• 2 months ago
1. Improve Circulation
Walking wards off heart disease, brings up the heart rate, lowers blood pressure and strengthens the heart. Post-menopausal women who walk just one to two miles a day can lower their blood pressure by nearly 11 points in 24 weeks. Women who walk 30 minutes a day can reduce their risk of stroke by 20%, and by 40% when they stepped up the pace, according to researchers at the Harvard School of Public Health in Boston.

2. Shore Up Your Bones
Walking can stop the loss of bone mass for those with osteoporosis, according to Michael A. Schwartz, MD, of Plancher Orthopedics & Sports Medicine in New York. In fact, one study of post-menopausal women found that 30 minutes of walking each day reduced their risk of hip fractures by 40%.

3. Enjoy a Longer Life
Research finds that people who exercise regularly in their fifties and sixties are 35% less likely to die over the next eight years than their non-walking counterparts. That number shoots up to 45% less likely for those who have underlying health conditions.

4. Lighten Your Mood
Walking releases natural pain­killing endorphins to the body – one of the emotional benefits of exercise. A California State University, Long Beach, study showed that the more steps people took during the day, the better their moods were.

5. Lose Weight
A brisk 30-minute walk burns 200 calories. Over time, calories burned can lead to pounds dropped.

6. Strengthen Muscles
Walking tones your leg and abdominal muscles – and even arm muscles if you pump them as you walk. This increases your range of motion, shifting the pressure and weight from your joints to your muscles.

7. Improve Sleep
Studies found that women, ages 50 to 75, who took one-hour morning walks, were more likely to relieve insomnia than women who didn’t walk

8. Support Your Joints
The majority of joint cartilage has no direct blood supply. It gets its nutrition from joint fluid that circulates as we move. Movement and compression from walking “squishes” the cartilage, bringing oxygen and nutrients into the area.

9. Improve Your Breath
When walking, your breathing rate increases, causing oxygen to travel faster through bloodstream, helping to eliminate waste products and improve your energy level and the ability to heal.

10. Slow Down Mental Decline
A study of 6,000 women, ages 65 and older, performed by researchers at the University of California, San Francisco, found that age-related memory decline was lower in those who walked more. The women walking 2.5 miles per day had a 17% decline in memory, as opposed to a 25% decline in women who walked less than a half-mile per week.

11. Lower Alzheimer’s Risk
A study from the University of Virginia Health System in Charlottesville found that men between the ages of 71 and 93 who walked more than a quarter of a mile per day had half the incidence of dementia and Alzheimer’s disease than those who walked less.

12. Do More for Longer
Aerobic walking and resistance exercise programs may r
Transcript
00:00If you knew how important walking is for our body, you're going to start ASAP.
00:26For our heart, our lungs, our digestive system, our immune system, depression, anxiety, losing
00:34weight, the list can just go on and on.
00:39Now don't worry if you can't walk fast or even walk long.
00:44So just understand that if you start walking, you are going to reap those benefits.
00:52And walking is about moving those joints, increasing blood circulation, and allowing
00:57the heart and lungs to work more efficient, to increase more oxygen to all the cells
01:02in your body.
01:03Now the key thing about walking is building up a little speed.
01:10But don't worry, because if you haven't walked, your body is out of shape.
01:15You don't want to be a hero.
01:17You want to go little by little until you get much stronger.
01:21So as you raise the speed of your walking just a little bit, we call that brisk walking.
01:28And brisk walking has amazing health benefits, particularly when you start getting into that
01:32aerobic phase where you start utilizing more oxygen.
01:35Remember, the more oxygen you take in, the more calories you'll burn.
01:40Although, if you cannot walk fast, don't worry.
01:44Just keep walking.
01:46Just keep your body relaxed.
01:48Your vision should be forward.
01:50Your head and neck relaxed.
01:52Your arms should be relaxed and swing while walking.
01:55And ensure that your body is in an upright position with your back straight.
01:59And walking will help manage your blood sugars and stress.
02:02It will help reduce the risk of obesity and weight gain.
02:05It will help your body become more insulin sensitive instead of insulin resistant.
02:10It will help fight diabetes.
02:13It will maintain normal glucose levels in your blood and help prevent the pancreas from
02:17overworking where it needs to secrete too much insulin.
02:21It will allow you to have more energy.
02:24And walking is great for your bones.
02:26It keeps them nice and strong.
02:28It will help mobilize the joints, allow the synovial fluid to function better.
02:33It will prevent pain.
02:34It will secrete endorphins from the brain.
02:37It will allow you to sleep better.
02:39You'll feel much more relaxed.
02:40It will reduce anxiety.
02:42And it will reduce stress.
02:44It will take the pain away.
02:45It will take the pain away.

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