While the fitness industry has improved so many lives via education of safe practices surrounding a healthy lifestyle, it’s shadow side has done a great deal of harm. I prefer to look at the Fitness Industry as a set of twins. There’s the good twin that teaches things such as getting enough rest, having a balanced diet and meditation practices. Then there’s the evil twin, pushing questionable supplements, detox diets and unrealistic body image. Unfortunately, it is often hard to discern the difference between the two; they are twins after all! While there are so many issues in this faux fitness world, I will begin by highlighting a few to look out for.
Myth: Thin Physiques Are The Only Expression of Health
A healthy body does not look the exact same for everyone, despite what all the magazines told us growing up. Now with social media, the deception of what a healthy body looks like has become even more warped, especially with photoshop and filters. A few things to note when you see images of a super lean or muscular individual online:
1. Most images of very lean/skinny individuals do not tell the whole story. The individual may genetically be slimmer. This goes back to the idea that a healthy body does not look the same for everyone. A short and curvy individual will not look the same as a tall and slender individual- nor should they!
2. Disordered eating/extreme exercise could be the reason why someone is very thin. Attempting to match an individual’s body currently struggling with these health issues is not a good idea, for obvious reasons.
3. The individual may be in “competition shape” for body building or bikini competitions, which requires a very lean and muscular physique. This is not something they maintain year-round, as it is stressful on the body to be that lean for too long.
4. Body composition factors into health as well. One might be very thin but have very little muscle, which can also pose health problems.
The goal should always be to inhabit the healthiest version of your body, not what someone else has told you is healthy.
Myth: Quick Fixes Produce Lasting Results
In my experience, the more extreme measures taken to quickly lose weight, the harder the rebound of putting the weight back on. Setting yourself up for a continuous cycle of yo-yoing back and forth between weight extremes is never a good situation to be in. Following strict diet plans or intense exercise routines are tempting because everyone wants to see results quickly! Many also believe that if you get all the weight off then you can go back to living a lifestyle that you want to. Ask yourself if you could maintain your current health routine for the rest of your life. If the answer is no, you are likely creating too much change too soon. The weight didn’t come on all at once so don’t expect it to drop off quickly either. Slow and steady really does win the race.
Myth: Supplements Have More Efficacy Than The “Big Rocks”
Preying on our desire for quick results that have simple solutions, many companies’ way oversell (or outright falsify) the importance of their fitness supplements, claiming they will melt body fat, transform your health etc. Many of these scams are built around the fact that you must take their supplement to be healthier or lose weight. This is a big red flag. While some supplements can be helpful to support an overall healthy lifestyle, such as whey protein or fish oil, they are not the largest contributing factor. This is great news, as many supplements can be very expensive while the “big rocks” of fitness are more accessible. Sleep, exercise, diet, mental, social and spiritual wellbeing are some of the largest pieces of health that will prove to yield much greater results than any supplement ever could. The old analogy of filling a jar with the big rocks first and then the little pebbles to fill in the gaps holds true here as well.
Myth: Fitness Requires Motivation/Hype All The Time
Many individuals think that there are “fitness people” where fitness just comes easy all the time. I’d argue rather that what makes someone a fitness person is somebody who shows up when they don’t want to. In fact, most of the time the motivation really isn’t there to make the healthier choice because it is often the more difficult one. Motivation is fleeting; sometimes everything aligns perfectly and you feel motivated to eat well and exercise! Life also happens and more often than not you might feel too busy, tired or unmotivated to go to the gym or make a healthier food choice. While not the only factor in creating a consistent lifestyle practice of health, discipline is a useful skill that you can practice honing. It will help you continue to push the needle forward on days when motivation is nowhere to be found.