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question everything

(47,476 posts)
Mon Aug 31, 2020, 01:08 PM Aug 2020

Why We Need to Walk -- Now More Than Ever

You’ve got to move more. It’s all too easy in these days at home to retreat to the couch. The truth is, we all know we need to move more, and we know we will feel the better for it. Movement is good for the brain and body, and we all know regular movement is one of the best ways of keeping fit and healthy. We evolved to walk long-ish distances every day (more than ten miles a day) every day of our lives from early childhood until very late in adulthood, and this walking acts as a self-repair mechanism for brain and body. Walking comes naturally to us, and is good for us in more ways than we know.

However, we have also evolved to conserve energy, to sit around, to eat and to store fat for the lean winters that used to be ahead of us. Now, though, food is abundantly available in the developed world all year around. We don’t need to walk long distances to forage for food. Walking lots allows to explore our world, building, as we walk, the ‘cognitive maps’ our brains make to understand our world, as well as strengthening the connections of the brain areas involved in learning and memory.

Modern work life can be so very bad for us. The modern world doesn’t help us to move at all. You might sit at your desk for seven or eight hours. And you might be sitting during your commute. This could add up to ten hours of indolence, five or six days a week. As few as three or four days without movement reduces muscle mass in the legs and replaces it with deposits of fat. You won’t notice this when you’re 30, but you will when you are 60, needing assistance to stand up out of your chair.

Sedentary living over decades slowly changes aspects of your personality for the worse: you will be less open to new experiences, you will become less extraverted, and you will be less agreeable. These personality factors are central to normal social life and social living. Sedentary living makes you more withdrawn, and inward looking. And, in turn, social isolation predisposes you to diseases of the brain, such as dementia.

Hitting the gym and pounding a treadmill for an hour after work doesn’t cut it either. Our bodies and brains are designed for, and need, lots of regular movement right throughout the course of the day. Walking is an easy solution our brains adore, and are built to profit from. Lots of regular, reliable, rhythmic, up-tempo walking throughout the day stimulates the production of molecules promoting brain health, and even brain resilience to the effects of chronic stress.

More..

https://shaneomara.com/2020/05/12/why-we-need-to-walk-now-more-than-ever/



O'Mara is a Professor of Experimental Brain Research at Trinity College Dublin and a Wellcome Trust Senior Investigator.



8 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Why We Need to Walk -- Now More Than Ever (Original Post) question everything Aug 2020 OP
Walking is my Prozac. luvs2sing Aug 2020 #1
35 miles on the exercise bike each morning Sherman A1 Aug 2020 #2
I have recently taken up walking around my neighborhood, The Velveteen Ocelot Aug 2020 #3
Bravo! question everything Aug 2020 #4
Good for you & great points. Inspiring. I did it a few years ago, appalachiablue Aug 2020 #6
I used to be a mail carrier. My last route was 17 miles per day six days a week. (per pedometers) Midnight Writer Aug 2020 #5
Bravo and you'll make it. Think of us some, ok? appalachiablue Aug 2020 #7
I got a Fitbit early this year. Buckeye_Democrat Sep 2020 #8

luvs2sing

(2,220 posts)
1. Walking is my Prozac.
Mon Aug 31, 2020, 01:14 PM
Aug 2020

I walk between 3-5 miles every day. My world just isn’t right if I’m not on the path within 30 minutes of getting up in the morning.

The Velveteen Ocelot

(115,683 posts)
3. I have recently taken up walking around my neighborhood,
Mon Aug 31, 2020, 01:37 PM
Aug 2020

and it's been an interesting experience. I've lost about 35 lbs. since the beginning of the pandemic (intentionally; I haven't been sick) but reached a plateau, so I figured I needed to add some exercise, having been a devout couch potato for years. Before I lost the weight, exercise was a drag so I didn't do it, but with 35 lbs. gone, walking was a lot easier on my back and knees. So I bought one of those exercise tracking devices, and every day for the past few weeks I've been walking 1 to 1-1/2 miles around my neighborhood (that's about as much as I can manage so far but hope to increase the distance gradually). I have discovered a lot of interesting things that I never noticed before: like there are more hills than I ever noticed when driving - not big ones, but you notice them if you have to walk up them.

I also noticed that my neighbors seem to be mostly liberals, since about every third house or so has a Black Lives Matter sign or an Ilhan Omar sign or a Biden sign on the lawn. They are also good about growing bee-friendly gardens - lots of lawns, like mine, have been replaced with native plants for the pollinators. I especially like to walk through the alleys, where I can see what people have done with their back gardens. And I meet cats there. It's much more interesting than pounding a treadmill or even one of those fancy expensive things that have a virtual landscape, and I'm too old to run anyhow. But walking makes me feel better and I enjoy observing my neighborhood.

question everything

(47,476 posts)
4. Bravo!
Mon Aug 31, 2020, 01:44 PM
Aug 2020

Have been walking around, too, but not every day, and a 90-degree high humidity has been a easy deterrent.


appalachiablue

(41,131 posts)
6. Good for you & great points. Inspiring. I did it a few years ago,
Mon Aug 31, 2020, 11:13 PM
Aug 2020

lost weight & felt really good. It's time for more walking & outdoor activity now with lovely fall arriving. Thanks for posting.

Midnight Writer

(21,753 posts)
5. I used to be a mail carrier. My last route was 17 miles per day six days a week. (per pedometers)
Mon Aug 31, 2020, 04:09 PM
Aug 2020

In all kinds of Illinois weather, and up and down lots of stairs.

I'm hoping to live to a healthy 110 years.

Buckeye_Democrat

(14,853 posts)
8. I got a Fitbit early this year.
Wed Sep 2, 2020, 12:52 AM
Sep 2020

My employer's new health insurance company offered rewards for walking, so it made sense for me to participate because my quality control job forced me to walk about 12 to 15 miles a shift anyway (not to mention walking outside of the job).

Still doin' it each day!


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