The long
read
Why exercise alone won’t save us
Sedentary
lifestyles are killing us – we need to build activity into our everyday lives,
not just leave it for the gym.
By Vybarr
Cregan-Reid
Thu 3 Jan
2019 06.00 GMT
This is the time of year when
trainers are mined from under
beds and gym kits are disinterred from the bottom drawer. Google
searches relating to physical fitness peak in January. Many people even trawl the web to find out about “desk exercises” and “workouts
on the go” in case they are too busy to use their new gym memberships.
Trawl: Search
Our relationship with exercise is
complicated. Reports from the UK and the US show it is something we
persistently struggle with. As
the new year rolls around, we anticipate having the drive
to behave differently and become regular exercisers, even in the knowledge that
we will probably fail to do so. Why do we want to exercise? What do we expect
it to do for us? We all know we are supposed to be exercising, but hundreds of
millions of us can’t face actually doing it. It is just possible the problem
lies at the heart of the idea of exercise itself.
The drive: The energy, the ambition
Exercise is movement of the muscles
and limbs for a specific outcome,
usually to enhance physical fitness.
As such, for most of us, it is an optional addition to the working day – yet
another item on a long list of responsibilities alongside the fulfilment of
parental duties or earning money to put food on the table. But because the
principal beneficiary of exercise is ourselves, it is one of the easiest chores to shirk. At the end of
the working day, millions of us prefer to indulge in sedentary leisure
activities instead of what we all think is good for us: a workout.
Limbs: Members, extremities.
Outcome: Consequence
Enhance: Improve
Fitness: The condition of being fit; suitability, appropriateness, healthiness,
etc.
Fit: Someone who is fit is healthy and physically strong. Fit in being right or going in
the right place
Chores: Tasks, responsibilities
Shirk: Evade, avoid
Fitness crazes
are like diets: if any of them
worked, there wouldn’t be so many. CrossFit, the intensely physical,
communal workout incorporating free weights, squats, pull-ups and so forth, is
still less than 20 years old. Spin classes – vigorous group workouts on
stationary bikes – have only been around for about 30. Aerobics was a craze about
a decade before that, although many of its high-energy routines had already
been around for a while. (The pastel horror of
1970s Jazzercise is probably best forgotten.) Before that, there was the
jogging revolution, which began in the US in the early 1960s. The Joggers
Manual, published in 1963 by the Oregon Heart Foundation, was a leaflet of about 200 words that sought
to address the postwar panic about sedentary lifestyles by encouraging an
accessible form of physical activity, explaining that “jogging is a bit more
than a walk”. The jogging boom took a few years to get traction, hitting its stride in the mid- to late-80s, but it remains one of the
most popular forms of exercise, now also in groups.
Crazes: Trends
If
any of them worked, there wouldn’t be so many: 2nd conditional
Pastel horror: Pastel it’s a picture. The sense would be a bad dream
Leaflet: Pamphlet
Seek / sought / sought: If you seek something such as a job or a place to live, you try to
find one.
Stride: Advance
The exercise craze that dominated
the 1950s was, oddly, not even an exercise. The vibrating exercise belt
promised users could achieve effortless weight loss by having their midriffs violently jiggled. It didn’t
work, but you can still find similar machines available for purchase today.
Midriff: Abdomen
Jiggle: Vibration
These fads
even came with their own particular fashions – legwarmers, leotards, Lycra. So
is our obsession with fitness doomed to be the
stuff of embarrassing passing “phases”? Is
exercise itself a fad?
Fad: Fashion, trend, craze
Doomed: Destined
Passing: Transitory
It is not news that we are becoming
more sedentary as a species. The problem has been creeping up on
us for generations. As industry and technology solved the physical demands of
manual labour, they created new challenges for the human body.
Creep up on: If you creep up on someone, you move slowly closer to them without
being seen by them.
Evidence about bone strength and density gleaned from fossils
of early humans suggests that, for hundreds of thousands of years, normal
levels of movement were much higher than ours today. And the range of work
required of the human body to subsist was sizeable: everything from foraging for food and finding water to hunting, constructing
basic shelters, manufacturing tools and evading
predators. The fossil record tells us that many prehistoric humans were
stronger and fitter than today’s Olympians.
Strength: Resistance, power
Glean: Collected, extracted (information) from various sources.
Forage: Search
Shelter: Refuge, cover, housing
A hundred years ago, while life was
easier than it had been for our hunter-gatherer forebears,
it was still required that shopping was fetched, floors scrubbed, wood chopped and washing done by hand. Modern
urban environments do not invite anything like the same kinds of work from the
body. It is not easy to clock up those miles
when cities are built to prioritise cars and treat pedestrians as secondary. We
are not assisted by our environments to move like we used to, for reasons tied up with motivation, safety and accessibility.
