Does Your Workout Feel Like Work?

Exercise and fitness image.

Are you one of the ones who think you need to sweat buckets and engage in some heavy breathing for the activity you are engaged in to be called exercise? Well think again. Lots of activities that don’t seem like exercise actually are, especially when you pick up the pace a bit!

Take for example gardening. Exercise you say? Uh huh, exercise. Outside work such as mowing the lawn, turning the soil in your garden, raking leaves, digging to plant new flowers – all of these require that you use your whole body while you’re working. Not to mention all the stretching, lifting, and a moderate cardiovascular exercise you get as well!

How about housework? Sure, that’s another form of aerobic exercise, especially when you move heavy objects, dance around the house with your duster or run the vacuum.

Known as “lifestyle physical activity,” gardening and housekeeping are actually forms of weight-bearing exercise that can help lower high blood pressure and encourage and maintain proper bone health.

Other creative ways to add weight-bearing exercise to your daily routine include:
  • Taking your dog for a 30-minute walk, or two 15-minute walks, each day
  • Taking the steps or walking up the escalators at your office, while shopping, or wherever possible.
  • Dancing – make a date with your spouse or significant other and get out on the dance floor and dance, dance, dance!
  • Walk all or part of the way to the gym, the office or anywhere else you have to go.

Regular physical activity improves health, prevents or reduces the risk for developing many types of disease (heart disease, certain types of cancer, diabetes), improves your mood and maintains your weight. And a beautiful garden and a clean house are fantastic side effects too!

Dr. Tim Asks some important questions of interest to Ann Arbor residents - Chiropractor Ann Arbor Dr. Tim Asks...

How could chiropractic help a stomach problem?
Chiropractic works by locating and reducing areas of the spine compromising nerve communications between your brain and your body. If nerves to or from your stomach are irritated, your stomach won't work right. Chiropractors find the source of the interference, reduce it and allow your body to work as designed.
What's your plan to deal with drug-resistant 'super germs'?
Chiropractors have always been concerned with the indiscriminate use of antibiotics, accelerating the mutation of microbes that make "wonder" drugs increasingly ineffective. My strategy? Do everything possible to bolster my immune system through proper diet, rest, exercise, clean air, pure water and an optimally functioning nervous system with regular chiropractic care.