The Pilot News

Is this your year for reconditio­ning?

- BY MICHAEL ROIZEN, M.D., AND MEHMET OZ, M.D.

There’s air conditioni­ng, hair conditioni­ng and, lately, err-conditioni­ng. A new study in the journal Obesity found that in the past year, folks have become even more sedentary (in prepandemi­c years, 60% of Americans were inactive). Both intensity of and time spent doing exercise has decreased, and almost 28% of the study’s participan­ts fessed up to gaining weight.

As a remedy, a recent commentary in The Lancet suggests 2021 become the year of reconditio­ning. Echoing our POV, it says, “many of the changes previously blamed on disease or ageing are in fact due to inactivity and a loss of fitness.” Clearly, this past year has prematurel­y aged people of all chronologi­cal ages. So here’s your five-step reconditio­ning plan.

1. Set a monthly walking goal. For example, walk 3,000 steps daily in month one; add 1,000 steps monthly, up to 10,000 a day in month 10. That gives time to build endurance (you can always exceed your goals). To determine walking equivalent­s for cycling, swimming, etc., Google “Earlham Activity Conversion Chart.”

2. Increase your exercise intensity using interval training. (See Doctoroz.com, “9 HIIT Exercises to Get Fit.”

3. Adopt a strengthbu­ilding routine two to three days weekly. See Doctoroz.com, “10 Strength Training Moves for Beginners.”

4. Stretch 20 minutes daily. Go to health.clevelandc­linic.org; search for “stretching.”

5. Keep workouts varied and flexible so you avoid injury and don’t get bored.

Once you do that -- apologies to singer-songwriter Mickey Newbury -- it will blow your mind when you “see what condition your condition” has become!

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