The Borneo Post

Feeling out of shape and fat? Start walking

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DIANA Nyad - the endurance athlete who, at age 64, swam from Cuba to Florida - has another big dream. It doesn’t involve water, poisonous jellyfish or an exhausting 111-mile journey that took her 53 hours. Instead, it involves millions of feet, which Nyad wants to see stride across every state in America.

“Sitting has become the new smoking,” she often says, quoting James A. Levine, a Mayo Clinic physician, whose now-popular phrase speaks to the way our culture’s sedentary lifestyle is ruining our health. More than 70 per cent of adults are overweight or obese, according to the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention. For both men and women, heart disease is the leading cause of death. Half of US adults have diabetes or prediabete­s, a 2015 JAMA study reported.

“We are sick of being fat, America,” Nyad announced to TMZ Sports in 2014, a year after her swim, when asked what she was up to next. “We are sick of kids having diabetes. We’re going to be walkers. Just like the Chinese do tai chi every morning, we’re going to walk.”

In 2016, Nyad and her best friend, Bonnie Stoll, a former profession­al racquetbal­l player and the leader of Nyad’s Cuba expedition, launched EverWalk, an initiative that aims to get Americans on their feet. Anybody can commit to walking at least three times a week by signing a pledge on EverWalk’s website (at everwalk.com), where Nyad and Stoll recently posted a training schedule and opened registrati­on for their next big event: EverWalk New England, a seven- day, 150-mile trek from Boston to Portland, Maine. It will begin in Copley Square on Sunday, Sept 10, and end at Cape Elizabeth (two miles from Portland) on Saturday, Sept 16. Participan­ts can register for a short walk (five or 10 miles), one day (20 miles), multiple days or the whole thing.

“It’s a stunning, idyllic New England showcase of a route, almost all of it along the ocean’s edge,” says Nyad, who recently gathered more than 600 EverWalker­s to team up with the non-profit River LA for a 6.5-mile morning walk to celebrate the developmen­t of a 51-mile no- car path along the Los Angeles River.

Unlike swimming, cycling or running, which require special equipment and can be hard on the body, walking is the perfect way to get fit and improve your well-being, Nyad, 67, says. It’s a low-impact activity that almost anyone can do: young, old, fat, thin, rich or poor.

More than 3,000 people have taken the EverWalk pledge so far. Eventually Nyad and Stoll envision tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands, even a million people joining them virtually for regular walks, no matter where people live. They are working on a website they hope will become “the word in all things walking,” where people can find walking partners, vacation walking routes, training tips and incentives.

EverWalk’s inaugural event in October was a seven- day, 133-mile trek from Los Angeles to San Diego. About 300 people participat­ed as day-trippers, virtual walkers (who walked in their own home town) or epic walkers. One of the epic walkers was Laura Petersen, 49, a statistici­an at UCLA.

Petersen has never been the athletic type, even as a child. “I wasn’t picked last for the teams, but I was picked second to last,” she recalls. As an adult, she wasn’t particular­ly active either. That is, until eight years ago when her family began taking walks after dinner as a way to get more exercise. Petersen and her son would walk for 30 minutes while her husband and daughter went farther and faster. The 30minute walk turned to 45. Then Petersen also started walking during her lunch hour. When she came across an announceme­nt about EverWalk’s first event, she felt ready to try 20 miles a day for a week straight.

EverWalk provided her with a training schedule, and Petersen recalls her first long- distance warm-up walk of 18 miles.

“The blisters kicked in at about Mile 16,” she says.

By the time the actual event took place, she had learned to better care for her feet. Other EverWalk participan­ts weren’t as prepared, but Nyad and Stoll had an EMT delivering first aid as well as a second EMT who biked back and forth along the route to keep an eye on walkers and point the way for the directiona­lly challenged. There was also a bus for those who needed a break.

Petersen used each rest stop - about every five miles - to rehydrate and refuel. At night, she slept in local hotels where her luggage had been delivered.

Petersen made it the entire distance.

“I learned that just because you think of yourself as a type of person, like non-athletic, doesn’t mean you have to live your whole life that way,” she says.

That’s exactly what Nyad and Stoll are hoping for: a nation of people willing to push away from their chairs and take to the sidewalks and park trails.

“Most people will never swim from Cuba to Florida or run the New York City Marathon,” Nyad says. “You have to work so hard and be so focused. But people can imagine walking from Chicago to St Louis or Portland to Seattle.” The vision of an endurance event for the everyday American caught the attention of Chris Devona, 57, of Mount Prospect, Illinois. Devona joined EverWalk’s first challenge despite his Stage 4 thyroid cancer. He walked with a brace because of knee replacemen­t surgery, averaging about three miles every hour. Crossing the “achieve line” in San Diego was ultra-satisfyi

“To complete the whole route makes the average guy feel like he just won the Olympics,” Devona says. It may seem strange that a function as basic as walking can trigger an overwhelmi­ng feeling of accomplish­ment. After all, humans are built to walk long distances. But we just don’t do it anymore. — WP-Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Diana Nyad, left, and Bonnie Stoll intend to travel by foot across America. — WP-Bloomberg photo
Diana Nyad, left, and Bonnie Stoll intend to travel by foot across America. — WP-Bloomberg photo

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