Monday, May 27, 2013

Jogging Bad For Weight Loss and Fitness? Yes!


Fun or Fitness

Why Jogging Is Bad For Weight Loss And Fitness

Drive down any scenic road on a weekend morning, and you're likely to see more joggers than scenery. You might feel jealous at how fit and energetic they look, and possibly even a twinge of shame as you look down at the box of donuts in the seat next to you which was your purpose for being out this gorgeous morning.

But are your feelings of jealousy and shame justified? Should it be you out there in high end cool running gear jogging along to shed some pounds and get more fit?

After a faithful analysis, we think you'll agree the spoton riposte is No, that should not be you. Why?

Because Jogging is Bad for weight loss and fitness.

While you definitely should be finding for ways to lose weight and come to be more fit, millions of people are doing more harm than good choosing jogging as their form of exercise. Can millions of people be wrong? Well, grab a donut, read on and determine for yourself.

First A Few Definitions

Ok, let's be clear who and what we are talking about with some definitions:

Jogger - person who runs 1 hour per workout session at a pace of 5 miles per hour (12 minutes per mile). Since many joggers keep a faster pace than that. We will also address "Runners" who keep an 8 mile per hour pace (under 8 minutes per mile). These definitions are in case,granted by the Mayo Clinic Weight Loss Website.

Weight Loss - The losing of weight per your scale or your clothes feeling more loose. Sorry, buying new, larger clothes does not qualify under this definition (be great if it would, eh?).

Fitness - There are many ways to define fitness. We have chosen one that hopefully matters to the most people: A person's allembracing corporal health measured by their capability to successfully achieve a wide variety of functional tasks.

Why Jogging Is Bad For Weight Loss And Fitness - The Evidence
Caloric Deficit

You will likely outeat the fat you burn while jogging or running

According to the Mayo Clinic, a 160 pound person who jogs for an hour will burn 584 calories. A 160 pound runner ramps up the fat burned in an hour to 986. If you weigh more you burn more calories, if you weigh less you burn less. Many people don't jog for an hour per workout, but we want joggers to have a opening at success here so we'll pretend they all do.

In order for our jogger to lose weight as a direct supervene of this workout they will need to ensure they do not eat more fat than the 584-986 they just burned. This is what's called the "caloric deficit" and it's probably the most widely thorough and proven recipe to weight loss.

How realistic is that? Not very. An hour of any exercise tends to originate a pretty serious appetite at some point later that day (which would be the worst time to eat it by the way), let alone the feeling of "entitlement" that comes from a workout well done. So most joggers (from here transmit when I say joggers I am together with "runners" unless noted) are going to head out for a nice meal to celebrate their efforts. A meal that will have much higher fat than what they would eat if they didn't jog.

But does it absolutely take a huge meal to make jogging or running a net loser for weight loss? The Power Bar you eat right before the run has 230 calories, that bagel with the cream cheese "schmear" you eat with your running group after the run has 400 or more calories, as does One decent sized slice of pepperoni pizza you've absolutely earned. If you determine to splurge on sweetmeat because you jogged today, any decent one will absolutely add 500 or more calories. We won't even mention the integrate extra beers or glasses of wine...oops, guess we just did!

So it's a good bet that joggers and even runners will add adequate fat to their diets on exercise days to outeat what they just burned, which at best will be a breakeven, and very often will originate a net caloric (as in Weight) Gain.

But we are not stopping there. What about on those days you don't jog? How many people are absolutely that disciplined to cut back on their eating since they won't be burning those further calories? More often, you hear "I'll run this off tomorrow" as they head back for seconds on the pasta. So, now the growth in fat caused by jogging on workout days leads to more fat on non workout days, further addition weight gain.

We voice this is how Most people administrate their eating, which means most joggers are gaining weight as a supervene of their jogging efforts.

To be fair, there are a pick few people who do administrate their fat more effectively than outlined above-- we have a name for those people - "The 2% club": The 2% of people who successfully voice a low calorie diet. While members of the 2% club can originate a caloric deficit by jogging, it still will not be a requisite deficit, and more importantly 2% Clubbers Don'T Need To Jog To Lose Weight because they are successfully dieting!

Muscle Catabolism

You will absolutely lose muscle while jogging, especially since jogging does not involve your upper body in any meaningful way.

A "catabolic state" refers to the state in which your body is burning protein for its nutritional needs. A catabolic state is one you'd like to avoid as it means you are burning muscle to originate power for your exercise efforts. Yet joggers and runners are putting their bodies in this state every time they work out.

When you jog you are using your leg muscles which gives them a suspect to grow stronger. That's good, but to jog for an hour your body needs to find energy, and low intensity activities like jogging for an hour will need to passage power from all inherent sources which include fat and muscle.

Here's a easy question: What does jogging do to benefit your upper body? easy answer: Nothing. So along with the fat you want to burn, your body is burning muscle as part of it's power to let you do your jogging workouts. And, where is it most likely to "catabolize" this muscle? From your upper body where it's not being used and therefore not needed.

And while jogging can give you stronger legs, a weak upper body is harmful to fitness as defined at the start of this essay. This is one example of how jogging harms your fitness. There's more to come.

Most joggers and runners come to be aware of this and start doing upper body resistance training such as weight lifting to preclude muscle catabolism. That's a absolutely good idea, but that's not jogging for fitness is it? No, that's having to do More exercise to offset the negative effects of jogging!

Plus, studies indicate that every pound of muscle on your body takes 3 to 10 times more fat to reserve than fat, so allowing any muscle catabolism means you are absolutely slowing your metabolism throughout the day. Slower metabolism does not sound like a good thing for whether weight loss or fitness does it?