Forebear: Ancestor
Fetched: Made
Scrubbed: Cleaned
Clock up: If you clock up a large number or total of things, you reach that
number or total.
Tie up: If you tie up an issue or problem, you deal with it in a way that
gives definite conclusions or answers. Related. Connected.
Technological innovations have led
to countless minor reductions of movement. To
clean a rug in the 1940s, most people took it into
their yard and whacked the bejeezus out of
it for 20 minutes. Fast-forward
a few decades and we can set robot vacuum
cleaners to wander about our living rooms as we
order up some shopping to be delivered, put on the dishwasher, cram a load into the washer-dryer, admire the self-cleaning
oven, stack some machine-cut logs in the grate, pour a glass
of milk from the frost-free fridge or thumb a capsule into
the coffee maker. Each of these devices and behaviours is making it a bit more
difficult for us to keep moving regularly throughout our day.
Countless: Uncountable
Rug: Carpet
Whack: Blow, hit.
Bejeezus out of: A big and terrible quantity. Has the sense of something very hard.
It’s derived from by Jesus. Also bejesus.
Fast-forward: It’s use in imperative: Go along
for..
Set: Configure
Wander: If you wander in a place, you walk around there in a casual way, often
without intending to go in any particular direction.
Cram a load: Fill (in this case the washer-dryer)
Grate: Grill
Thumb ( θʌm ): To touch, mark, or move with the thumb. The thumb is the first and
usually shortest and thickest of the digits of the hand, composed of two short
bones
As we step through various
innovations, we tend to think of the work that is no longer required as
“saved”. Cleaning a rug once burned about 200 calories, while activating a
robo-vac uses about 0.2 – an activity drop of a thousandfold, with nothing to replace it. Nobody, when they
buy a labour-saving device, thinks: “How am I going to replace that movement I
have saved?”
Drop of: If the level of something drops off, it becomes less. If you drop off
to sleep, you go to sleep.
Thousandfold: A thousand times as much or as many
A great deal of energy is also saved
in the kinds of work that we now do. Towards the end of the 19th century, the
labour market began to change radically. Office clerks were
the fastest-growing occupational group in the latter half of the period. The UK
census of 1841 suggests that 0.1% of working people performed administrative or
office work at that time. By 1891, the number had increased twentyfold, and
only kept increasing. One recent US survey estimated that 86% of today’s
workforce is in sedentary employment.
Office clerk: A clerk is a person who works in an office, bank, or law court and
whose job is to look after the records or accounts. In a hotel, office, or
hospital, a clerk is the person whose job is to answer the telephone and deal
with people when they arrive
As a result of our leisurely lifestyles, our bones are thinner and our muscles
weaker, and while these are not problems in themselves, they are part of the
larger, fleshier story whereby
the diminution of movement is shackling humans to
the very biggest global killers. Heart disease and strokes
are responsible for about 17 million deaths a year, according to the World
Health Organization.
Leisurely: Relaxed
Fleshier: Overweight
Whereby: By or
because of which
Shackling: Chaining
Stroke: If someone has a stroke, a blood vessel in their brain bursts or
becomes blocked, which may kill them or make them unable to move one side of
their body. (feridura, apoplejía, derrame cerebral)
All-day activity trackers like the
Apple Watch and the Fitbit (which is only a decade old this year) have
attempted to make an intervention into this sandpit
of sedentariness. Widespread use of wearables may be helping people to move
more, but technology created this problem of sedentary work and leisure, and
cannot solve it alone.
Sandpit: It’s a closed place with sand for children play but the sense seams
refers to a problem
A 2015 report by the Academy of
Medical Royal Colleges called Exercise – the Miracle Cure said that regular
exercise can assist in the prevention of strokes, some cancers, depression,
heart disease and dementia, reducing risk by at least 30%. With regular
exercise, the risk of bowel cancer drops by 45%, and of osteoarthritis, high
blood pressure and type 2 diabetes by a whopping 50%.
Exercise, in these terms, is not a fad, or an option, or an add-on to our busy lifestyles: it
is keeping us alive. But before it can work for us, our whole approach needs to
change.
Fad: Trend, fashion.
As a result of the Miracle Cure
report, doctors were urged to promote regular exercise among their patients.
Humans obviously need regular activity, but the modern world strives to take exertion out of our
lives. Modernity is characterised by imperatives to simplify, improve and
maximise efficiency. In much the same way, medical bodies trying to motivate
the population to exercise promise big results with the absolute minimum of
disruption to our busy, seated lives.
