Sunday, September 13, 2009

Are You Conserving TOO Much Energy?

from http://themojocoach.com/blog/

Conserving energy and natural resources is a great thing when we’re talking about turning off the lights when you leave the room or recycling. However, it is possible in the modern world of drive-thrus and remotes to conserve too much of your physical energy and limit how much you move your body in the course of a normal day.

Electric garage door openers, television remotes, electric can-openers, dishwashers, drive-through windows, and baby monitors enable us to stay put while we accomplish many of the tasks that at one time would have required physical effort. If you used to hand-deliver papers to your colleagues in another part of your building at work, now you can just e-mail them. If you gamble, you don’t even have to pull the lever on the slot machine anymore!

So many products and services make things simpler and easier, yet all of this energy conservation is making us bigger than ever. In a nutshell, the more “efficient” our world becomes, the less “efficient” our bodies become at burning calories.

Take a minute to think of someone who’s naturally thin. Not someone who lives from one diet to the next or rarely eats a meal, but someone who maintains their weight with seemingly relative ease. One thing you may notice about this person is that she rarely conserves energy. When she needs something, she goes and gets it instead of asking you to pass it to her. When she wants to get somewhere, she moves at a quick pace instead of strolling along. When she has free time, she often will choose an activity that requires movement, such as gardening, instead of watching TV.

Naturally thin people are often not as physically efficient as overweight people. They won’t wait for things to pile up before taking them upstairs, wait for the elevator when the stairs are right there, or wait for the closest parking spot to prevent a longer walk. They don’t think about the extra movement, they just do it.

Naturally thin people are also likely to fidget. Studies have found that fidgeters burn many more calories than their more sedentary contemporaries. Their bodies are constantly moving whether doodling, toe tapping, rocking while waiting in line, or pacing while on the phone. Movement expends energy (calories) and although it may not look like much, this extra energy expenditure adds up over the course of the day.

If you don’t know a naturally thin adult, take a look at your kids. If they need to get somewhere, they don’t slowly walk to where they want to go - they run, jump, skip, hop, bounce or glide! If you’re exhausted following a young child around all day, it’s because they’re constantly moving. The reason you want to hold their hand half of the time when you’re in a busy area is because they move so fast that if you don’t hold onto them, they’ll quickly run ahead! There’s no conservation of energy with them, just bursts of movement and action.

Take a look at how you’ve been conserving your energy in order to make life more efficient. While it may make things easier to move less, the extra energy and health you gain by adding additional movement to your daily routine can make you feel healthier and stronger. Challenge yourself to find two ways that you can move more. Pace while you talk on the phone, park farther away from your destination, take the stairs instead of the elevator, stop making phone calls to co-workers and walk to their desks instead. Commit to adding more activity to your day and to being LESS energy efficient!

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