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For twenty-three years Lena Brightwood ended nearly every first session with the same sentence: "If you walked, on most days, for the rest of your life, you would probably outlive the version of yourself who did not." She kept a whiteboard with three columns — the popular exercise trends, the patients she treated for injuries from those trends, and the patients who simply took up walking. The third column outperformed the other two on almost every measure she could track, and unlike the trend-followers, it showed up again the next year.
This is the case for walking as the foundation of lifelong fitness, made in plain language and grounded in what the data actually says. Brightwood walks you through what happens in the body on a single walk, from the gait cycle that engages roughly two hundred muscles in coordinated motion to the way moderate movement keeps your arteries supple and steadies blood sugar after a meal. She is honest about limits: walking will not dissolve forty pounds in ninety days, and she explains the real, complicated relationship between walking and weight instead of selling a magic number. Along the way she dismantles the cardio myth, traces how jogging and the aerobic boom demoted walking to the warm-up, and shows where walking for weight loss, walking for longevity, and walking for mental health truly sit in the evidence.
Inside this walking and fitness book:
- The cardio myth, corrected — Why walking at the volumes most people can sustain produces health outcomes that compare favorably to running and most gym programs, at a fraction of the injury rate
- Walking for weight, told straight — The truth about energy balance, why appetite and metabolism fight back, and what a daily walking habit can and cannot do for body weight
- What a walk does inside you — The gait cycle's roughly two hundred muscles, a heart working in the range it was designed for, suppler arteries, and steadier post-meal blood sugar
- Walking for mental health and sleep — How a daily walk reshapes mood, sleep, and your relationship to time, which may be the most important benefit of all
- Walking and longevity — Why the longest-lived populations on Earth are not running but walking all day, and why the biggest benefit comes in the first thirty to ninety minutes
- Every season of life — Dedicated chapters on walking for beginners, after surgery or injury, with arthritis, through pregnancy, with kids and dogs, through grief, and well past sixty and seventy
- Habits that survive February — Sample weekly plans, a thirty-day starter program, and habit architecture built to outlast rain, travel, and the third week of a cold month
Brightwood will not sell you a trademarked program, a step-count promise, or anything beyond a pair of shoes you can walk in. What she offers instead is permission to do something quiet, repeatable, free, and unglamorous, knowing it is by every reasonable measure one of the most powerful things you can do for the rest of your life. A daily walking habit, she argues, is not the warm-up. It is the foundation almost no exercise program can replace.
For readers who want walking for longevity and lifelong fitness grounded in real clinical experience rather than fitness-industry marketing.
Catégories
Caractéristiques
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- ISBN9798905161056
- ÉditeurChiify
- Date de publication4 juin 2026
- FormatEpub
- ProtectionAucune
- Catégories BISACSanté & Mise En Forme / Exercice / Généralités, Santé & Mise En Forme / Vaccinations, Santé & Mise En Forme / Alimentation & Nutrition / Perte de poids
- LangueAnglais
