There are new exercise "crazes" every year, and many of them are "fun." That's great. Going to a club and dancing all night is fun. It makes you sweat. It gets your heart rate up. Awesome. Does it get you stronger? Does it make you healthier? Does it make you look better naked?
It amazes me how many times I have had to try to explain to someone who has just complained to me for 20 minutes about how big her legs are, that she needs to stop spinning 3x a week. "But I love spinning", she says. "Great", I say, "but do you love it more than you hate having big legs?" Listen, I'm actually a fan of big muscles, so if you have thick, firm thighs from spinning I'm good with that. But if you want thinner legs, you cannot spin 3x a week. Have you ever seen a spin instructor with thin legs? Muscular and toned legs, yes. "Thin legs"? Nope. You get the idea.
You need to train for the goal you have in mind, not necessarily what you "like" to do.
Training is something you do to achieve a specific result. Exercising is something active that you like to do. There is a very big difference between the two.I like to play hockey. That is my fun and that is where I get to enjoy the benefits of my hard work in the gym. Being faster is fun, being stronger is fun, being able to play all game long and not get tired or injured is fun. And although hockey is strenuous exercise , it alone will not give me the results I want. If that was my only form of exercise that I was willing to do (because it is fun), I would be very disappointed in my physique and other goals. I must perform workouts that build muscle and burn fat, and leave the fun for the other activities that I love.Going to the beach is fun, especially when you are confident in the way you look in a bathing suit. Being insecure and self-conscious at the beach is not fun.
So the moral of the story is that while some workout programs may be "fun", you are going to get more long term enjoyment from workouts that "work", even if they are not so much fun while you do them. Train for results. Exercise for fun.
-Scott
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