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Are you a “sedentary athlete”?

Posted by Nancy Clark RD CSSD on Aug 29, 2009 8:24:22 AM

We are all familiar with unfit couch potatoes … the sedentary folks who sit all day and shudder at the thought of doing purposeful exercise. Yet, few athletes recognize they may also be couch potatoes—apart from the time they spend exercising. Think about it. The average “active” person:

Sits at breakfast

Drives to work

Sits at work

Takes the elevator to the lunch cafeteria

Sits at lunch

Takes the elevator back to work

Sits at work

Drives to the gym

Exercises for 45 to 60 minutes

Drives home

Sits at dinner

Sits in front of the TV or computer

 

Sound familiar? Even if you consider yourself “athletic”, you likely spend the majority of your day sitting! We no longer get built-in exercise by opening the garage door, rolling down the car window, climbing stairs, walking down the hall to ask a question to a colleague (email is easier), etc., etc..  You get the picture.

 

We have engineered activity out of our lifestyle. For many of us, the only movement we get in a day is when we do purposeful exercise. According to Neville Owen, speaker at the American College of Sports Medicine’s Annual Meeting (Seattle, May 2009), the average person sits 9.3 hours a day. This high amount of inactivity is bad for our health, even if we are physically fit.

 

Owen reports the more a person sits, the higher the risk of mortality. Hence, we not only need to find time to exercise, we also need to find time to not sit – such as by standing up when talking on the phone or answering emails (raise your computer by putting it on a cardboard box that you keep under your desk), and biking to work. We can even go back in time and hang laundry out to dry (instead of use the clothes dryer)!  I invite you to be creative, and figure out how to move your body in ways that have purpose and meaning. Your health and waistline will be glad you did.

 

Nancy Clark

1,279 Views Tags: mortality, acsm, sedentary_behavior, sitting


Oct 3, 2009 5:26 AM RHIT CCS-P RHIT CCS-P    says:
Nancy:  I love this blog note.  I have made several of those types of changes that you mention in order to at least try to not be a couch (or desk) potato.  One thing that certainly helped me - a few years ago, I got stuck in an elevator for 20 minutes that seemed like 20 years.  Since then I always take the stairs if the floors are in single digits.  More than nine, not sure about going up, but I will go down the stairs for just about any number of floors.  I have gone over to other offices instead of emails (with puzzled looks from my boss or co-workers, espcially since my office is on a different floor than most of them).   Also, taking mass transit helps - some days, I have to stand on the train, and don't forget the 6 blocks I walk from the train station to the office.  so, there is a mile plus every day, no matter what I do the rest of the day.