Fitness
Seven ways to exercise – without realising it
This task involves moving around the home, carrying your weapon (vacuum cleaner), lifting and moving objects to expose the enemy (dust). Here, continuous movement is your friend. Set a timer on your phone and use the AMRAP protocol (As Many Reps As Possible). This means you lift as many rugs and shift as many chairs and tables as you can within, say, a two-minute period. Between these sets take a 30-second rest and go again. You will want to feel your heart rate rise and a little “glow” taking place during this one.
Furlough the wearables from your wardrobe
Every wardrobe contains items that once felt useful but are now just reminders of that awful wedding we all attended in the early 1990s. Remove the horrible coats and unspeakable shirts, bag them and take them to the charity shop. Each bag represents five lifts and folds.
A coat weighs 2kg – a very respectable weight. The awkwardness of the lift off the hangar will engage your core as well as your arms. Consciously keeping your core tight will make this even more effective. We suggest filling each bag without pause. Carrying the bag downstairs to the car and then from the car to the shop is a great weighted carry. The tricky shape of the bag only brings in more of the stabilising muscles.
Tip for increasing the burn: Throw the bags into the car from as far away as you can manage. A great abs workout.
Dance like you got straight A*s
Close the curtains, make sure no one will call and put on whatever made you fling yourself about back then. Spotify helpfully has playlists defined by year of release (the unexpected forgotten tracks are the most powerful). No ballads, this will need the likes of Chic and Duran Duran to fire up long-forgotten moves. Make sure all limbs are being used and go big (the curtains are drawn, right?). Duration is what we’ll use here. The 7-inch version of Good Times lasts 3 minutes 42 seconds – keep moving throughout, no swaying, feel the heart and lungs working.
Tip for increasing the burn: The bigger the steps you make when dancing, the more energy you use. Try a minute of very exaggerated leg moves.
Clean the (safely accessible) windows
Transform the bi-fold doors and feel your heart rate rise. The garden deserves to be seen clearly. This is a perfect aerobic workout if you clean those huge plates of glass as though they were about to be inspected by a very impatient and bad-tempered quality control manager. We suggest a cloth in both hands and large, vigorous motions. Hard-to-access low areas will work your glutes and thighs if you bend your legs and squat to reach them. Set one-minute rounds and 20-second rests and polish like your annual bonus depended on it.
Tip for increasing the burn: When squatting for the low areas, stop and hold for as long as possible. Feel the thighs aflame.
Fitness
How to make exercise a consistent routine in 2025
By Gwendolyn Bounds
For The Washington Post
Eight years ago this month, like many Americans, I made a resolution to become fit and strong.
About 7 in 10 U.S. adults set goals at the start of a new year, and personal health or fitness goals are the most common, according to Gallup. But by mid-February, 80 percent of the people who set New Year’s resolutions will have abandoned them, Gallup reported.
I, too, had tried before, my pledge generally lasting a few months before old habits (sitting! screens!) returned.
But that year was different. I had a specific goal in mind — to compete in one obstacle course race. Tying my New Year’s resolution to something concrete was a critical first step to exercise being almost a nonnegotiable in my day. Last year, I completed my 56th race.
Once a resolution is made, specific tactics make it more likely to stick. Here is what habit and fitness experts, and my own experience, suggest:
Have a longer-term obtainable goal
Going out too hard is a common misstep, said Peter Duggan, a strength, conditioning and rehabilitation specialist at Fuel Sport & Spine in New York. “People say ‘I’m going to go crazy’ and then come in to see us injured by the middle to end of January,” he said.
Having a longer-term goal and plan is better, suggested Duggan, who works with professional athletes and amateur fitness enthusiasts. That can be as simple as a 5K race in April or a 90-day first-quarter (Q1) challenge where you measure your January progress against your February progress and your March progress against February and January.
This way, you have some form of momentum. But if January blows up because you get sick, then you still have February and March, Duggan advised. Start small if you’re a newcomer: Go from walking or jogging in January a couple of times a week to running 25 minutes two or three times a week in February and longer in March. Then set another goal for the next quarter.
“You can’t just run up Mount Everest,” Duggan said. “You have to start at base camp. Use January or Q1 as base camp.”
Time block and preprogram your workout
Waking up and thinking, “I’m going to exercise at some point today,” is a vulnerable strategy. You must then spend extra time figuring out what you’ll do, when you’ll do it and where — time you probably don’t have in an already full day.
Instead, schedule and block out your exercise moments for the week, in advance, to reduce the likelihood of slipping back into old habits — such as coming home, jumping on the couch and scrolling on the phone.