Strive: Try
Exertion: The act,
fact, or process of exerting; active use of strength, power, etc.; exercise. Energetic
activity; effort
Anyone researching exercise
strategies this new year will find that the government recommends “at least 150
minutes of moderate aerobic activity such as cycling or brisk walking
every week and strength exercises on 2 or more days a week that work all the
major muscles (legs, hips, back, abdomen, chest, shoulders and arms)”.
Brisk walking: It's walking faster but not as fast as a full run.
If 150 minutes – or half an hour
five times a week – is too much for you, and the data suggests that for most of
us it is, another public health strategy promotes the efficacy of being active
for just 10 minutes a day. Public Health England launched its Active10 campaign
on the grounds that just 10 minutes’ brisk
walking each day “counts as exercise” and “can reduce your risk of serious
illnesses like heart disease, type 2 diabetes, dementia and some cancers”.
On the grounds: If you do something on the grounds of a particular thing, that thing
is the reason for your action
Even less time is required for
high-intensity interval training (HIIT), which can involve bouts
of just 20 seconds of intense effort a few times a week. It seems there is good
evidence for the efficacy of very short bursts of strenuous anaerobic exercise,
such as sprinting or cycling hard, followed by a brief recovery period.
Interval training may improve insulin sensitivity and oxygen circulation, and
increase muscle mass. But one of the early researchers into HIIT, kinesiologist
Dr Martin Gibala, worried that despite its benefits, it required “an extremely
high level of subject motivation”, because all-out exertion
is unpleasant and can lead to dizziness, vomiting
or injury. “Given the extreme nature of the exercise,” he wrote, “it is doubtful
that the general population could safely or practically adopt the model.”
Bouts: Sessions
Exertion: Effort, energy
Dizziness: If you feel dizzy, you feel that you are losing your balance and are
about to fall. (mareig, mareo)
While all of these three modes of
exercise are effective in different ways, and each has its proponents and
committed followers, none is an all-round solution for a “fit” human body. But
the problem is not really with the exercises themselves; it is what we tend to
do in between those bursts of activity.
The health effects of being
sedentary are as common and recognisable as they are serious. Anxiety,
depression, heart disease, breast and colon cancer, type 2 diabetes, high blood
pressure, obesity, osteoporosis, osteoarthritis and the leading cause of global
disability, back pain, are all driven by sedentary behaviours.
For our bodies to function properly,
they operate on the assumption that we will be burning calories throughout the
day, and not in short bursts. It is clear that periods of sedentariness are bad
for the human body, and some exercise is always going to be better than none;
the issue is not really to do with the types of exercise, but with our approach
to them and what we expect them to achieve. We know from the data that the
human relationship with exercise is predominantly characterised as both
optional and additional to an otherwise sedentary life, which itself causes a
ton of problems. As long as physical activity is divorced from the real work of our lives,
we will find reasons for not doing it.
No matter how low the institutional
expectations for physical activity drop, more of us fail to meet them each
year. A Public Health England survey last year found that people in England are
becoming so inactive that 40% of those aged between 40 and 60 walk briskly for
less than 10 minutes a month. The reasons are numerous, but they seem to be
connected to our notion of exercise, and the difference between short bursts of
running or cycling and low-level, sustained physical activity. If we go back to
the beginnings of exercise, we can see why it is still so problematic for us
today.
The rise of exercise is synonymous
with the rise of leisure. We associate this with the start of the Industrial
Revolution, but in fact it dates from much earlier. Once humans settled and
began to build, several thousand years ago, hierarchies began to form,
particularly in cities, as did the gap between master and servant. To be one of
the elite meant others were doing the physical work for you. For the masters,
there was time to fill, and into this space grew the idea of leisure. Exercise
also emerges here, in the imbalance created in the spread of labour performed
across a population. Ever since, we have seen a powerful link between exercise
and inequality.
The wealthy men of ancient Greece,
deprived of work by their slaves and with little else to do, invented a new
place called the gymnasium, an open space in the city where they could strip off and gambol about naked,
competing in made-up challenges to keep each other fit for war.
Strip off: If you strip off your clothes, you take them off.
Gambol: If animals or people gambol, they run or jump about in a playful way.
Later, the Romans also celebrated
the value of exercise. Cicero, the Roman politician and lawyer, said: “It is
exercise alone that supports the spirits and keeps the mind in vigour.” Pliny
the Younger, a writer and also a lawyer, said: “It is remarkable how one’s wits are sharpened by physical exercise.” Like their Greek
gym buddies, these men were privileged and wealthy. They understood that even
though the slave class did their work for them, exercise and physical activity
were essential for a long and sane life.
