I LOVE to read the inspirational guidance for both our bodies and spirits on www.prayfit.com, and this past February 15, 2012, Prayfit leader, Jimmy Pena, posted a FABULOUS article (below) regarding how our lives, health and exercise are precious at any age. I hope you enjoy it as well!
{I will be your God throughout your lifetime - until your hair is white with age.” Isaiah 46:4
You remember 8th grade dances, right? I sure do. I was the king of holding up the wall. Turn down the lights on a basketball court, add some streamers, some 80′s music, and you had yourself a dance. Just…without the dancing. (No way I was crossing the outer marker.)
I thought of those dances this week while on a television interview in the Midwest. Referring to the senior citizens watching her show, the host asked me if it was ever too late to start an exercise program or to improve your health. Instantly I was transported to those last ten minutes of my 8th grade dance. Knowing my dad would be pulling up any minute to get me, I knew I didn’t have another minute to spare. So I took a deep breath, swallowed any last drop of moisture left in my throat (gulp), and I defied 8th grade logic. I walked across the three-point line and asked the first girl I saw to dance. Best 10 minutes of the year for me.
And that’s my answer to the host’s question. Our life and our health are precious at any age. So if it’s been a while since you’ve exercised or even if you’ve never crossed the outer marker, consider each sunrise the upbeat He’s playing for you. So get crazy. Defy logic and move those arms and legs. Even if Daddy (Abba) says it’s almost time to go, it’s not too late to ask, “Can I have this dance, for the rest of my life?“
–Jimmy Peña
FAT-BURNING TIP: Train HungryRegardless of how long you’ve been exercising you have probably heard about the concept of “empty-stomach cardio.” But it’s not just lip service. Training while hungry — ideally before breakfast — can help you lose more fat when training. Researchers at Kansas State University found that exercisers who fasted before a low-intensity workout oxidized 94.3 more calories from fat, on average, than groups who had a meal 30, 60 or 90 minutes before exercise.
As you sleep, your body uses stored carbs (glycogen) to run your brain’s motor, so in the morning, your body is in a carb-deprived state. This means that fat will be burned for fuel sooner during a workout.
As the study suggests, this approach is best done before low-intensity training because high-intensity training, such as sprinting, requires more carbohydrate for performance. What’s “low” intensity? The most universal and leisurely low-intensity exercise is walking. So if losing bodyfat is one of your training goals, try putting your feet to the pavement before you put fork to mouth each morning.
BONUS TIP: The same logic applies to doing cardio after weights. Since weight training uses stored carbs for fuel, doing cardio after will help decrease the time it takes to start burning calories from fat.