I don't see how that applies, if i chuck a battery in the bin the energy still exists, i just don't use it.![]()
Is that really even possible most of the time? I would think the body must dump some of the calories we consume because we would get a lot fatter a lot quicker, for example im not very active at all if im honest yet i eat an average amount and am still slightly underweight, im pretty sure i don't use as much as i consume so where does it go?
I don't see how that applies, if i chuck a battery in the bin the energy still exists, i just don't use it.![]()
Your just getting comftorable when your thinking about stopping!
I'm sure you have had many, many of those moments!!!
Well, I ran about ... a mile up a hill and back down again, walking some of it because I was dead. I'm going to repeat this process every day for the rest of the week. I expect to have lost some weight by the end of April.
Mate, just make sure you keep increasing the distance each week.
Running up hills is a brilliant way to get fit if you keep pushing yourself every time.
My limited understanding is that HIIT burns waaaay more calories than a constant-paced jog / flob around on a treadmill does. Does spinning count as HIIT?
It never fails to amaze me what the human body is capable of, when you are mentally strong enough to keep pushing well beyond what you mind is telling you is the limit, even a tortured and abused one such as mine.You just keep going until you can't keep going........my old (and current) instructor says that if you can still think about stopping then you haven't gotten to the point where you have to stop.
It never fails to amaze me what the human body is capable of, when you are mentally strong enough to keep pushing well beyond what you mind is telling you is the limit, even a tortured and abused one such as mine.
I'm confused about hit. Does it help with weight loss much, or is old fashioned running/gym still the way to go?