Wit: Mind, brain.
After the Greeks and Romans,
exercise all but disappeared from western culture. It didn’t resurface properly
until the 18th century, when inactivity became a problem for a certain class of
gentleman. In 1797, the Monthly Magazine announced a new patent for Francis
Lowndes’ Gymnasticon, the earliest of the static exercise machines – a frame in
which the user sat, turning a spindle with his arms and operating a treadle
with his feet. The article noted that “when peculiar or sedentary occupations
enforce confinement to the house, it promises to be equally useful to the
healthy as to the sick. The merchant, without withdrawing his attention from
his accounts, and the student, while occupied in writing or reading, may have
his lower limbs kept in constant motion by the slightest exertion, or, the
assistance of a child.” The handle on the contraption’s lower spindle was arranged so that, if desired, a child could be
employed to turn the wheel, to save the user valuable energy.
Contraption: Machine
Spindle: Axis
In the early 20th century, calisthenics became popular among people with limited means
of expending physical energy. In the opening pages of EM Forster’s Howards End,
from 1910, we are introduced to the Wilcox family as they come and go in their
country-house garden. They are “new money”; they see
the world instrumentally, and are mostly allergic to it, too. A visitor reports
the scene in a letter: “Then Evie comes out, and does some calisthenic
exercises on a machine that is tacked on to a greengage tree – they put
everything to use – and then she says ‘a-tissue,’ and in she goes.” Like
inactivity, hay fever only seemed to afflict those higher up the social scale.
Calisthenics: Calisthenics are simple exercises that you can do to keep fit and
healthy.
New money: Money and wealth that has not been inherited
In 1831 the Journal of Health
defined calisthenics as “a reasonable, methodical, and regular employment of
the exercises best calculated to develop the physical powers of young girls,
without detriment to the perfecting of the moral faculties”. Its adoption was
necessary because “young girls have not the same freedom as boys in their
outdoor exercise, and their customary amusements and
occupations, when not at school, are of a more sedentary nature”.
Amusement: Amusement is the pleasure that you get from being entertained or from
doing something interesting. Amusement park.
Since our modern way of life denies
many of us the physical exertion that kept our ancestors healthy, one way to
gain social capital is to add
it back in.
Any kind of communal exercise gives
us a sense of belonging, of shared values and endeavours,
aside even from its more general physical and
mental benefits. When people gather together in a gym or in an exercise class,
at least one aspect of what they are doing is joining together in a civic
activity that ensures their collective survival, just like the ancient Greeks
before them.
Endeavour: Effort
Aside even from: Adding
If being fit promotes long life, you
might expect being an elite athlete to help you reach a ripe old age. It
doesn’t. Olympians buy themselves an
extra 2.8 years on average, according to a 2012 study. Devoting your life to
sport and exercise will buy you more time, but once you factor in the
Olympians’ lifelong sustained attention to diet and healthy living, as well as
tens of thousands of hours spent training, 2.8 years might not really seem
sufficient recompense.
Buy: In this case, to acquire by any exchange or sacrifice
Instead, the fittest and healthiest
people on the planet have never been to a gym. These people, who report high
levels of wellbeing and live extraordinarily long lives, inhabit what have been
called “blue zones” – areas where lifestyles lead to peculiar longevity. The
term was coined by two demographers, Gianni Pes and Michel Poulain, who, while
collecting data on clusters of
centenarians on the island of Sardinia, identified places of especially high
longevity on their map with a blue felt-tip pen. Because
clusters of long-lived people are often found in geographically remote places
(also including parts of Okinawa, Costa Rica and Greece), jackpot genes seem
like a strong candidate to explain their longevity. But a famous study of
Danish twins has concluded that a long life seems to be only “moderately heritable”.
Over the years, many studies have looked at the lifestyles of people in “blue
zones” and found that a number of their customs and habits contribute to a long
life (everything from a sense of belonging and purpose to not smoking, or
eating a predominantly plant-based diet). In the list of contributory factors,
there is a noticeable absence of exercise.
Cluster: Group
Felt-tip pen: A pen having a writing point made from pressed fibres (rotulador)
I travelled to Sardinia to meet Pes
and find out more about his work. He has a vested interest in
longevity. His great uncle was a supercentenarian (living beyond 110). The
years that Pes is interested in finding out more about are the good ones, not
those spent with 24-hour care in a nursing home (there are also none of these
in Sardinia’s blue zones). A trial by a group of gerontologists based at Boston
University reported that 10% of supercentenarians made it to the final three
months of their lives without being troubled by major age-related diseases.