“Physical activity takes time, and you need to be mindful of your other habits that need to change,” said Chad Stecher, a behavioral health economist and an assistant professor at Arizona State University. “Not only are you building a new habit, but how does that habit fit into the rest of the day?”
My solution: Since I live by my digital calendar for work, each week’s exercise gets scheduled in the same color-coded blocks as my meetings. I don’t skip meetings, so I don’t skip my workout. This removes the barrier of “at some point today.”
Leave yourself visual prompts
Cues, particularly visual ones, are some of the strongest motivators to create a new habit, said Stecher, whose research focuses on habit formation.
For instance, placing your running shoes or workout clothes where they are the first items you see when you wake up reduces the likelihood exercise will slip your mind, Stecher said. It also serves as a commitment reminder that “you intended to do this,” he said.
In my living room, I keep a nice box that holds a yoga mat, balance board and foam roller. Seeing that box each time I walk to the kitchen means I’m more likely to use what’s in it when I have five to 10 minutes to spare.
Accessibility also matters, Duggan said.
“It has to be convenient,” he said. “We all have weeks when we are overwhelmed, but you can still carve out 20 minutes in your living room with some dumbbells or a HIIT [high-intensity interval training] class on an app.”
Build accountability slowly
Recent research suggests the amount of movement we get in a day, as measured by a wrist tracker, is a stronger predictor of mortality than age, smoking or even diabetes.
There is no shortage of apps, fitness trackers and health devices to gather data on our movement. The key is not letting the devices get in the way of actually exercising – especially when we are first building a habit.
“I think if you are new to exercise, you don’t need all the fancy gear,” Duggan said. “Just start. Listen to your breath and feel your heart rate. As you get better, and crave more data, then you can buy more tools like a watch and a heart rate monitor.”
A less complex (and free) tracking tool is what I call “completion signaling” — the act of checking a box and recording your progress when exercise is done. For instance, when doing multiple sets of an exercise at home, I move a pile of machine screws or small rocks from one mug to another. And each time I complete a workout, I mark it as “Done” in my digital calendar.
Each action, however small, is a clear visual for me of forward movement and accountability. Put more simply, the reward of marking a workout as completed feels good; not checking that box feels bad. So, I am more likely to get the workout done.
Make exercise part of your identity
Exercise becomes truly nonnegotiable when it’s part of your core identity, Stecher said, noting a growing body of research linking identity to maintaining behavior change. “Then, when your routine is interrupted, and the normal cues aren’t there, you’ll still go to the gym,” Stecher said.
This rings true. Eight years ago, “fit person” or “athlete” were nowhere among the descriptors my friends and family used for me — nor ones I used for myself. Now, those monikers are as core to my sense of self as “writer,” “spouse” or “daughter.” The tactics above made that possible.
Fitness
How to Get Back in Shape After the Holiday Break
Fitness
Is electrical muscle stimulation really a short-cut to getting buff?
In a 1993 film Dragon: The Bruce Lee Story there’s a scene where the main character sits at a typewriter wearing electrodes strapped across his chest and biceps.
The martial arts superstar is zapping his muscles so he bulks up without doing any exercise.
“Three minutes is like doing 200 push-ups,” he claims.
This technology, called electrical muscle stimulation or EMS, was explored by the Russians back in the 1960s to help athletes train, and it’s since been embraced by the likes of soccer star Cristiano Ronaldo and Olympic gold medallist Usain Bolt.
These days, EMS is promoted to people who want to get buff. You can even wear a whole-body EMS suit at the gym.
EMS proponents say that the technology, which sends electric impulses through skin and into muscle below to make them contract, “bypasses” the brain, triggering muscles to work and grow in a “smarter and more efficient way”.
Some ads say you can get your weekly whole-body workout in just 20 minutes — without lifting a single weight.
It sounds too good to be true, so what is the scientific evidence for these claims?
What’s the theory behind EMS?
Our muscles are made up of different “motor units”, each consisting of a nerve and the muscle fibres it activates.
One type of motor unit is smaller, contracts slowly and takes a while to get tired, while the other is larger, contracts rapidly and fatigues quickly.
The larger units use more energy but can generate more force. These are the ones that we use to build strength over time.
When we voluntarily activate our muscles — by lifting weights, for example — our brain activates the smaller slower motor units first before activating the larger faster ones, says Swarup Mukherjee, a sports and exercise physiologist at Nanyang Technological University of Singapore.
“What EMS does is it reverses this natural recruitment order.”
