Exercise

What the evidence actually says about fitness

Exercise & Weight Loss

Myth: Exercise is the best way to lose weight

The Compensation Problem

Diet vs Exercise for Weight Loss

Key insight: Exercise is essential for health but poor for weight loss. Diet controls weight; exercise controls fitness.

What Exercise IS Good For

Cardio Training

HIIT vs Steady Cardio

Which to Choose?

Strength Training

Why Lift Weights?

Intensity Matters Less Than You Think

Common Mistakes

Overcomplicating It

Myth: You need an optimal program to see results

All-or-Nothing Thinking

Ignoring What You Enjoy

Practical Guidelines

Minimum Effective Dose

Recovery Matters

Summary

References

  1. 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]
  2. Flack KD, et al. (2020). The consequences of exercise-induced weight loss on food reinforcement. PLOS ONE. [DOI]
  3. 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]
  4. Ross R, et al. (2018). Effects of aerobic training with and without weight loss on insulin sensitivity and lipids. PLOS ONE. [DOI]
  5. Imayama I, et al. (2015). Quality of Life after Diet or Exercise-Induced Weight Loss in Overweight to Obese Postmenopausal Women. PLOS ONE. [DOI]
  6. 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]
  7. Thum JS, et al. (2016). High-Intensity Interval Training Elicits Higher Enjoyment than Moderate Intensity Continuous Exercise. PLOS ONE. [DOI]
  8. Wang Y, et al. (2024). Effects of elastic band resistance training on the physical and mental health of older adults. PLOS ONE. [DOI]
  9. Faigenbaum AD, et al. (2016). The Chronic Effects of Low- and High-Intensity Resistance Training on Muscular Fitness in Adolescents. PLOS ONE. [DOI]