8,000 at 20

This entry is part 2 of 14 in the series John Briffa's "A Good Look at Good Health"

Memorize this: “8,000 at 20”

That is: “8,000 steps at a 20-minute-mile walking pace.” I’ll explain below, but first…

The researchers involved in this study then looked at what levels of activity appeared to be associated with BENEFITS for PHYSICAL and MENTAL health. What they found was that improved physical health was seen in individuals taking 8,000 steps a day at [a certain] intensity.

The threshold above which there was an associated benefit for MENTAL health was lower: only 4,000 steps a day at [a certain] intensity.

~ John Briffa from, «http://www.drbriffa.com/2009/06/05/walking-may-be-ideal-exercise-as-we-age/»

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It’s not about how far you walk; Don’t worry about how long your legs are. It’s about how hard you are working when you walk. Basically, you need to do the steps at a level of exertion that is roughly 3 times you base metabolic rate; That is to say, the rate at which your body burns energy when you are sitting still doing nothing. The intensity this research points at is roughly a 20-minute-mile walking pace for average height/legs. This is faster than “I’m strolling” but well below “I’m late! speed walking”.

Just go walk for 45 minutes every day.

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Art du Deplacement

This entry is part 23 of 72 in the series My Journey

LVPK representing! So happy we got this trip in!

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East River Park

Bleachers. Stairs. Hmmmmm … what could we possibly do here?

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Fix your posture old school

WWII Workout Week concludes with some exercises you can do to improve your posture. While posture is an oft neglected part of physical training programs, it provides a myriad of benefits and can boost both your physiological functions and your confidence.

~ Brett McKay from, WWII Workout Week: Posture Training

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Circa 1946, from the Army field manual FM 21-20. ‘ten-HUT!

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Ba-bye Brooklyn

Hello again NYC. Glorious weather over here!

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Breakfast

Food first, then off to East River Park.

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Bananagrams

Post-training cafe play at Manny’s in Brooklyn. The Lancaster Parkour post-training chocolate milk tradition continues!

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Doughnut?!

Creme Brulee doughnut… waaaaaaaaaaaaaaat. yummy.

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Day One

In the bag. What an awesome group of people. Spirit all around…. what heart!!

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The folly of the unwise

When I left, the search for my replacement took a long time. Much longer than I’d have preferred, and to an eventually unsatisfactory conclusion for everyone involved, I believe. I contented myself with the knowledge that my skill set was sufficiently wide in breadth and complex in nature that I was hard to replace. I used this to buoy my ego. ALthough I had sympathy for the people I was leaving, and the one I left in my stead, it felt good to be needed and wanted, and I was proud that I could fill that role like no one else we’d found.

Such is the folly of the unwise, I’m afraid.

~ Matt Simmons from, «http://www.standalone-sysadmin.com/blog/2013/02/and-when-you-gaze-long-into-an-infrastructure-the-infrastructure-will-gaze-back-into-you/»

Note to self: Hang out with Matt more and listen to what he has to say.

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