HOW TO MAKE THE MOST OF YOUR FITNESS TRACKER.
1.) Go your own way: Fitness goals are great, but you should not let your device set it for you. Instead of stressing over the preset goal of 10,000 steps per day-which may be too many or too few for you-see how many steps your current lifestyle reasonably allows you to achieve, then work toward a higher number.
2. Adjust accordingly. Anita Hamilton warns
users that most fitness trackers overestimate the number of calories
you burn by at least 10-15%; for some exercises, such as cycling,
trackers without a built in heart rate monitor may be off by more than
half. The solution? Calculate your workout’s calorie burn totals
yourself and enter them into your tracker’s app manually.
3. Be patient. It will take time for your device to
gather useful data, so don’t pay too much attention to the numbers in
the first week or so. “The point of collecting your data is to find the
averages over time and create a baseline,”. “The data on day one won’t necessarily create an
accurate picture of your life. Over time, however, the averages will
more accurately reflect your true fitness level, and those are the
numbers that matter.”
4. Stay balanced. Fitness trackers can be good
motivators, but don’t let yours rule your life. If you obsess over the
daily goals you have set for yourself, you may lose sight of other
things that matter (remember friends and family?). That’s the lesson
that Redbook.com contributor Susan Dominus learned
from her experience with a tracker: “The key, I realized, is finding
some happy balance between reevaluating old habits (sitting, driving)
and a mindless devotion to counting and competing.”
5. Find a friend. While your fitness tracker may help
move you towards a healthier, more active lifestyle, think about adding a
buddy to your new-you team. Friends can help each other stay
accountable to goals and are much more pleasant to be around than a
device that can only beep its encouragement. Kieran
Alger writes,
“You’re going to need something to keep that fitness band interesting.
By far the best way is to dive head first into the social and community
that comes with most devices, or get friends and family involved.” Hamilton warns users to focus on your own goals rather than
turning exercise into a competition: “The motivating effect from being
part of a group only works when you’re winning. As an alternative,
consider setting short-term goals that build on your own baseline
activity level instead.”
Interesting to know, going your own way and not depending on trackers. Also being patient, many people usually want immediate outcomes.
ReplyDeleteTrue most people rely on the trackers to determine everything for them.I thought it is a good way to go until this.Good info indeed.
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