No actually, in my very unresearched and unknowledgable opinion the majority of people don’t really set out to walk much more than to and from their cars, the washroom, or the kitchen
I don’t walk to my grocery store, despite it being half a mile from my house, because there are no sidewalks along the 6 lane roads between my house and the store.
The street in front of my neighborhood has been under constant construction for 7 years, and I’m afraid to ask them to add sidewalks because I’m pretty sure this would make the entire area entirely unwalkable even in an emergency due to the construction barriers they’d install for at least the next decade for that project.
I don’t walk more than an hour a day and that’s just to the shops and back.
That’s plenty for upkeep, your body knows that walking is a thing that it’s supposed to do, and continue to do, and not just an interim state between sitting at a desk and sitting in a car which can be safely deprioritised just as it deprioritises balancing on one leg while holding on to a cabinet leaning over a mine-field of legos to get hold of the winter bedsheets stowed away in a far-away corner.
If you want to up the ante a bit add hanging to the walking: No need to get into pull-ups, at least not intensively so, just hanging provides enough data to the feedback loops in your shoulders/upper back to prevent getting confused as to how they’re supposed to control the muscles there.
And if you’re in a bad state (or just enjoy it), say you’re fat and walking is actually a joint issue: Swimming. No need to train lap times, just enjoy yourself, of course, if you enjoy training lap times then do that.
While I’m at it last but not least: With every exercise, don’t choose the hard stuff. If you can’t do 10 pushups then you shouldn’t be doing pushups, you should be training to get to 100 wall-pushups: Less resistance means you can focus on form and actually develop good form, and many repetitions of a low-resistance exercise tire the muscles just as fewer repetitions of a high-resistance one. Muscles will become stronger in the recuperation period after the lactose starts burning, as such don’t set a number goal but train to exhaustion.
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You either live in New York or outside of the US. Which one are you?
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No actually, in my very unresearched and unknowledgable opinion the majority of people don’t really set out to walk much more than to and from their cars, the washroom, or the kitchen
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Beer mostly.
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I don’t walk to my grocery store, despite it being half a mile from my house, because there are no sidewalks along the 6 lane roads between my house and the store.
The street in front of my neighborhood has been under constant construction for 7 years, and I’m afraid to ask them to add sidewalks because I’m pretty sure this would make the entire area entirely unwalkable even in an emergency due to the construction barriers they’d install for at least the next decade for that project.
That’s plenty for upkeep, your body knows that walking is a thing that it’s supposed to do, and continue to do, and not just an interim state between sitting at a desk and sitting in a car which can be safely deprioritised just as it deprioritises balancing on one leg while holding on to a cabinet leaning over a mine-field of legos to get hold of the winter bedsheets stowed away in a far-away corner.
If you want to up the ante a bit add hanging to the walking: No need to get into pull-ups, at least not intensively so, just hanging provides enough data to the feedback loops in your shoulders/upper back to prevent getting confused as to how they’re supposed to control the muscles there.
And if you’re in a bad state (or just enjoy it), say you’re fat and walking is actually a joint issue: Swimming. No need to train lap times, just enjoy yourself, of course, if you enjoy training lap times then do that.
While I’m at it last but not least: With every exercise, don’t choose the hard stuff. If you can’t do 10 pushups then you shouldn’t be doing pushups, you should be training to get to 100 wall-pushups: Less resistance means you can focus on form and actually develop good form, and many repetitions of a low-resistance exercise tire the muscles just as fewer repetitions of a high-resistance one. Muscles will become stronger in the recuperation period after the lactose starts burning, as such don’t set a number goal but train to exhaustion.
Oh, and this guy.
Well, I did about 10 years of retail work that destroyed my back and knees, its not just about poor diet.
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