You can’t really “burn” enough calories to lose weight without changing your diet. You can hit the gym, walk, row, or swim all you want, but exercise alone won’t give you a svelte figure. Given that 1 pound of human fat is worth about 3,500 calories, you would have to add 3,500 calories of extra activity to lose 1 pound. You could walk 35 miles thereby burning 3,500 calories or do one of these 500 calorie activities for seven days:
If you do one of these every single day for a solid week, you might lose a pound for that week, if you eat as you normally would. Whew! In a large international study conducted by the Loyola University School of Medicine, the authors found that while physical activity burns calories, it also increases appetite, and people may compensate by eating more or by being less active the rest of the day. Physical activity has many proven health benefits, allowing people who are physically active to live longer and healthier lives, but it’s not necessarily a good weight-loss method by itself. You cannot outrun a bad diet. [1] No matter what messages the government or PepsiCo may send out, physical activity and diet should not be given equal, um, weight in any plan to control obesity. The message from food companies has for decades been that it’s our laziness that makes us fat. Nope, it ain’t all about inactivity; it’s much more dependent on what we shove into our pieholes. A better approach is gradual, slight changes to both diet and exercise.
It can be a lot easier and more healthful to reduce your calorie intake by 300 per day AND add a 500 calorie workout three times a week: 300 x 7 days a week = 2100 diet calorie reduction 500 x 3 times a week = 1500 exercise calories That's 3600 calories per week or a little over 1 pound a week = 52 lbs a year. Substitute a piece of fruit for that breakfast muffin or simply reduce the sizes of all your portions. In other words, eat better for good. You’ll lose weight and be in better health in general. [2] [1] Lara R. Dugas et al., "Accelerometer-measured Physical Activity Is Not Associated with Two-year Weight Change in African-origin Adults from Five Diverse Populations," PeerJ, January 19, 2017, accessed February 05, 2017, doi:10.7717/peerj.2902. [2] Erin Brodwin, "We Should Never Have Told People They Could 'Burn Off' Calories," ScienceAlert, June 16, 2017, accessed June 17, 2017, https://tinyurl.com/SciAlert-ExercisNoBurnCals. ![]() Want more? Buy the book: Scam-Proof: Good Information & Critical Thinking for an Evidence-Based Life. Amazon - $1.99 Kindle, $6.25 paperback
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