Misconceptions
About Exercise Can Sabotage Your Efforts to Get in Shape
Here are the facts behind 10 common myths.
In a recent Op-Ed piece in The New York Times, Martina Navratilova decried one
of sport's most persistent myths - that women lack stamina and endurance. That's
why their tennis matches are limited to three sets, while men's matches can go
five sets. Actually, the physiological differences that make men more muscular
than women confer no edge in endurance. Women can exercise at least as hard and
long as men can. And they recover from a grueling workout significantly faster
than men do.
While scientists and female athletes are finally laying that myth to rest, other
antiquated notions about exercise have stubbornly persisted - and new misconceptions
keep popping up. Such incorrect notions can discourage you from exercising or
lead you to waste time, effort, or money on workouts that don't really work.
They can even harm your health. Here are the facts about 10 unfounded fears,
negative notions, and false hopes about working out.
Myth #1: While light exercise does yield some benefits, it's
not nearly as beneficial as strenuous exercise.
Fact: Strenuous workouts do improve aerobic capacity far more
than light or moderate workouts do. While that may improve athletic performance,
it does not necessarily translate into a great health advantage.
The death rates from coronary heart disease, cancer, and all causes combined
are much lower in moderate exercisers than in non exercisers; but they're only
a little lower in heavy exercisers than in moderate exercisers. The same holds
true for the risk of developing type II diabetes, by far the most common kind.
In addition, non strenuous exercise seems to reduce stress, anxiety, and blood
pressure as effectively as strenuous exercise does. And moderate exercise like
walking can do just as much to control weight as vigorous exercise like jogging,
since the number of calories burned depends on how much ground you cover, not
how fast you cover it. In fact, moderate exercise is potentially more effective
than vigorous for most people, since they can walk much further than they can
run.
Myth #2: You can lose fat from specific parts of your body by
exercising those spots.
Fact: There's no such thing as "spot reduction." When
you exercise, you use energy produced by burning fat in all parts of your body
- not just around the muscles that are doing most of the work. In fact, your
genes may dictate that fat disappears from, say, your face or arms before your
belly, even if you do endless abdominal exercises. However, working a specific
region like the belly can have one site-specific benefit: Strengthening the muscles
can make you look thinner by helping you hold in your gut.
Myth #3: The more you sweat during exercise,
the more fat you lose.
Fact: The harder you work out, the more calories
you'll burn within a given period and thus the more fat you
stand to lose. But how much you sweat does not necessarily
reflect how hard you're working. Some people tend to sweat
profusely due to heavy body weight, poor conditioning, or heredity.
And everyone sweats more in hot, dry weather or dense clothing
than in cool, humid weather or porous clothing. (You may feel
as if you're sweating more in humid weather; but that's because
moist air slows the evaporation of sweat.)
Exercising in extremely hot weather or in a plastic "weight loss" suit
will indeed make you sweat heavily and lose weight immediately. But that lost
weight is almost entirely water; the pounds will return when you replenish your
fluids by drinking after the workout. Further, you could develop heat exhaustion
if you push yourself too hard in extreme heat or in plastic clothes. which prevent
sweat from evaporating and, in turn, cooling you off.
Myth #4: Sports drinks help you exercise more safely and effectively.
Fact: Sports drinks contain two main ingredients that are theoretically
beneficial for exercisers: sodium, which helps the body retain water, and sugar,
which the body burns for energy. But very few people exercise hard enough to
sweat away much sodium or to use up their carbohydrate reserves, which the body
converts to sugar. You'd have to jog for at least two hours, for example, before
your carbohydrate stores would start to run low. So unless you're doing a marathon
or other exhaustive exercise, plain water is all you need.
Myth #5: Aerobic exercise tends to make you hungry, so it actually
undermines your efforts to lose weight.
Fact: Aerobic exercise, such as jogging or brisk walking, may
indeed increase your appetite - but only, it seems, if you need extra calories.
Studies suggest that lean individuals do get hungrier after such exercise; that
helps prevent them from getting too thin. In contrast, working out does not seem
to boost appetite in obese individuals; so exercise should help them slim down.
Myth #6: Strength training won't help you get thinner, since it burns
few calories and adds pounds of muscle.
Fact: Strength training, using either weights, machines, or
elastic bands, can substantially increase the number of calories you burn. A
typical session, in which you rest briefly after each muscle-building maneuver,
uses up calories at least as fast as walking does. Circuit training, in which
you move quickly from one strengthening maneuver to the next, burns calories
faster than walking does. And your body continues to burn calories for hours
after either type of strength training. More important, the muscle you build
consumes calories more rapidly, even when you're not exercising.
In one study, three months of strength training boosted the average calorie-burning
rate by an average of 7 percent, burned off 4 pounds of fat, and added nearly
that much muscle. Since muscle is denser than fat, the volunteers presumably
did become thinner. Equally important, they burned off that fat despite a 15
percent increase in their calorie content. If the researchers hadn't prodded
them to maintain their weight by eating more than they felt like eating, the
volunteers almost surely would have lost weight.
Strength training is particularly helpful as part of a comprehensive weight-loss
program that includes both aerobic exercise - which burns lots of calories during
the workout and some calories after the workout - and a moderately low-calorie
diet. (forget crash diets, which almost always never work and can be dangerous.)
A recent study found that women who ate a moderately restrictive diet and did
either strength training or aerobic exercise lost more weight than those who
only dieted. But those who split their workout time between strength training
and aerobic exercise lost the most weight of all.
Myth #7: Strength training builds muscle and bone but does nothing
for the heart.
Fact: Strength training plus aerobic exercise may be the ideal
exercise regimen not only for the waistline but also for the heart. One analysis
of 11 clinical trials found that strength training can reduce levels of LDL cholesterol,
the artery-clogging kind (though it has little effect on HDL cholesterol, the
artery-clearing kind). Aerobic exercise has a complimentary benefit: It improves
HDL but does little for LDL. Further, some studies suggest that strength training,
like aerobic exercise, may help reduce blood pressure. (But check with your doctor
for guidance before starting a muscle-building program if you have hypertension,
since straining can temporarily increase blood pressure.) One final benefit:
By fortifying the muscles, strength training reduces the likelihood that sudden
or unaccustomed exertion, such as moving furniture or shoveling snow, will trigger
a heart attack.
Myth #8: When you stop exercising, your muscles
turn to fat.
Fact: Lack of exercise does make the muscles
shrink, reducing the body's calorie-burning rate. The lack
of activity itself further reduces the number of calories you
burn. So people who stop working out are indeed in danger of
getting flabby.
But that doesn't mean that muscle actually turns to fat - they're totally different
types of tissue. Nor does it mean you're doomed to gain fat around the muscles
after you stop exercising; you just need to cut back on the calories you consume.
(Of course, the best way to stay slim is to eat a lean diet and continue to exercise
regularly.)
Myth #9: Building muscles reduces flexibility.
Fact: If you strength train without moving your joints through
their full range of motion, you can indeed lose flexibility. But strength training
can actually improve flexibility if you do move your joints fully. Stretch after
a muscle-building workout to help keep yourself limber.
Myth #10: Strength training tends to give women a bulky, masculine
physique.
Fact: It's very difficult for most women to
build large muscles. That's because women have relatively low
levels of the hormone testosterone, which influences muscle
growth. Both men and women can build firmer rather than bulkier
muscles by working against lighter resistance more than 25
times rather than heavier resistance fewer times.
Body Trends