Give Your Health a Lift
Forget everything you think you know about lifting weights. First, toss out the notion that it's not for you.
Weightlifting is one of the fastest-growing U.S. fitness activities. And the American Heart Association (AHA) recently threw its weight behind weightlifting, too.
The AHA is promoting resistance training, a range of activities that includes working with weights, for its role in preventing heart disease. For people who think cardiovascular health is tied solely to the number of miles walked, run, or biked, this is big news. The AHA cites benefits linked with weight training and aerobic exercise.
Weightlifting and other resistance training are an important part of any adult's exercise plan.
Let's look at five myths that keep people from weight training.
Health benefits
Myth #1: Weight training is only good for building big muscles.
When people think of weightlifting, they think about big bodybuilders. But weight training is more about health and fitness than building big muscles.
Most people are not genetically capable of building huge muscles. Few devote the time and training it would take to produce a Mr. or Ms. Olympia.
No age limits
Myth #2: Weight training is only for young men.
Two groups that benefit greatly from weight training are women and those older than 40.
Weight training is important for women because it helps maintain or increase bone density in both the upper and lower body and that's a big help in battling osteoporosis. Of the estimated 10 million Americans with osteoporosis, about 8 million or 80 percent are women.
Both women and men lose muscle as they age. Around age 45, muscle mass starts to fall at a rate of 1 percent a year.
Aerobic exercise does little to halt or reverse this trend, but weight training can. Studies show that even people in their 80s and 90s can increase strength through basic resistance exercise.
Weight management
Myth #3: Weight training won't help with weight loss.
Even at rest, muscle fibers burn calories. Fat cells do not. If you add lean muscle mass, a benefit of weight training, you burn more of the calories you take in each day. That doesn't even take into account the calories you burn while you lift.
By itself, weight training probably won't knock off those extra pounds. Combined with aerobic activity, however, it can be a powerful ally in the battle of the bulge.
Range of alternatives
Myth #4: Weight training always involves lifting weights.
You have alternatives to barbells and the clank of iron plates. Anything that provides resistance against your muscles provides that same kind of training. It could be free weights. It could be stationary machines. It could be resistance bands. It could even be your own body weight by doing push-ups or pull-ups.
Fit it to your schedule
Myth #5: Weight training takes too much time and money.
Weight training can take as little as an hour a week in two 30-minute sessions.
The cost can range from the price of a gym membership to nothing. That's how much it costs to do push-ups, pull-ups, and sit-ups.