hope.

Weight loss plateaus are all part of the process. A crummy part to be sure. But still normal.

Advertisement

“We call it metabolic adaptation. It’s your body trying to hold on to weight by slowing down your metabolism,” Dr. Creel explains. “We know it’s healthy for us to lose excess weight, but your body doesn’t. It’s trying to protect you.”

It can be hard to push through. But the best response to hitting a plateau is to increase your efforts. Add in some additional exercise. Recalculate your calorie needs. (Chances are they’ve changed because of the weight you’ve already lost.) Be patient. Don’t give up.

And talk with a weight loss specialist or registered dietitian. They can help you find interventions that could make a big difference. That may include things like new diet or exercise strategies.

Or they may recommend anti-obesity medications or bariatric surgery in addition to a healthy diet and exercise program. Those strategies can help overcome your body’s natural instincts to defend against weight loss.

Bottom line?

Losing weight isn’t rocket science. But that doesn’t mean it’s simple. Humans are complex creatures. What we eat, how much we move and the inner workings of our minds all contribute to how we gain and lose weight.

Advertisement

Trust the process. And don’t hesitate to ask for help. Your health is worth it.

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Fitness

Mike Sommerfeld Reveals His Simple 4-Exercise Leg Day Ahead of the 2026 Arnold Classic – Muscle & Fitness

Published

on

Mike Sommerfeld Reveals His Simple 4-Exercise Leg Day Ahead of the 2026 Arnold Classic – Muscle & Fitness

Mike “The Bad Ass” Sommerfeld is on a mission to defend his Arnold Men’s Classic Physique title and is taking a no-nonsense approach to outperforming the likes of Wesley Vissers and a debuting Sam Sulek. To illustrate this, the gigantic German used a recent Instagram post to share one of his go-to leg days for total domination, and you can try it too.

Sommerfeld brought the complete package to the stage during the 2025 Arnold Classic, impressing the judges with his muscle mass, definition, symmetry, and conditioning, but with a stacked field ahead of him in March, the big man shares that one of the workouts he’s forged follows a back-to-basics approach. Apparently, The Bad Ass’s leg day is about quality over quantity and requires just four exercises in total. “Two for hams, and two for quads,” he explained.

Mike Sommerfeld’s 4-Exercise Leg Day Workout Ahead of the 2026 Arnold Classic

Warmup

Hamstrings

Quads

Mike Sommerfeld’s Leg Day Strategy Explained

Joining the likes of other bodybuilding great, Martin Fitzwater, Sommerfeld shared that he begins leg workouts with adductors to warm up his upper legs and get the blood circulation stimulated. “I always start with adductors to warm up my hips and get me going,” explained Sommerfeld. “Especially mentally, and physically, to lift heavier weights for the upcoming exercises.” He noted that while on the machine, he pushes his back to the pad as far as possible, to increase both the stretch and the contraction while executing his reps.

Homing in on his hamstrings, Sommerfeld’s first exercise is the seated leg curl. “The reason for that is, you get an amazing pre-stretch position by just sitting down (and getting set up) on the machine” said the man-mountain. Next up is the deadlift. “Why? Because we already contracted hamstrings pretty hard, and they are pumped as hell,” confirmed Sommerfeld. “Now we can stretch the s**t out of our hamstrings.”

Moving on to quads, the 2025 Arnold Men’s Classic Physique champion shared that his new favorite quad exercise is the hack squat (also referred to as the hack press). “The reason for that is, it feels so much more natural to my knees.” Sommerfeld explained that he feels almost zero pressure or pain on his knees with this squat variation. “And I can go really deep into the stretch, and I can focus entirely on my way up, to contract my quads as hard as possible.” The Bad Ass also shared that he likes to use rest-pause sets on the hack squat, performing his reps towards failure, taking a short break, and then going again to towards failure. “So, after hitting 10 to 12 reps, I like to pause for a few seconds, and then go again for three to four more reps.”

Advertisement

Last but not least for his legs, Sommerfeld rounds out his workout with the belt squat. “The reason for that is, it’s actually so much smarter to use a belt squat because it loads your hips, not your shoulders,” coached the champ. “In regular (back) squats you have all the load on your shoulders, and your body needs to stabilize it all the way. That creates a lot of fatigue and we wanna train legs not our full body. This is why I chose the belt squat, an amazing piece of equipment. You can hold yourself and stabilize yourself (on the platform). You can go really deep, wait a second in the stretched position, and then go up again, and squeeze it out.”

In terms of sets and rep, Sommerfeld explained that he does “multiple, multiple, sets,” but for us mere mortals, 2 to 3 sets of 8 to 12 reps will bring mass building results. By focusing on the quality of his stretch and contractions and isolating his quads and hamstrings rather than fatiguing the rest of his body, Mike Sommerfeld could present his best physique yet come March.

To follow Mike Sommerfeld on Instagram, click here. 

