How to Lose Fat and Improve Fitness: The Key is Exercise, Not Activity

Ross Harrison
There are many different opinions about fitness and fat loss, but a common viewpoint suggests that all you need to do is increase your activity level and/or decrease your caloric intake to be successful. While this may have some truth in theory, it does not always hold true in real life and it is certainly not the best strategy for improving long-term fitness and fat loss.

Increasing your activity level and exercising are definitely not the same thing. While they are related, the difference between them is often the difference between success and failure when it comes to losing fat and improving overall health and fitness. Exercise is one way to increase your activity level, but there are many ways to increase your activity level that should not be classified as exercise.

Webster's defines exercise as: "bodily exertion for the sake of developing and maintaining physical fitness." The key point in this definition is that activity has to affect fitness to be considered exercise.

A good exercise program is always designed to improve various aspects of fitness (strength, endurance, flexibility, etc.), as opposed to being designed just to burn calories. Having the goal to increase your activity level will increase the number of calories you burn, but it will not necessarily improve your fitness level. This is incredibly important, because increasing your fitness level is essential to long-term fat loss and improved health.

Just increasing your activity level to burning more calories and lose weight usually only results in short-term success. You may have experienced this at some point yourself, if you ever had initial improvements, which were followed by a lack of further results. Personally, I went through a period where I was doing cardio workouts once or even twice a day to increase my activity level and lose fat, but soon after I started, I stopped seeing any improvements whatsoever.

My problem was not that I needed to increase my activity level more, but rather I had to stop focusing on doing activities to burn calories and start exercising. In other words, I needed to perform activities that were designed to improve my fitness level and not just burn calories. There may not seem like a big difference between the two, but this small change in approach will lead to a huge improvement in results.

I would argue that, especially for people who have sedentary (non-active) lifestyles, any initial increase in activity should be considered exercise. If someone is out of shape, almost any type of activity will improve their fitness level. I believe it is the improvement in fitness level and not just the increase in activity level that ultimately is responsible for the initial positive results.

To further illustrate this point; let's take a look at probably the most common scenario for increasing activity. Walking is a natural choice as a starting activity, because it is something people already know how to do, requires essentially no equipment (although appropriate shoes are recommended), and it can be done almost anywhere. For people who are not used to walking, it will be somewhat challenging at first, and their body will be forced to adapt to the new stimulus, thus improving their fitness level.

However, as the person's fitness level improves, chances are they will not adjust their walking routine. It is very common for people to walk the same distance and speed, often taking the same route whenever they walk. Over the course of time, what was once a challenging walk that stimulated improvements in health and fitness, becomes a walk that just burns calories. More importantly, when the walk stops being challenging, a stop in fat loss usually occurs.

Another important issue is the more you perform an activity, the more efficient your body becomes at that activity. When starting a new activity, your body is not very efficient and a higher percentage of your muscles are used to perform the activity. Over time, the amount of energy your body uses for the activity will slowly decline. In other words, the same activity will result in fewer calories burned than when the activity was new.

I am not trying to say there aren't any health benefits to increasing your activity level and if you are currently not very active, doing anything to become more active is a good thing. However, if you want to lose fat and improve your fitness over the long run, just increasing your activity level will not cut it. You need to exercise and continually challenge your body if you want to achieve long-term fat loss and fitness success.

One final note: Nutrition plays at least as big of a role as exercise in health, fitness, and fat loss. Even the best exercise program cannot make up for a bad nutritional program, but this article is only meant to address the activity component of an overall health and fitness program.

Published by Ross Harrison

Ross Harrison has been a member of the National Strength and Conditioning Association and involved in the fitness industry since 1996. He is a certified personal trainer, certified strength and conditioning...  View profile

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