Exercise bikes?

Soldato
Joined
19 Dec 2009
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Lancashire
Been considering one of these as a way of increasing the level of exercise that I do and was just wondering if I could get some opinions on how effective they are for helping to lose weight when used regularly? Thinking of starting off with half an hour every day, then starting to increase duration and intensity as time goes on, but I really have no idea if they're even any good for this kind of thing (last time I did serious exercise was 2004 and I was clueless back then, so... :o ).

Ideally, I want to be going to the gym and swimming, but at the moment my weight and size are such that I keep putting it off because I'm really unhappy with myself and generally lack confidence, so was thinking that I'd start to reduce my weight at home first. I've already started walking more, which is helping a bit, but I feel that I need to be doing something more now that I've started to get my eating under control. I've finally had enough of being so overweight, lacking confidence and generally just disliking myself, so work is going to begin. I'm just hoping my plan is a decent one and that I can get somewhere with it. Wanting to start playing cricket for a local club next year. :)

Thanks in advance for any answers. :)
 

Thank you for that, very useful information. Of course, would be looking to start small and work up to it, so I understand that going all-out straight away would be bad for me.

BennyC said:
Save your cash, spend it on a gym membership as it's likely you'll make far greater progress there with the ability to do resistance training too.

Everybody else in the gym really couldn't give a toss what anybody else is doing! Anybody that is concerned what others are doing isn't going to make any progress anyway! You've also the possibility of meeting new people and making friends if you attend various circuit or spinning classes etc.

If you want decent CV equipment then you'll need to spend a fair chunk, generally speaking you get what you pay for.

The problem with that is that I find such things extremely difficult. I've spent the past three years rebuilding my confidence at a comfortable rate after roughly ten years of it constantly being hammered and I don't want to end up taking too big a step only to leave myself feeling bad. Yeah, it's pathetic, I know, but it's a problem that I've been making progress with at my own pace and I'm quite comfortable with that at the moment. :/
 
Gather up the courage and join a gym :)

It is something I am hoping to move on to, but preferably in my own time. I understand the potential benefits and I do want them, but I don't feel that I'm ready to make that step yet. :)

How much are you willing to spend on your equipment if you're planning to work out at home?

Well, that's the thing. I haven't got a clue what kind of race I should be looking at, sadly.

BlackCoat2k10 said:
Just so you know I didn't mention it to berate you or anything, it's just I've seen so many people start something by going into the deep end and then they give up where as if they started out smaller they'd stick to it and do well.

I know, and I'm grateful for the advice. :)

BlackCoat2k10 said:
I used to be similar to you in the fact I had very low confidence, and I mean low, to talk to people who weren't in my good circle of friends I'd have to be rather drunk and even then it was a challenge just because I used to be shallow and upset about my weight. I lost mine over my college summer break, so when I went back in the amount of compliments I got was staggering, from fatty to good looker.

I have that problem now, although it's starting to improve. At college, I couldn't even do a presentation to a group of five people that I knew really well, but that's not such a big deal now. I do struggle to hold conversations with people that I don't know well, though, and that's another thing I've been trying to work on by deliberately taking up the requests logged by people I don't talk to much at work.

BlackCoat2k10 said:
Another option, if you have a stairs in you place.. use that to walk up and down do that a lot. Its cheap, its effective to some degree and it may help you shed a few pounds where you are then more comfortable to join a gym and further your gains as well as meeting new people and gaining much more advice.
Again like the above but a skipping rope? maybe incorperate it into your routine a bit and slowly work it up. I now use one and its fantastic, I probabally use it once or twice a week for a change from the bike.

Hmm, both sound like they'd be a good addition and certainly something I could probably try out sooner, whilst I get more information. Thanks. :)
 
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