I’ve had clients work with me even through their spiritual
fasting commitments and I’m going to share some of the things my clients and I
think of, and do, to ensure that they can keep their exercise appointment
without compromising their desire to commit to their religious practice.
Focus on what’s important
While you have the desire to keep exercising while fasting, you need to focus on what’s important. Focusing on what’s important means understanding that the intensity of your workouts when you’re fasting needs to be modified. I’ll discuss modification ideas next, but for now let me explain why you need to modify to help you understand what’s important.
While you have the desire to keep exercising while fasting, you need to focus on what’s important. Focusing on what’s important means understanding that the intensity of your workouts when you’re fasting needs to be modified. I’ll discuss modification ideas next, but for now let me explain why you need to modify to help you understand what’s important.
Depending on how long you fast and how much you eat when you
break your fast, your body won’t be getting enough calories to sustain intense
exercise during your fasting period. When this happens, your body taps into
reserves for energy . But unfortunately, your body will burn both fat and
muscle in its quest to keep you alive. Your focus, if you choose to exercise,
should be to preserve your body’s current lean muscle mass.
This means that you don’t have to run long distances while
fasting, to maintain your fitness. You just need to challenge your muscles
enough by doing things like body weight
exercises, yoga, or Pilates.
Throttle Back On the Intensity
One of the reason why I didn’t mention High Intensity Interval Training (HIIT) in the previous section on shifting your focus to what’s important is that it takes a lot of energy to do such exercises. HIIT is a fantastic way to preserve and build lean muscle, but it requires a lot of energy and burns energy long after your workout is done. If you’re trying to lose weight on a normal day, this is amazing. But if you’re fasting, this will eventually wear you down because you’re not eating for performance. This is what I meant when I mentioned earlier that you’ll need to modify the intensity of your workouts.
One of the reason why I didn’t mention High Intensity Interval Training (HIIT) in the previous section on shifting your focus to what’s important is that it takes a lot of energy to do such exercises. HIIT is a fantastic way to preserve and build lean muscle, but it requires a lot of energy and burns energy long after your workout is done. If you’re trying to lose weight on a normal day, this is amazing. But if you’re fasting, this will eventually wear you down because you’re not eating for performance. This is what I meant when I mentioned earlier that you’ll need to modify the intensity of your workouts.
The exercise recommendations I made earlier are not as intense
as HIIT, but they’ll still challenge your muscles enough to get the job done.
They also happen to be exercises that you can do at home, so that you don’t
have to hustle to the gym on top of your work, family, and church commitments.
Find Another Way to Ramp Things Up
One final strategy I’ve employed with my clients is shifting away from structured exercise altogether and focusing on walking and counting steps instead. With this, they maintain some physical activity but build it into their lives so that they don’t feel overwhelmed with one more thing on their to do list as they try to focus on their spiritual assignments.
One final strategy I’ve employed with my clients is shifting away from structured exercise altogether and focusing on walking and counting steps instead. With this, they maintain some physical activity but build it into their lives so that they don’t feel overwhelmed with one more thing on their to do list as they try to focus on their spiritual assignments.
To effectively use this strategy, it is best if you’ve been
tracking your steps up to this point, as it helps you establish a baseline.
Your baseline should be the daily average number of steps you were walking
before fasting began and you can ramp it up by adding between 500 – 1,000 steps
each week. If you didn’t track before, you can start at 5,000 steps and ramp up
the same way and you’ll need an activity tracker to tell how many steps you’ve
been doing.
To put this strategy into action, you can choose to set aside
time to go for a walk to hit your step goals so you’re still having to keep an
exercise appointment at a fixed time. Doing this will help make the transition
back to structured workouts easier because you kept up the habit of
setting aside the time for exercise.
Take Action
Now that I’ve laid out what you should be thinking about when you’re considering exercise while fasting, it’s your turn to choose how you proceed. You can choose to use walking as your primary activity or challenge your muscles with Pilates, yoga, or body weight exercises.
Now that I’ve laid out what you should be thinking about when you’re considering exercise while fasting, it’s your turn to choose how you proceed. You can choose to use walking as your primary activity or challenge your muscles with Pilates, yoga, or body weight exercises.
By : Ej Ogenyi (Female Lifestyle Coach and Founder of the Team)
#Fast&Exercise
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