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Fitness

Combining small changes in diet, exercise and sleep may extend life | CNN

Published

on

Combining small changes in diet, exercise and sleep may extend life | CNN

Small changes in diet, exercise and sleep may extend life by a year when put into practice together, while making larger changes could provide more than nine additional years of life, according to a new study.

Combining changes in diet, sleep and exercise also increased “health span,” or the number of years a person may live without major health complaints.

“These findings highlight the importance of considering lifestyle behaviors as a package rather than in isolation,” said lead study author Nick Koemel, a research fellow in physical activity, lifestyle and population health at the University of Syndey’s main campus in Camperdown, Australia.

“By targeting small improvements across multiple behaviors simultaneously, the required change for any single behavior is substantially reduced, which may help overcome common barriers to long-term behavior change,” Koemel said in an email.

READ MORE: Can’t sleep? Take steps to improve your sleep hygiene, which boosts health.

Advertisement

However, that finding is far from conclusive, said Kevin McConway, professor emeritus of applied statistics at the Open University in Milton Keynes, United Kingdom, who was not involved in the study.

“A snag is that the paper uses complicated statistical methods that are not always described clearly,” McConway said in an email. “It’s therefore difficult to tell to what extent the findings have emerged from the researchers’ choice of statistical analyses, rather than things that are clearer from the data.”

Using scientific modeling, Koemel and his team found combining as little as five additional minutes of sleep, two minutes of moderate to vigorous physical activity (such as brisk walking or taking the stairs), and an additional ½ cup of vegetables a day might lengthen life by a year.

However, this predicted outcome was only for people who had an extremely poor diet, slept less than six hours per night and only exercised about seven minutes a day. In addition, it wasn’t until the model’s lifestyle improvements greatly increased that the results became scientifically significant.

“All of the gains reported in this study are theoretical,” Koemel said. “We cannot claim a direct causal effect from the lifestyle patterns. These findings should therefore be interpreted as expected or projected benefits under assumed behavioral variations, rather than confirmed effects of an intervention.”

Advertisement

The greatest gain in longevity — 9.35 years — and health span — 9.46 years — came with the combination of an addition of 42 to 103 minutes of exercise and sleeping between seven and eight hours a day, while also eating an extremely healthy diet that included fish, whole grains, vegetables and fruits.

Adding exercise to the mix moved the longevity needle the most — a fact that did not surprise preventive cardiologist Dr. Andrew Freeman, director of cardiovascular prevention and wellness at National Jewish Health in Denver.

“Exercise is the elixir of youth,” said Freeman, who was not involved in the study. “But let me be clear — this study should not be interpreted as exercising for exactly two minutes and stop, you’ve accomplished a goal.

“Rather, you should aim to get 20 to 30 minutes of brisk, breathless physical activity, combining strength and cardio in every day. That advice has not changed over decades of study.”

READ MORE: Want to start moving? Check out this guidance to ease into walking.

Advertisement

The study, published Wednesday in the journal eClinicalMedicine, looked at almost 60,000 participants from England, Scotland and Wales in the UK Biobank, a longitudinal health study, who were followed for an average of eight years. Everyone in the study provided information on their diet — including ultraprocessed foods, such as sugar-sweetened beverages. A subset of the group also wore wrist watches that provided more objective measurements of movement and sleep.

Researchers gathered this medical data and used it to form theoretical scenarios of improved longevity and health span, which was defined as the number of years free of cardiovascular disease, dementia, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and type 2 diabetes.

Enjoying a longer life and a longer health span, or remaining free of disease, aren’t the same thing, Koemel said. “Combined improvements in sleep, physical activity, and diet were associated with longer lifespans, even if people still developed some chronic conditions later in life.”

READ MORE: Want to improve your diet? Instead of making drastic changes, you can ease into the Mediterranean diet.

After adjusting the findings for many variables — such as the amount of ultraprocessed foods, smoking, alcohol use, body mass index, insomnia, snoring and daytime sleepiness — the results differed depending on how much of each behavior change was accomplished.

Advertisement

In addition to the lowest and highest levels of the lifestyle changes discussed above, researchers also found lower levels of exercise — less than 23 minutes a day — sleeping seven to eight hours a night, and an excellent diet were associated with nearly four more years of life and three years of health, the study found.

Moderate levels of exercise (between 23 and 42 minutes a day), sleeping up to eight hours per night, and a high-quality diet were associated with a greater improvement of an additional seven years of life and just over six years of good health. So many calculations! What does it all mean?

“This is not about the absolute minutes you exercise or sleep or the number of pieces of broccoli you eat. It’s about making sure that all the things you do in your life are synonymous with health,” Freeman said.

“This is a great time of year to reflect on how you live and make big changes that will set you up for a life of wellness by modifying your life’s trajectory,” he said. “The overall signal in the noise is if you live well, your health span and then your lifespan will be longer.”

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Fitness

Consider This: How to build a fitness routine that lasts past February

Published

on

Consider This: How to build a fitness routine that lasts past February

Every year, countless individuals — including many from within the U of A community — make new year’s resolutions focused on health and fitness. However, the spark of motivation that accompanies the start of a new year often causes people to push too hard, too fast, setting overly ambitious goals that are abandoned by the time February arrives.

