Exercise & Weight Loss
Myth: Exercise is the best way to lose weight
The Compensation Problem
- People often eat more after exercise[1]
- Exercise increases food reward sensitivity[2]
- Typical calorie burn: 300-500 kcal per workout. One muffin: 400 kcal.
Diet vs Exercise for Weight Loss
- Diet alone is more effective than exercise alone for weight loss[3]
- Exercise is great for health—just don't expect it to melt fat on its own
Key insight: Exercise is essential for health but poor for weight loss. Diet controls weight; exercise controls fitness.
What Exercise IS Good For
- Improves insulin sensitivity even without weight loss[4]
- Improves quality of life[5]
- Muscle preservation, bone density, cardiovascular health, mood
Cardio Training
HIIT vs Steady Cardio
- Both improve cardiovascular risk factors similarly[6]
- HIIT is more enjoyable for many people[7]
- HIITⓘ
Which to Choose?
- HIIT if: you're short on time, get bored easily, want variety
- Steady cardio if: you enjoy running/cycling, want lower injury risk, prefer mental "zone out" time
- The best cardio is the one you'll actually do
Strength Training
Why Lift Weights?
- Builds/maintains muscle (crucial as you age)
- Improves metabolic health and bone density
- Effective even with resistance bands[9]
- You don't need a gym or heavy weights
Intensity Matters Less Than You Think
- Low and high intensity both build strength[10]
- Consistency beats intensity
- Progressive overloadⓘ
Common Mistakes
Overcomplicating It
Myth: You need an optimal program to see results
- Any consistent exercise beats an "optimal" program you don't follow
- Walking counts. Stairs count. Playing with kids counts.
All-or-Nothing Thinking
- 10 minutes is better than 0 minutes
- A light workout is better than a skipped workout
- Imperfect consistency beats perfect intensity
Ignoring What You Enjoy
- Hating your workout predicts quitting
- Try different activities until something clicks
- Social exercise (sports, classes) improves adherence
Practical Guidelines
Minimum Effective Dose
- 150 minutes moderate activity per week (or 75 minutes vigorous)
- 2 strength sessions per week
- These are minimums—more is better up to a point
Recovery Matters
- Muscles grow during rest, not during exercise
- Sleep is essential for fitness gains
- Overtraining leads to injury and burnout
Summary
- For weight loss: focus on diet; exercise helps but isn't primary
- For health: any exercise is better than none
- For cardio: HIIT and steady are both fine; pick what you enjoy
- For strength: consistency beats intensity; equipment is optional
References
- Church TS, et al. (2009). Changes in Weight, Waist Circumference and Compensatory Responses with Different Doses of Exercise among Sedentary, Overweight Postmenopausal Women. PLOS ONE. [DOI]
- Flack KD, et al. (2020). The consequences of exercise-induced weight loss on food reinforcement. PLOS ONE. [DOI]
- Hunter GR, et al. (2014). Does the Method of Weight Loss Effect Long-Term Changes in Weight, Body Composition or Chronic Disease Risk Factors in Overweight or Obese Adults?. PLOS ONE. [DOI]
- Ross R, et al. (2018). Effects of aerobic training with and without weight loss on insulin sensitivity and lipids. PLOS ONE. [DOI]
- Imayama I, et al. (2015). Quality of Life after Diet or Exercise-Induced Weight Loss in Overweight to Obese Postmenopausal Women. PLOS ONE. [DOI]
- Costa EC, et al. (2019). Effects of HIIT and MICT on cardiovascular risk factors in adults with overweight/obesity: A meta-analysis. PLOS ONE. [DOI]
- Thum JS, et al. (2016). High-Intensity Interval Training Elicits Higher Enjoyment than Moderate Intensity Continuous Exercise. PLOS ONE. [DOI]
- Wang Y, et al. (2024). Effects of elastic band resistance training on the physical and mental health of older adults. PLOS ONE. [DOI]
- Faigenbaum AD, et al. (2016). The Chronic Effects of Low- and High-Intensity Resistance Training on Muscular Fitness in Adolescents. PLOS ONE. [DOI]