The National - News

WORKING LUNCH

▶ Noon is now the favourite hour to exercise, but is it the best time? Gemma White finds out

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The pandemic has been instrument­al in changing a lot of aspects surroundin­g the way we live, work and interact. And the latest news out of the US suggests it has also had an effect on how we exercise. Or, more specifical­ly, when we exercise.

According to fitness subscripti­on service ClassPass, which is available in the UAE, lunchtime has become the new favourite time to work out, surpassing the traditiona­l early morning and evening – or pre and post-office – slots. “For the first time ever, noon is the most popular time to work out during the week,” ClassPass says in its fitness trend forecast for the year.

“Lunchtime workouts have seen a 67 per cent increase in popularity. This shift can largely be attributed to a rise in remote working, and the ease of no-shower-required online meetings. Even as people have returned to studios, the noon weekday time slot for in-person classes is more popular now than it was before lockdowns.”

With people continuing to work remotely, and the lines between the home and the office remaining fluid, when should you be fitting in your daily workout?

“I wouldn’t say there’s an optimum time to exercise, more that it’s down to what suits the individual,” says Michael

Sole, founder of The Den DXB in Motor City.

“Some people find that it fits into their schedule better to train earlier in the day and get it out of the way. When it comes to fitness, consistenc­y is far more important than timing.

“Picking the time of day when you can focus your energy is key,” he continues, “because if you’re not in the right frame of mind, you’re not going to give it your all.”

It seems that fitness fans now feel more confident about “giving it their all” in the middle of the day. Peloton, an American exercise equipment company, also recorded a 35 per cent jump in popularity for lunchtime workouts, according to New York Magazine’s lifestyle website The Cut. Meanwhile SLT fitness studios in the US schedules its live classes at 12.30pm every day “after surveying its clients”.

“People are a lot more flexible with their time now,” says UAE sports promoter Mark Boyd. “I’ve noticed that, as a trainer, I’m busier because clients are not beholden to specific timings. It used to be that my busiest times were 6am to 8am, before people went to work, then from 6pm onwards. That’s changed now, as people can use their time more flexibly, such as in the hours they might once have spent commuting.”

There are drawbacks to the lunchtime workout, however, as Circuit Factory’s Phil Parkinson, says. “We trialled lunchtime virtual classes during the UAE’s stay-at-home orders and they were initially popular with non-working females and parents during homeschool­ing. They were not popular with anyone who was generally working from home, and these people continued to join morning and evening classes.

“The idea of working out in the middle of the day is attractive, but the reality is different,” he says. “By lunchtime, people have been awake for four to seven hours, and they are beginning to feel hungry, with energy dips. It is also harder to make lunchtime workouts a habit because of the distractio­ns at that time of the day, such as phone calls, cooking and catch-ups with friends.”

When it comes to scientific studies concerning the optimum time to exercise, opinions are divided. According to a 2010 study in the Scandinavi­an Journal of Science & Medicine in Sports, afternoon workouts can be more effective with regard to the body’s ability to perform. This is because body temperatur­e increases throughout the day, reaching its highest between 2pm and 6pm, which can optimise muscle function, strength and endurance.

A 2018 study published in Current Biology backs that up, as it states humans burn about 10 per cent more calories in the late afternoon than they do late at night.

However, a 2019 study published in The Journal of Physiology found that a 7am workout can make you feel more alert in the mornings, and more tired earlier in the evenings, a benefit of which is you’ll go to bed earlier and get enough sleep to be more energised for your next morning workout.

“I prefer to train in the morning on as empty a stomach as possible,” says Parkinson. “My thinking is that the energy required for the workout will therefore be taken from fat, rather than food that I am digesting from a recent meal. Eating after the workout also makes more sense as it fuels the body and replaces whatever you used.”

Lina Shibib, a clinical nutritioni­st at Medcare Hospitals & Medical Centres in Dubai, says: “Generally, exercise is exercise. Any movement to build muscle at any time of the day can be of great benefit to the body.”

However, even she says there are some benefits to working out earlier in the day. “Recently, studies have been looking more closely at the benefits of exercise besides muscle [gain] and weight loss, and have shown that working out at 7am, as opposed to later in the afternoon or evening, may help individual­s get more quality sleep at night,” she explains.

“Another argument making the case for a workout first thing in the morning is that exercising on an empty stomach could burn more fat.”

If you’re going to do that, however, she says to avoid sports injury, a combinatio­n

Given their more flexible schedules, some fitness fans feel more confident about ‘giving it their all’ in the middle of the day

of protein and carbs should be consumed one to four hours pre-workout and within approximat­ely 60 minutes post-workout.

Generally speaking, humans prefer the stability and dependabil­ity of a routine. With the pandemic throwing so much of people’s lives into chaos and uncertaint­y, exercise became something of a global touchstone, with YouTube workouts garnering millions of views in the past year.

“Those taking up their exercise at lunchtime are creating a new routine to adapt with their new working hours, from home, as they find they are working later into the evening and night,” says Johanna

Richmond, a therapist at Cognitive Behaviour Therapy centre in Dubai.

“Having a routine maintains momentum, we prepare for exercise, make arrangemen­ts around our exercise routine and this gives us mental stability.

“Psychologi­cal studies have proven that exercise improves our mood, enabling us to become more resilient by releasing our feel-good neurotrans­mitters such as dopamine, noradrenal­ine and serotonin, which is why therapists will always ask and encourage an exercise routine, no matter how minimal at the beginning,” Richmond says.

There are other ways people’s workout habits have changed. Sole has noticed a larger influx of people at the morning sessions, while evenings remain quieter. “We see more parents or couples in the morning sessions, most likely because they want to free up their evenings to spend with their families. And we get more singles in the evening classes.”

Boyd says it’s also made a difference to where we work out outside our homes. “The pandemic has pushed a lot more people into fitness, but it has also scared them away from big, commercial gyms. People are moving towards smaller, specialise­d facilities, where there’s a close-knit community in which they feel safe.”

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 ?? Unsplash ?? A midday, midweek time slot has become more popular in some fitness studios
Unsplash A midday, midweek time slot has become more popular in some fitness studios
 ?? Getty ?? A rise in lunchtime workouts can be attributed to remote working and the ease of no-showerrequ­ired online meetings
Getty A rise in lunchtime workouts can be attributed to remote working and the ease of no-showerrequ­ired online meetings

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