Fitness Matters

Hazel Hepburn
2 min readMay 1, 2023

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Today, the first Saturday of May, is National Fitness Day. Numerous activists have promoted fitness; one credited contributor was Kim Bielak, a life and career coach based in Los Angeles.

While it is essential to keep the fitness of our mind and body, counterintuitively, it is also critical that we are not aware of “doing exercise.”

Why?

From human instinct, it is a novel idea to go to a specific destination and only to build up our bodies. Looking back on our anthropology history, none of our hunter gathered ancestors’ activities was for “doing exercise.” Physical movements have already in their daily routine. In the 19th century, Treadmills (tread wheels) was invented by William Cubitt for the Victorians to punish the prisoners, not to “benefit overall well-being.” Therefore, if we inject “movements” routines into our daily life, it minimizes our innate resistance to “work-out,” which makes “work-out” and “exercise” more available to us. Put that theory into practice; walking would be the most basic form of physical exercise.

According to studies, the minimum recommended dose for exercise is 150 mins per week. If we keep this “150 mins-movement” habit, we will lose about 0.5 pounds (lb.) per month and can lose about 6 pounds if we continue this routine for one year.

Also, because 30 percent of our muscle mass counts for 20 percent of metabolism, the older we are, the more benefit we can gain from exercise.

A study by Ralph Paffenbarger, a Stanford and Harvard University professor, found a correlation between exercise and mortality rate. Under the exact circumstances of doing 2000 kcal per week, the mortality rate drops 21 percent among the age group of fifty and less; the mortality rate drops 50 percent for the age group of seventy to eighty-four.

Interestedly, one of our neighborhood buildings integrated the recreation and library program into one community center. This brilliant gesture reminded us of a WELL design principle.

“Active design considers how different building components such as staircases can encourage movement.” — WELL V01, Active Buildings, and Communities.

On National Fitness Day, whether you are a fitness enthusiast or fitness caviler, checking out this neighborhood center at Wheaton, Maryland, can inspire you to begin a healthier lifestyle.

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By the way, if you are interested in this topic, consider watching a Google talk by Dan Liberman, “Exercised- why something we never evolved.”

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Hazel Hepburn
Hazel Hepburn

Written by Hazel Hepburn

Hello there, we are Hazel and Hepburn. We love art, cities, and everything in between.

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