By Judi Ketteler
Find the time that works best for you
“If you feel so tired that you can barely get
through the workout, it’s probably not the best
time of day to train,” says Tom Holland, an ACE-certified
trainer. If you drag through every morning workout, for
example, and never feel quite awake, try training in the
afternoon; if evening workouts leave you too pumped up
to sleep, give morning workouts a try.
YOUR PLAN: Make sure that the time you plan to train
fits appropriately with your schedule. For example, if
you keep scheduling evening workouts, but you rarely
seem to get around to them because your day always gets
away from you, reset your brain and your attitude for
a morning workout.
Set new fitness goals
Long
after you’ve dropped pounds, exercise will continue
to remain a very powerful tool for keeping the fat off
as much as maintaining clean-eating habits, says Paul
MacLean, PhD, associate professor of medicine at the
Center for Human Nutrition at the University of Colorado
Denver. He and his colleagues recently published a study
regarding the effect of exercise in the American
Journal of Physiology – Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative
Physiology. “We found that regular exercise reduced
hunger and appetite during weight-loss maintenance,” he
says.
YOUR PLAN: Keep your exercise on track – and your
energy stores high while maintaining your fat-loss and
weight-maintenance efforts – by continuing to set
new fitness goals as you meet your fat-loss, goals. Remember,
consistent exercisers reach, even exceed, their goals.
|