• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
Senior Daily news for seniors

Senior Daily

Entertainment, Health, Deal News for Seniors

Deals - Health - Education -  Tech - Entertainment - About Us - Home - Search

Hate exercise? Small increases in physical activity can make a big difference

By Libby Richards Last Updated Monday, November 24, 2025 12:26 pm

A new year typically brings new resolutions. While making resolutions is easy, sticking with them is not. Exercise-related resolutions consistently make the top 10 list, but up to 80% of resolutions to be healthier, including promises to exercise more, are tossed aside by February.

You know physical activity is good for you. But, that isn’t always enough to get or keep you moving. You’re not alone. Fewer than half of American adults are as active as they should be.

How active should you be? The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommend that adults get at least 150 minutes of moderate-intensity physical activity every week.

So, let’s think about physical activity in a different way. As a nurse who researches exercise, I can tell you that it is likely the closest thing to a fountain of youth or a magic pill that you will have in your lifetime.

Benefits to all parts of your body

Research shows that every single system in the body benefits when you are more active. You sleep better. You have more energy. You find yourself in a better mood. You think more clearly and remember better. Your bones become stronger. Your body also responds better to insulin, which lowers your risk of diabetes. And you significantly reduce your risk for many cancers. All of that is in addition to the better known weight and heart benefits of physical activity.

Bottom line: If you want to live a long and healthy life, you need to be active.

But “that’s easier said than done,” you might be saying to yourself. In fact, increasing your physical activity is probably easier than you think. You don’t need to buy expensive equipment or join a gym. And you will begin to reap the rewards of physical activity almost as soon as you start. Adding small amounts of movement to your daily routine goes a long way.

Brisk walking, at a pace of at least a 20-minute mile, provides health benefits similar to running, and probably more social benefits. Plus, your risk of injury is much lower. And you can walk – for free with nothing more than comfortable shoes – from almost anywhere: your neighborhood, your office, or in lieu of waiting behind the wheel of your car in the pickup line at your kid’s school. A 22-minute walk every day, or two 11-minute ones, would put you just over 150 minutes every week.

It isn’t cheating to break your 150 minutes a week into small increments. In fact, even for people who are physically fit and exercise every day, breaking up periods of sitting is critically important. Even if you are getting enough exercise, sitting for the rest of the day can undo the health benefits of your workout. If you aren’t yet ready to aim for 2.5 hours of brisk walking each week, reducing the time you spend sitting would be a great starting goal.

Setting other goals

Many experts who work with clients or patients to set goals use the acronym SMART (specific, measurable, attainable, realistic and time-based) to guide goal-setting. This simple method could help you achieve a goal to sit less and move more in the new year:

  • Be specific. Rather than just “sit less, move more,” include when you will start and how will you do it. Specify what actions you will take to meet your goal. For example, make a list of how you can get more steps in each day by doing specific things, like taking the stairs instead of the elevator.
  • Make it measurable. Again, “less” and “more” are hard to measure. Instead, try “Walk for 5 minutes after every hour of sitting.” Without a way to measure your goal, it becomes hard to know when you have achieved it.
  • Make it attainable. If you currently don’t exercise at all, 150 minutes a week may not be realistic. How about three 20-minute walks per week? You can slowly increase after you achieve that first goal. And choose an activity you might enjoy. If you already know you hate running, a goal to do it every day would be less attainable.
  • Set realistic goals. Your new activity goal should work for you and fit within your lifestyle. It’s great to challenge yourself, but break up challenging goals into smaller, more realistic, goals to help keep on track.
  • Set a time by which you will meet your goal. For example, will you take a certain number of steps by noon each day? Or, will you build up to 150 minutes a week by mid-April? You’re more likely to achieve short-term goals that lead into a long-term one.

One of the best ways to keep up with your efforts is to track your progress. You can do it with pen and paper, in a journal, or in one of many smartphone apps. As you see yourself making progress, it can be easier to keep up the routine.

Expand your view of exercise

Another thing to keep in mind is that you don’t have to go a gym to get moving. There are ways to make exercise part of your lifestyle, without too much inconvenience.

  • Get the family involved. Play tag, go on a scavenger hunt at a local park, or walk to your favorite hangout.
  • Park farther away from your workplace, the store, the library, etc.
  • Walk during your breaks at work and over your lunch period.
  • Instead of having coffee with friends, take a walk with them.
  • Whenever you are on the phone, stand up and walk around.
  • If you are at your kid’s or grandkid’s sporting event, walk the sidelines instead of sitting on the bleachers.
  • Try to find ways to make walking more meaningful. For example, try walking your own dog or a shelter dog. Dogs make great exercise companions that will never turn down an opportunity to walk.

