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New Year's resolutions for slobs

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If you’ve been slobbing on the sofa for longer than you care to remember, and don’t have a clue how to adopt a fitter, healthier lifestyle, then read on to find 10 new year’s resolutions for couch potatoes to get 2015 off to a great start!

Change your view

It’s likely that if you’ve become very inactive, you dislike exercise. But that’s probably because you’ve pigeonholed it believing it only entails certain activities, in certain places (like gyms!). But a brisk walk in the park, a game of tennis or a gentle yoga class qualify every bit as much as a step aerobics class or a 8km run. Open your mind to new ways of getting active.

Add more energy to daily activities

You may think of activities like vacuuming, washing clothes, window cleaning and gardening as chores, rather than opportunities for exercise but do them with gusto and you can really work up a sweat! And, of course, there’s the pay-off of having got the job done. Putting lively music on while you do household chores is a good way of making you move around more.

Wear comfortable shoes

It might sound like something that your grandmother would say, but if you spend most of your time in high heels, heavy boots or stiff leather loafers, standing still on the escalators is always going to win out over bounding up a cab is always going to seem like a better idea than walking. If you can’t ditch the heels, at least travel to and from your destination in more action-friendly footwear.

Get a pedometer

This simple device that you clip to your belt or waistband and counts the number of steps you take. You may not be achieving the 10,000 steps a day goal, but it will at least give you an idea of how many steps you are taking and where you need to build from.

Abide by the 10-minute rule

We are all guilty of jumping in the car to drive short distances and that’s a calorie-burning, leg-strengthening, mind-clearing exercise opportunity lost! Make a pledge to walk (or cycle) any journey that will take you 10 minutes or less without the car. And do your absolute best to stick to it.

Stretch yourself

Okay, so stretching isn’t going to make you into a lean, mean kilojoule-burning machine but it will get you more in touch with your body; helping you mobilise your joints; get to know where different muscles are; and find out the areas in which you are tight and tense. And stretching feels great, too. Make a gentle stretch first thing in the morning or when you get home from work part of your regular routine.

Raise your awareness

Give yourself a pat on the back as you begin to add more activity into your daily life but don’t make the mistake of thinking that a half-hour burst of activity means you can ‘let it all hang out’ for the rest of the day! Being aware of things like posture and the way you move your body is a 24-hour-a-day task. For example, you can undo all the good of an hour-long Pilates class by sitting at your desk with hunched shoulders and your stomach hanging out for the rest of the day. Equally, it’s no good practising perfect squatting technique when you are exercising if you bend from the waist or don’t think about your knee position when you bend down to pick up your child, or a heavy box, off the floor.

Opt for bite-size workouts

If the idea of going to the gym or taking a fitness class is intimidating, do mini workouts at home. For example, while the kettle is boiling, do as many push-ups against the kitchen counter as you can. Before you sit down on a chair, do a few sets of squats, lowering your bottom until it’s just above the seat and then straightening up again. Before you get into bed, do as many abdominal curls as you can. It may not seem like much at the time, but all these efforts add up.

Get some support

Changing your lifestyle is never easy it takes time for new patterns of behaviour to become habit so get as much support as you can. It may be from an outside source, such as a personal trainer, your doctor or an exercise instructor  or it could entail teaming up with your partner or a friend, so you can provide each other encouragement, feedback and motivation.

Believe it doesn’t have to hurt

A common misconception among sedentary people is that exercise has to hurt to be doing any good the old ‘no pain, no gain’ adage. Well, it’s not true particularly at the early stages of getting active. Gentler paced workouts allow you to continue for longer than tougher ones, they put you at less risk of injury and they also increase fat utilisation, lower blood pressure and ease stress.

A final word

Remember to be patient changes in your fitness, weight and body shape aren’t going to come overnight. Too-high expectations only lead to disappointment, so sit back and enjoy the journey to better health and fitness.

(Picture: Woman with dumbbells from Shutterstock)

(Realbuzz)

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