Adding inconvenience to your life useful way to up your energy output

By Helen Branswell, Medical Reporter, THE CANADIAN PRESS
1 | 2 | 3

TORONTO - Modern life is replete with an ever growing list of little shortcuts, each of which we gratefully embrace as it comes over the horizon of consumerism.

Baby carrots that don't need peeling. Pre-washed herbs and salad greens that don't need spinning. The garage door opener that eliminates the need to bend and tug. The leaf blower and sit-on mower that make yard work a breeze.

These blessings, we frazzled folk believe, steal back for us small bits of that most precious of commodities, time. What we fail to recognize is what they steal from us.

Modern conveniences are robbing us of opportunities to actually move. They are stripping from our daily lives movements that could add to our flexibility, mobility, balance and strength, that could help us battle weight gain and forestall the effects of aging.

Obesity and fitness researcher Mark Tremblay thinks we ought to start taking back some of those chances to bend and flex and burn a few calories. And he has an idea of how to do it.

People should introduce a dash of inconvenience to their days, advises Tremblay, director of healthy active living and obesity research at the Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario's Research Institute in Ottawa.

"The list of conveniences is very, very long and we're very easily seduced into thinking that these conveniences are good things," Tremblay says, pointing as an example to the latest time saver to hit his radar.

"I saw on the television last night that podcasts are now broadcasting church services to the home so that parents with young children don't have to go through 'all that bother."'

"And it's 'all that bother' that is what we need to recapture. Because all that bother is part of what keeps us healthy, active, limber, mobile and at a healthy body weight."

Diane Finegood figured out the inconvenience trick when she set out to lose weight a few years ago.

Finegood had fought a long-time battle with her weight and was up to about 250 pounds when she decided enough was enough. But having lost and regained on diets, she decided to change the way she lived instead.

That meant embracing activity. But the pedometer she wore to calculate how much she was moving in the course of the day revealed she was nowhere close to the 10,000 daily steps she was aiming for. So she looked for ways to inject extra steps into her daily routine. Inconvenience was a key.

She started deliberately parking her car in the furthest possible spot from the door when she drove to a mall or to work. It's now such an ingrained habit she can't bring herself to park close, even in bad weather.

"In my job, I don't move. I sit on airplanes a lot. I sit at my desk a lot," says Finegood, who is director of the Canadian Institutes of Health Research's Institute of Nutrition, Metabolism and Diabetes.

"And that's what's led me to behaviours like parking my car as far away in the lot as I can, whether it's going to work or going to the mall. Taking the stairs instead of the elevator and recognizing that those stairs counted and were valuable to me.... Purposefully getting up and going to the farthest coffee place across campus to get that coffee in the morning or something like that."

"Those kinds of activities were really helpful," says Finegood, who has lost 75 pounds.

1 | 2 | 3

Average (17 Ratings)4.5 out of 5 stars

Write a Review

TODAY ON YAHOO!

Odd News

Mafia godfather's daughter ties knot in Corleone
Reuters - ROME (Reuters) - When Don Corleone's daughter got married in the film "The Godfather,"...

Business

Ford posts $8.7 billion second-quarter loss on truck slump
Reuters - DETROIT (Reuters) - Ford Motor Co posted a record $8.7 billion quarterly loss on...

Sports

Leonard predicts even brighter future for champion Cotto
Reuters - LAS VEGAS (Reuters) - The great Sugar Ray Leonard predicts great things for WBA...