As you undertake the big change from being inactive to becoming active, understand that setbacks happen. Don’t let one slip-up derail your whole goal. When possible, have a backup plan to deal with barriers like weather or time constraints. And celebrate the small victories you make toward reaching longer-term goals.

Looking for more tips on how to get started? Check out this guide.

[ Like what you’ve read? Want more? Sign up for The Conversation’s daily newsletter. ]The Conversation

Libby Richards, Associate Professor of Nursing, Purdue University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Filed Under: Health Return to Senior Daily Home Page

About Libby Richards

Dr. Richards’ research efforts focus on understanding and intervening on the individual, interpersonal, and environmental influences on physical activity behavior. Past studies have focused on the use of dog walking to increase physical activity and included the implementation and evaluation of two randomized controlled trials (funded by the American Kennel Club and the Human Animal Bond Research Initiative). These interventions demonstrated effectiveness in a similar manner and led to examining the impact of this intervention strategy in new settings and in new populations. A larger scale of this intervention, funded by Purdue Extension and named Get WalkIN’, was delivered through Purdue Extension Educators in sixteen Indiana counties. Due to this program success, Purdue Extension has implemented Dr. Richards’ intervention across the state of Indiana.

Dr. Richards’ research also involves examination of dyadic relationships in physical activity promotion. Findings from Dr. Richards’ dog walking studies highlight the importance of external support for increasing physical activity which led to development of a research team to examine other types of social partnering that could support behavior change. This interdisciplinary team conducted a pilot intervention (funded by the Kinley Foundation) examining the effectiveness of a couple-focused collaborative goal setting intervention to increase physical activity among older adults in committed relationships. This intervention increased activity an average of 60 min/wk while leveraging the strong association between couples’ physical activity behavior.

In addition, she serves in several leadership positions in the field of public health, including as a Board Member for the Indiana Public Health Association and past member of the American Public Health Association Action Board. She is one of seven individuals hired by Purdue University to promote research across disciplines in public health. Dr. Richards’ is a faculty associate for Purdue’s Center for Aging and the Life Course. In addition, she is a faculty partner for Purdue’s Center for Families. She actively mentors students interested in population health and public health nursing. She currently teaches Population Health and Public Health Nursing.

Primary Sidebar

Weekly Grocery Ads

  • Albertsons
  • Aldi
  • Food Lion
  • Fresh Market
  • Harris Teeter
  • Kroger
  • Lowe's Foods
  • Publix
  • Safeway
  • Sprouts
  • Whole Foods

Big Retailer Ads

  • Costco
  • Home Depot
  • Lowes Hardware
  • Target
  • Walmart

Useful Links

  • TV Guide for Today
  • Top 10 TV Shows from Nielsen
  • TV Listings 1975-76
  • AARP TV Recommendations
  • Today's Top TV Shows from IMDB
  • Top Movies - 50 Years Ago
  • NY Times Best Seller List
  • Best Places to Retire in the US
  • Medicare Website
  • Social Security Website
  • AARP
  • Celebrity deaths

Features You May Have Missed

Creating a Facebook account

How to Use Facebook to Reconnect with Your Past

Saturday, May 1, 2021

Facebook is a great place to reconnect with people from your past. It can take a bit of detective work, but if the people you’re looking for are online, you can probably find them.

Is This The Best Pain Relief Medication?

Wednesday, April 14, 2021

The most effective pain relief medication available today – even better than prescription drugs – might be a combination of two popular over-the-counter drugs, recent studies have shown.

Apple Airtag

Do You Need a Tracking Device?

Monday, September 5, 2022

Do you ever have trouble finding your car keys? Or your wallet? Or your remote control? A bluetooth tracker may be what you need. Senior Daily tech expert Michael Miller explains the options.

This Day in History
Today's Holiday
Todays Birthday
Word of the Day
Quote of the Day
Article of the Day
This Day in History, Today's Holiday, Birthday, Article of the Day provided by TheFreeDictionary.com

Terms of Use: Senior Daily is not directly affiliated with the brands, companies or retailers of the products listed on this web site, and in no way claims to represent or own their trademarks, logos, marketing materials, or products. Any trademarks that appear are the exclusive property of their owners. © 2022 Senior Daily | Facebook | Contact: editor@seniordaily.com | Gil Arnold 9954 Lodestone Drive, Brentwood, TN 37027