And it is thought that by stimulating the larger motor units first, EMS can speed up the process of building muscle mass — and strength.
From medicine to elite sport
Manufacturers of some EMS gadgets have landed in trouble for overstating their claims on late night infomercials.
While some gadget claims might not stack up, there is a scientific basis for using electricity to stimulate muscles. In fact, the idea has been around for centuries, and has developed into an important way to exercise muscles when someone has an illness or injury.
“For patients that are unable to physically exercise for whatever reason, electrical stimulation can replace exercise,” says Gordon Lynch, who studies the use of EMS with the Centre for Muscle Research at the University of Melbourne.
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“The evidence is really strong that we can get adaptations in muscle and recruit muscles in a way that that can be beneficial.”
But, Professor Lynch says, it is less clear whether EMS works as a general fitness tool.
“There’s no real consensus about how to optimise this form of training for otherwise healthy people.”
Still, there are no shortage of online testimonials from people who swear EMS workouts are the way to go.
But what does the evidence say?
Some research, such as this small 2016 randomised controlled trial of middle-aged men, supports using EMS to build strength and lose fat.
And the technology’s “time-efficiency” and “joint-friendliness” is seen by some researchers as attractive to those “unable or unmotivated” to do intense exercise.
A 2023 review by Dr Mukherjee of 10 other studies also found EMS increased the size of the muscles they stimulated in healthy adults.
And since muscle is one of the most energy-hungry tissues in the body, building them should also help burn fat, Dr Mukherjee says.
But, he cautions, building bigger muscles does not necessarily translate to the sort of strength that will make gym exercises or everyday activities easier.
In fact, none of the studies in his review found EMS improved such “functional” strength.
“There isn’t enough body of data to convince us that it is an equivalent of voluntary resistance training,” Dr Mukherjee says.
Other researchers who reviewed the evidence on whole-body EMS concluded active people won’t get any advantage from the technology, although older sedentary populations may benefit.
One limitation of EMS is that it contracts static muscles, but to do specific activities our brain orchestrates a combination of muscles in a special way, Dr Mukherjee explains.
During bicep curls, for example, our biceps contract, while our triceps must lengthen and relax.
This is why there is a preference among proponents to combine EMS with traditional muscle exercises, Dr Mukherjee says.
Getting the right ‘dose’
Everyone’s muscles respond differently to EMS, Professor Lynch says, adding that this makes giving the right dose of stimulation a challenge.
“If it’s not enough, then you’re not going to get any benefit at all. And if you over stimulate, then you can cause muscle damage.”
Sport scientist Nicola Maffiuletti of the Schulthess Clinic, an orthopaedic hospital in Switzerland, agrees.
Traditional muscle building involves progressively — and carefully — adding heavier weights to a training regimen over time as your muscles adapt and get stronger.
But Dr Maffiuletti says it’s harder to know how much current to use to get the right stimulation with EMS.
“When you inject current you don’t know how to properly dose on an individual basis.”
Possible risks of EMS
Dr Maffiuletti is particularly concerned about the dose of current delivered by whole-body EMS suits.
These are a wetsuit-type outfit with electrodes that stimulate a number of muscles across the body at the same time.
He says it’s like “giving a pill” when we don’t know how much drug the pill contains, or what it’ll do to the person taking it.
“It’s not a cautious way to exercise.”
While painful muscles are to be expected after a muscle workout of any kind, Dr Mukherjee warns people should not experience pain at the time of receiving EMS — discomfort yes, but not pain.
In 2016 Dr Maffiuletti co-authored a piece in the British Medical Journal calling for better regulation of whole-body EMS suits after seeing people’s muscles break down in a condition called rhabdomyolysis, which can lead to kidney damage.
While there are fewer reports of rhabdomyolysis from EMS these days, he remains concerned about how well people are screened before using whole-body suits at the gym.
Even experts who support the use of whole-body EMS in general fitness warn of potential harms and the need for better oversight.
The US Food and Drug Administration has warned some consumer products have reportedly shocked, burned, bruised and irritated the skin of users, and interfered with critically important medical devices such as pacemakers.
If you are planning to fork out for EMS at the gym, Professor Lynch advises looking for a personalised approach with supervision by a professional like a physiotherapist who is trained in using the technology.
But he recommends making the most of more traditional forms of exercise and strength training first.
Finally, he adds, if weight loss is the goal you also really need to watch what you put in your mouth.
Delve into claims surrounding EMS in more detail on What’s that Rash? and subscribe to the podcast for more answers to more health questions.
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