Seeds for Change Wellness
Five Ways to Lose More Weight with Walking Workouts
Five Ways to Lose More Weight with Walking Workouts
Author: Debbie Rocker Source Gaiam Life
1. “Cross train” by varying your walking workout.
I’ve been seeing it for over a decade — people tell me they’ll walk the same six-mile route
every day. Usually you can cut your workout time in half and get the same results, simply by
changing up the way you walk!
If you always do the same things, your body knows exactly what to expect and it goes into
conserve mode. It’s part of maintaining stasis. And your mind goes to that same place — the
workout gets boring, and you don’t keep walking at a vigorous pace. It loses what I call the
“training effect.”
If you can swim and cycle and walk, that’s fantastic. But walking is something you can take with
you anywhere and do throughout your lifetime. You can walk anywhere — outside, in front of
your TV, in a gym. Your heart rate conditioning is varied based on different terrain. And when
you walk indoors, you’re using completely different muscles in different ways, with different
levels of resistance.
Use a treadmill once a week. Another day, take your dog, meet a friend and do a casual stroll.
It’s not as dramatic a cross-training effect as going from cycling to swimming, but it’s a big
difference compared to walking the same path for three years.
2. Add some intensity bursts.
One school of thought is that the longer your work out, the more likely your body is to go into
fat burning mode. But another theory goes that after a long workout, 60 to 90 minutes, the
body goes into conserve mode.
People will tell me, “When I started spinning I lost 15 pounds; now I’m not losing anymore.” And
I say, “You’re just spinning more; you have to spin more efficiently.” The research on this
seems to indicate that if you mix short intense bursts, you go into fat-burning mode after your
workout rather than into conserve mode. It’s six of one, half-dozen of the other.
Try doing run-walks. Add an interval workout, with intense bursts mixed in every few minutes,
twice a week. If you can get in two intense 15 to 20 minute interval workouts per week, plus one
moderate but longer workout, that’s a great start. Then work up to adding an additional really
long workout that’s very intense. That’s an incredible workout week.
Once or twice a week I walk with a friend for over an hour wearing a Walkvest, and I’m telling
you we hoof it — it’s intense. Other than that, most of my workouts are 15 to 20 minutes long.
My friend’s dog is a very fast, vital dog. I’ll take the dog out and walk fast for a block, jog for a
block, and do that for 15 to 20 minutes. Or I’ll walk, then do lunges for half a block, then tricep
extensions, then walk for a block.
3. Work out with a coach, via DVD/CD or in person, three days a week.
I know how hard it is to change. We all need help!
Effective training tools are important, but coaching is imperative to reaching new levels of
fitness. A good coach can take you places you can’t go alone. My training as a professional
coach and motivator helps me know what it will take to bring out the best in you; and as a
former pro athlete, I know what will work.
Your coach will be with you every step of the way. You’re starting from scratch, working from
the ground up, together.
Even when you’re walking intensely, you can listen to a CD with coaching and music. It
motivates you and reminds you of how powerful you are, how valuable your workouts are, how
positive it is on every level. This can help in a very physical way too, moving your heart rate
around and constantly changing the levels of intensity in the body.
4. Work out to live better, not just lose weight.
Your body starts losing bone mass at 30! I want to build and support my body, not wear it
down. I want to be better at the movements I do all day long. I want my balance to be sharp and
my joints strong, with no more stress on my body than necessary.
Anyone over 25 may be too old to run. I had a training regimen that kept me pounding the
pavement for hours on end, and ultimately it had negative effects on my body. I switched my
exercise routine to weight-bearing walking, and I started to love my workouts again. I looked
forward to walking. Clearly you’re more likely to work out if you actually look forward to it.
I’m going to be 49 this year and I plan to look like this until I die!
5. Change your mind.
I am a huge proponent of, “Don’t even bother changing your body if you don’t change your
mind.” It will be temporary, and it will add to past failures.
We condition ourselves to fail. People are convinced they can’t do it based on their past
experience trying to diet and lose weight.
This is another great reason to add intensity bursts to kick-start fat burn. The faster you can
get results, the more you build your belief that you can do it. It’s the fastest way to change your
body, and your mind changes too.
I also believe the universe brings us what we’re thinking about whether we want it or not. Our
thoughts, feelings, beliefs, fears and obsessions drive our actions and behaviors. So focus on
what you want, not what you don’t want.
If you want to lose weight, think about how much you want to lose and what you want to look
like and feel like, not how much you hate being heavy. If you think about what is, you just get
more of what is. Think how much you want to be healthy and fit.