Together we strengthen our minds, bodies and spirits. We live in the workout and visit the world for the 23 hours between meetings.
Mind
- Running stimulates the creation of new nerve cells and blood vessels within the brain, an organ that tends to shrink as a person ages
- researchers found the athletes' brains showed greater metabolic efficiency and neural plasticity.
- runners have a better ability to focus, to juggle multiple tasks, and to make distinctions.
- Researchers believe these larger glycogen stores in the brain may be one of the reasons running boosts cognitive function.
- Exercise promotes the release of the feel-good chemicals called endorphins. Additionally, like many antidepressant medications, running helps your brain hold on to mood-boosting neurotransmitters serotonin and norepinephrine
- Runners who log a weekly run of 10 miles (or more) are 39 percent less likely to use high-blood-pressure meds and 34 percent less likely to need cholesterol meds compared with those who don't go farther than three miles.
- Men who burn at least 3,000 calories per week (equal to about five hours of running) are 83 percent less likely to have severe erectile dysfunction.
- Running strengthens bones better than other aerobic activities, say University of Missouri researchers who compared the bone density of runners and cyclists. Sixty-three percent of the cyclists (Spin Class) had low density in their spine or hips; only 19 percent of runners did.
- Insomniacs fell asleep in 17 minutes on days they ran, compared to 38 minutes on days they didn't. They also slept for an extra hour on days they exercised.
- A review of 22 studies found that people who work out 2.5 hours a week are 19 percent less likely to die prematurely than those who don't exercise
- the high intensity group felt less afraid of the physical symptoms of anxiety
- those who exercised were “less anxious, less depressed, less neurotic, and also more socially outgoing.
- those who exercised two to three times a week “experience significantly less depression, anger, stress, and ‘cynical distrust.'”
No comments:
Post a Comment