The Benefits Of Exercise Are Seemingly Limitless!!!
19 02 2012The benefits of exercise are seemingly limitless. You already know that exercise is good for you physically. Health and fitness experts and professionals laud the physical benefits of regular exercise, which include improved cardiovascular health, increased energy, strength, and lean muscle mass, weight loss and loss of body fat, reduced risk for developing certain diseases, conditions, and disorders, and just generally into shape and looking good.
But exercise does so much more than simply get you into shape and help you to look good: it can make you feel good, too. Regular exercises affects you not only on a physical level but also mentally and emotionally: in other words, exercises affect mood. Working out on a regular basis has been shown, through a number of studies, to improve your overall sense of well-being, to reduce stress levels while improving your ability to deal with stress and stressful situations, to help you cope with anxiety and depression, to promote relaxation, to increase mental clarity, and even to improve your body language and attention to personal grooming.
But exactly how does exercise accomplish this? First of all, regular physical activity helps to improve mood by increasing your heart rate and then reducing muscular tension, which in turn relieves overall bodily tension, enabling you to relax and feel good. Further, many experts believe that when you exercise, hormone called endorphins ( often referred to as the “feel-good” hormones) are released from the brain into the body, which suppress pain sensations, ease feelings of stress, anxiety, and even depression, and produce a feeling of calm, pleasure, and general well-being.
Levels of serotonin, a neurotransmitter within the central nervous system, are also increased during exercise-particularly through engaging in repetitious exercises and movements. Serotonin’s function is to regular mood, in addition to body temperature, sleep, appetite, sexuality, and anger. Therefore, increased levels of serotonin mean an improved mood: conversely, low levels of serotonin are often associated with depression, obsessive-compulsion, and aggression.
Maybe this all sounds a little too scientific. There are other, perhaps simpler and more basic, ways of explaining how physical activity can improve your mood. For example, some people experience getting an emotional boost or “high” directly related to the physical results they see from working out. Basically, they notice their own weight loss or fat loss, their more toned muscle, or a leaner, sleeker shape, and simpler feel better because they know they look better. Others experience an improved mood as a result of taking control of their health by incorporating daily exercise into their lives, and sticking to their fitness plans. These individuals experience a sense of accomplishment in taking charge of their health and fitness, which also increases self-esteem and the higher your self-esteem, the better your overall mood.
Exercises is good for you on so many levels. Consider incorporating it into your life so you can improve your health, look good, and feel good, too.
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