Again, the devil's advocate will want to argue that joggers can minmize muscle catabolism without supplemental exercise by using Target Heart Rate Training. Basically, this involves exercising at a rate below your "target" heart rate to encourage more fat burning. So now we are jogging slower which means we are burning fewer fat which harms our caloric deficit. This makes weight loss even more difficult. Now we're confused. What's the most effective way to jog again? Do we jog faster and burn more fat or jog slower and save more muscle?

Adaptive Response

Your body will adapt to the challenge of jogging fairly quickly, thus production it progressively harder to lose weight or come to be more fit. Once your body adapts to jogging you enter a "death spiral" of needing to run further or faster or both to see any further improvement.

Adaptive response is just a fancy way of saying that your body will do it's best to adjust to whatever level of exercise you are trying to do. It will "adapt". This is why it's a lot easier to perfect the 1 hour jog after you have done it 10 times than it is the first time you try it.

But when it comes to weight loss, adaptive response is exactly what you don't want. It means your body has reached a state where jogging is no longer a challenge, and because you are now capable of handling the task at hand, there is no suspect to drop any further fat or add any more muscle. In addition, your metabolism has a similar adapative response. You will be doing the same exercise, but whatever metabolic benefits you were getting will continue to decrease the great you get at it. You might think of this situation as a "plateau".

As adaptive response makes your runs less and less effective from a fitness, metabolic and weight loss standpoint, joggers are left with 2 choices: run faster or run farther to give your body a new challenge that it needs to enhance upon in order to adapt. Running faster or farther is not necessarily a bad thing, but it dramatically increases your chances of injury and also starts to take an excessive amount of time to achieve an effective workout. Plus it's Hard. A much harder jog (or run) that lasts a lot longer increases your chances of giving up on your jogging program. And if you do give up jogging because it becomes too much work to see any results, you are at risk of requisite weight gain without an even more restrictive diet.

Bottom line, your adaptive response to jogging has a sure aspect in that it's good for your capability to jog (not necessarily for your allembracing fitness--see Practical Applications), but it's Bad for your weight loss efforts, and it creates a never ending "death spiral" of harder, longer jogs or harder, faster runs that most people will have issue staying with due to injury or lack of motivation.

Injuries And Other health Issues

Jogging's repetitive motion over long periods of time makes joint injuries very likely. Other injury and health concerns come from the adaptive response death spiral mentioned above, running in traffic and in inclement weather.

Pavement is hard and unforgiving. Your legs pounding against it for thousands of steps per jogging session can cause serious short term and long term injuries to your joints and muscles.

Sure, there are good running shoes that can help preclude injuries, but sooner or later you're bound to injure a knee or ankle or even worse, a hip while jogging.

There's also the issue of running on the roads with automobile traffic which has been known to cause serious injury or even death. That cannot be considered a plus for joggers.

And, the sheer length of jogging, a repetitive motion for 1 full hour, increases the opening of a variety of injuries like shin splints or a variety of foot problems versus shorter forms of exercise due to muscle fatigue.

There's more. Consideration must be given to the health and safety risk of running in inclement weather. Jogging in greatest heat or cold, rain, snow or worst of all icy conditions greatly increases the risk of injury or an illness that makes you miss workouts for a short period of time or possibly something worse.

Of policy the treadmill offers a viable clarification to many of these issues, but not all of them. And many joggers insist on jogging outdoors throughout the year. When they do, the risk of injuries and other health related issues is very real and should be considered in an evaluation of the benefits of jogging.

Practical Applications

Jogging has few practical applications. Jogging is not a good form of training for most other activities -- except for more jogging. Plus, the loss of upper body muscle and lower body joint problems that often supervene from jogging can absolutely decrease your allembracing fitness level.

Remember our definition of fitness: A person's allembracing corporal health measured by their capability to successfully achieve a wide variety of functional tasks.

We would have to concede jogging could enhance your abilities at the following activities:

1) More Jogging
2) Basketball - well not absolutely the sprinting up and down the court to be competitive, but you can jog down to set up a half court play with the best of them.
3) Football - Jogging from the huddle to the line of scrimmage.
4) Baseball - Jogging to the dugout with a beer in your hand at your weekly softball league.

Umm, that's all we can think of. The rest of the activities in the above sports and many others like skiing, tennis and golf wish impel (both muscle and joint), the capability to use your body at full speed, as well as hand eye coordination, none of which are helped by jogging.

The fact that jogging has no practical applications as cross training for any other sport makes it a lot of time spent for very exiguous benefit, except of policy for #1 above--more jogging. This is especially true when you correlate jogging to other exercise alternatives like impel training, and interval training. You can spend a lot less time exercising and come to be more effective at performing all sorts of other sports and activities. This in turn offers you more opportunities to have fun and enhance your fitness. Does developing your jogging skills help you with any other activities or tasks you like to do?

The Verdict?

Based upon the fantastic evidence outlined above, the verdict is Jogging is a Bad exercise for weight loss and fitness. Running for an hour at a faster pace does offer sure advantages over jogging but still ends up a net negative for weight loss and fitness when all the factors are considered.

Sunday Driving

So, the next time you head out for weekend donuts you can smile at thin or fit finding joggers, because now you know they didn't get that way by only jogging. And when you get home, grab a maple custard (my favorite!) and spend 30 minutes learning weight loss and fitness plans that work on improving your body's metabolism to solve the caloric deficit question because there are much great ways than exercising endlessly and cutting calories. Also, a good fitness plan should put in order you for a wide variety of tasks and activities.

If you study hard and plan correctly, your exercise schedule should only take half the time the joggers spend but will take you much further down the road to weight loss and fitness.

We hope you do your homework and find the plan that's right for you because being happy with your weight and fitness is a great feeling that everyone should enjoy.

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