Here’s how seemingly effortless exercise can improve your fitness, where it comes up short and the best way to incorporate it into your routine.
Less active people may benefit more from zone zero
If you spend most of your time sitting, even adding a modest amount of movement to your day can help to improve key measures of health like circulation, blood pressure and blood sugar, said Dr Eli Friedman, who directs the sports cardiology programme at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center.
“The people who go from doing nothing to something get the most bang for the buck,” Friedman said. Over time, he added, moving incrementally more and at gradually higher intensities can improve your balance, muscle strength and endurance, too.
While the term zone zero training doesn’t appear in scientific literature, researchers have studied ultralow intensity exercise in other contexts. Some studies suggest that people who are completely inactive face a significantly higher mortality rate compared with those who move slightly more, said Christopher LaFlam, an exercise physiologist at the Duke Health & Fitness Center.
If zone zero activity is the only movement in your routine, the experts recommended incorporating it as often as possible throughout your day. It can also be a helpful on-ramp to more intense exercise.
Zone zero shouldn’t replace more intense exercise
If you regularly exercise at moderate or vigorous intensities, zone zero training can be a useful complement to your fitness routine – but it’s not a substitute.
Exercise that requires more exertion, whether it’s aerobic or strength-based, will lead to greater health and fitness benefits than zone zero movement, the experts said. “Zone zero is not going to get you ripped. It is not going to help you train harder,” Iafrate said.
But on rest days, it can be a worthwhile form of active rest or recovery, which can help ward off muscle soreness, she said.
Zone zero activities can also be a valuable tool for weekend warriors, or people who go to the gym a few times a week but spend most of their time sedentary, by helping offset the negative effects of prolonged sitting, said Karl Erickson, a performance specialist in the Mayo Clinic’s department of orthopaedics and sports medicine.
“Don’t over-complicate it”
Giving the activities of everyday life a seemingly formal name and parameters may motivate some people – especially those who have felt intimidated by or excluded from more intense fitness spaces, Friedman said. But the key point is to increase your daily movement in whatever way feels manageable and sustainable.
On some days, this might look like parking farther away from the grocery store or walking up a couple flights of stairs. On other days, it could mean gardening or organising your closet.
Don’t stress too much about whether your heart rate stays below 50% of its maximum or if it inches higher, Friedman added. Focus more on moving in a way that feels good to you.
Besides, you might enjoy the activity more if you aren’t monitoring yourself. “I’d rather people just get out there and move,” he said, “and do something they love.”
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.
Written by: Danielle Friedman
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