Vested (ˈvɛstɪd ): Absolute
In my conversation with Pes, he
repeatedly stressed that while diet and environment are important components of
longevity, being sedentary is the enemy, and sustained, low-level activity is
the key that research by him and others has uncovered: not the intense kinds of
activity we tend to associate with exercise, but energy expended throughout the
day. The supercentenarians he has worked with all walked several miles each day
throughout their working lives. They never spent much time, if any, seated at
desks.
Pes has recently been studying
workers in one of the island’s regions of longevity, Seulo (population around
1,000). He discovered one group of women who had spent their working lives
seated, but nonetheless reached a great age. They
had been working treadles (pedal-powered sewing
machines), which meant they had regularly burned sufficient calories to derive
the longevity benefits of remaining active. (Lowndes’ Gymnasticon, which works
like a treadle, is starting to look a little less ridiculous as a solution for
sedentary workers.)
Nonetheless: Despite that; however; nevertheless; in spite of that
Treadles: Is a mechanism operated with a pedal for converting reciprocating
motion into rotating motion (pedal oscil·lant de les màquines de cusir, pedal
oscilante de las máquinas de coser)
For all the trillions invested in
healthcare year on year, there are regions in high-income nations (such as the
UK and the US) where life expectancy is still as low as it was in the mid-60s.
In Tower Hamlets, one of the poorer parts of London, men can only expect an
average of 61 years of good health – and women just 56.
So far, researchers agree that
sustained periods of low-level activity seem to work well. Aiming for 10,000
steps a day is a good idea, but 15,000 better resembles the distances likely
covered by our prehistoric ancestors, and indeed by those Sardinian
centenarians.
For those of us who can’t move to
Sardinia and become a shepherd, a review
published in the Lancet in 2016 found that “high levels of moderate-intensity
physical activity (ie, about 60-75 min per day) seem to eliminate the increased
risk of death associated with high sitting time”.
Shepherd: A shepherd is a person, especially a man, whose job is to look after
sheep.
So even if we go to the gym on a
Saturday morning, our absolute inactivity at other times can still be damaging
to the body. Low and moderate activity for longer or sustained periods seems to
produce the best results. It looks like excessive high-intensity activity (the
kind we see in elite athletes) drives metabolism and cell turnover, and may
even, when all factors are taken into account, accelerate the ageing process.
As those all-day activity trackers continue to mature into their second
decade, they will no doubt find better ways of encouraging us out of our
chairs. At the moment, though, they can only count the things we have done, not
the opportunities for movement we have missed. They make us more likely to be
attentive to our activity than our inactivity.
Activity trackers: Apple Watch, Fitbit, activity devices…
After two centuries of trying, we
should accept that exercise is not working as a global fitness strategy while
it remains an addition to the working day. In the long view, it is starting to
look a lot like a fad. Government guidelines in the UK and other countries that
encourage sport and exercise are failing. These strategies struggle because we
are trying to get people to give up what little leisure time they have to
pursue activities that require substantial additional effort.
Perhaps instead we should encourage people to make
the kinds of daily decisions that result in a healthier life. What is needed are
the kinds of strategies that would make exercise unnecessary. Urban
planning that better addresses the outdoor experience and encourages movement
would be a key part of this change. But on an individual level, we can think
about returning a little of the friction that technology has so subtly smoothed
out for us, and make it easy to get things done. Exercise becomes physical
activity when it is part of your daily life.
A year ago, my car lease
came up for renewal. I had been a driver for nearly 30 years, but after all the
alarming research I had read about the impact of modern lifestyles, I could not
possibly keep it. I now walk miles more than I used to. Without a car, getting
to the gym involved a 70-minute round trip. By the time I had walked there and
back, the workouts seemed less necessary, so I cancelled my membership.
Car lease: If you lease property or something such as a car from someone or if they
lease it to you, they allow you to use it in return for regular payments of
money.
I tried other things, too. I
experimented with a standing desk, but I knew from Pes’s research in Sardinia
that it is not sitting itself that is bad, but the inactivity associated with
it. Standing in one place for hours is only marginally better than sitting
there. The Gymnasticon is also making a comeback. Its new incarnation is the
treadmill desk, which seeks to keep office workers permanently on the move.
From a health perspective it seems superb, but it is hardly practical. Getting
a less comfortable office chair would probably be as effective a strategy,
making it less easy to settle into for long periods of immobility.
You don’t have to join a gym this
year. The numbers tell us that exercise is not the solution to the problems
associated with physical inactivity, for the simple reason that these two
things are not opposites. The antidote is activity: to find and recover some of
the movement that modern life has been taking from us for centuries.
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