Walking may never become as trendy as CrossFit, as sexy as mud runs or as ego-boosting as Ironman races but for fitness experts who stress daily movement over workouts and an active lifestyle over weekends of warrior games, walking is a super star.
For
author and scientist Katy Bowman, walking is a biological imperative like
eating. In her book, “Move Your DNA: Restore Your Health Through Natural
Movement," she suggests there are movement nutrients, just like dietary
nutrients, that the body needs.
“Walking
is a superfood. It’s the defining movement of a human,” said Bowman, a
biomechanist based in Ventura, California. “It’s a lot easier to get movement
than it is to get exercise.”
Researchers
say emerging evidence suggests that combined physical activity and inactivity
may be more important for chronic disease risk than physical activity alone.
“Actively
sedentary is a new category of people who are fit for one hour but sitting
around the rest of the day," Bowman said. “You can’t offset 10 hours of
stillness with one hour of exercise.”
Last
year researchers at the University of Texas School of Public Health asked 218
marathoners and half marathoners to report their training and sitting times.
Median training time was 6.5 hours per week. Median total sitting time was
eight to 10.75 hours per day, suggesting that recreational distance runners are
simultaneously highly sedentary and highly active.
Leslie
Sansone, creator of the “Walk at Home: Mix & Match Walk Blasters” DVD, said
too many people believe that spending gruelling hours at the gym is the only
way to fitness.
“There’s
this “Biggest Loser” idea out there that if you’re not throwing up and crying
you’re not getting fit,” she said, referring to the popular television
weight-loss show.
She
added that a small study of non-obese men published in the journal Medicine
& Science in Sports and Exercise by scientists at Indiana University
suggests that three five-minute walks done throughout three hours of prolonged
sitting reverses the harmful effects of prolonged sitting on arteries in the
legs.
Three
miles (5 kilometres) per hour is a good beginning, gradually working to 4 miles
per hour, she said about walking.
Dr
Carol Ewing Garber, president of the American College of Sports Medicine
(ACSM), notes that fitness-walking guidelines of 10,000 steps per day may be
too much for many.
“About
7,500 steps may be more accurate,” she said, adding that current ACSM
recommendations call for at least 150 minutes of activity each week.
Garber,
a professor of movement sciences at Columbia University in New York, said
research suggests that even one bout of exercise causes beneficial
physiological effects.
But
she concedes that walking does not do everything. It is less beneficial for
bones than running, and for strength, it is better to lift weights.
“Still,”
she said, “If you’re going to pick one thing, research says it should be
walking.”
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