Michael Kennedy, a Clinical Exercise Physiologist and Associate Professor in the Faculty of Kinesiology, Sport, and Recreation, shares his expertise and tips for success if you’re looking to build a sustainable exercise routine that lasts all through the year.

Start by establishing your baseline 

Before you make an exercise plan, Kennedy explains, it’s important to assess where you’re starting from. A reasonable fitness goal for someone who is completely sedentary will be very different than for someone who already regularly incorporates physical activity into their daily routine. “Our bodies regulate how much capacity or function we have based on how much stress you impose,” explains Kennedy, which means different people will be able to handle a very different amount of intensity or overload dependent on what their activity has been like in the past.

One of the most accurate ways to figure out your baseline is through fitness testing, a service that the U of A offers through its Fitness Testing Services program, where Kennedy is director. It’s not just for elite athletes — regular individuals can sign up to have several health measures assessed, including cardiorespiratory or aerobic fitness, muscular strength, muscular endurance, flexibility, neuromuscular health and body composition.

“Testing gives you real evidence of your baseline fitness, and then through that feedback we can give you very clear recommendations on the intensity, duration, frequency and types of exercise that are appropriate for your training program.”

Advertisement

Follow the 15 per cent rule 

Kennedy covers several training principles in his Introduction to the Biological Aspects of Fitness to Health class, including the overload principle. Essentially, once you’ve figured out what your baseline is, you should avoid setting goals that have you exceeding it by more than 15 per cent. If you’re already running for 30 minutes a few times a week, for example, increase a few of your runs to 35 minutes per week.

For an individual who is completely sedentary, for example, “increasing to 10 or 15 minutes of physical activity a few times a week is a good start.” A training plan involving high-intensity, 90-minute fitness classes is a recipe for disaster, and likely injury.

And, Kennedy notes, you should keep the 15 per cent rule in mind when thinking of intensity as well. For example, if you regularly go for 30-minute walks, aiming to slowly increase the duration of your walks at the same pace is a reasonable and sustainable goal. Interested in a more high-intensity form of exercise for the new year, such as cross-country skiing or running? Don’t make the mistake of planning for the same duration as your lower-intensity workouts — instead, lower your amount of minutes as your body adjusts. 

“As I say to my students, intensity and duration are inversely related — as one goes up the other should go down.”

If you keep this in mind, your body will have the chance to adapt and keep pace with your resolution-fuelled enthusiasm.

Advertisement

Individualize your plan based on both capacity and interest

A common tip for those with fitness goals is to find a buddy to help motivate you to show up for your training sessions or exercise classes. While this may help with accountability, Kennedy warns that it can be a mistake in terms of sustainably reaching your health goals. “People are very social animals, so they want support,” he says, which often leads to people agreeing to accompany a friend to a workout class that’s too intense for them. “The training principle associated with that is individualization — what’s good for you is not necessarily good for me.”   

Kennedy also recommends finding activities you actually enjoy, rather than what you think might be the most effective, when designing your fitness plan. “Don’t do things that are good for you but that you absolutely hate — that’s not going to lead to long-term changes in your lifestyle and health-related fitness.”

Those who far prefer venturing outdoors over sweating in a gym can do so year-round, even in our northern climate; simply keep in mind that “cold is a major physical stressor,” says Kennedy.

“Spend the money and the time to dress appropriately, cover your mouth and cover your skin, because those two things can really change your nervous system and how it’s responding to your lung function and body temperature.”

Assess your schedule — and be realistic

While it may seem obvious, keep in mind that it’s also crucial to consider what your current weeks look like when planning a fitness program. “Any program is not worth the screen or paper it’s written on if it can’t fit into your actual life schedule,” says Kennedy. 

Advertisement

He recommends taking a look at an average week in your life and breaking it into two-hour blocks, spotting where there are windows of leisure time. Those are the opportunities to fit in physical activity — creating an idealistic plan and then trying to shoehorn it into your schedule where it simply doesn’t fit won’t lead to long-term success.

Know how to identify symptoms that you’re pushing too hard 

It’s normal to feel sore after a workout, especially if you’re pushing yourself, but how do you know when you may be taking things too far? According to Kennedy, a good rule of thumb is that if you’ve taken over-the-counter medications such as Advil or Tylenol to reduce subjective muscle soreness that is still lasting over 72 hours, “you’ve probably gone too hard.”

And don’t be tempted to ‘tough it out’ — “one of the things that can happen with severe muscle soreness is a leakage of proteins into the blood, and if too much leaks out this can be really hard on your kidneys.” 

Beyond muscle soreness, other physical signs of what Kennedy refers to as “overreaching” include a racing heart when you are trying to fall asleep, dry mouth, restless sleep, cravings, an increase in daytime drowsiness and mood disturbances (feeling grumpy or feeling flat). 

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Advertisement

Trending