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The idea is to record your
activity each day. If you like to swim, ride and run, track these
activities. Your diary could typically include date, swim
(time/distance/sec per 50m), cycle (time/distance/min per km), run
cycle (time/distance/min per km), strength (time), stretches (time),
weight, fat %, water %, muscle %, resting HR, training HR (average),
blood pressure and comments. In addition, you may like to make sure
you stretch and spend some time with free weight. If you are really
interested in strength training you may wish to track the reps &
sets. You get the drift.
"Scales can be quite clever; new
designs use inductive measurement between your two bare feet to
calculate the %fat, %water and %muscle in your body..."
The comments field is to record how you
are feeling, the weather, a special run or ride etc. When you look
back over your diary in months to come, your comments may help you
make sense of a particularly great or poor ride time.
Keeping track of your
weight is always a good idea, even if weight control is not a main
goal of yours. Scales can be quite clever; new designs use inductive
measurement between your two bare feet to calculate the %fat, %water
and %muscle in your body. Some scales allow you to nominate the
height, sex, age of the whole family, and will show whether the
weight etc is within a normal range. We are not totally convinced of
their absolute accuracy, but they certainly show a gratifying trend.
They are well worth the investment (around $100 to $150), and can
show you if you are dehydrated. So measure your height and enter
your details on your new set of scales. Keep the scales on a hard
surface; your bathroom tiled floor is perfect. Measurements can be
affected by carpet and other soft surfaces. Weigh yourself naked or
in light underwear, in the morning before exercise or eating. You
should weigh yourself regularly at the same time, say once or twice
a week.
Start your Fitness diary by entering the
date of week 1, date of birth, height, weight and %fat, %water,
%muscle (if your scales show this). In the morning before you get
out of bed, take your resting heart rate. You can do this by using
an electronic heart rate monitor (if you have one) or by taking a
watch and counting your heart beats for 15 seconds. Multiply this
amount by 4 to get your heart rate /min. Write your resting heart
rate in your diary. This is good to record, because your resting
heart rate is a good indicator of your fitness. As you get fitter
the rate will get lower. An elite athlete may have a heart rate of
50 or even lower.
If you wish to keep track of your
measurements, either to watch a waist get smaller or biceps get
bigger, grab a tape measure and measure away!
"Write your resting
heart rate in your diary. This is good to record, because your
resting heart rate is a good indicator of your fitness..."
If you or your doctor is concerned about
your blood pressure, you may wish to personally monitor your blood
pressure with a portable electronic monitor, available from a
chemist or online for around $120. Keeping a record of your blood
pressure is a great way to convince your doctor that you don’t need
to go on medication, or even come off medication you may have been
on for years.
With your spreadsheet, you can graph any
of the data that you record. On the second tab we have included a
graph to plot your weight, to start you off. In the same vein, you
could monitor your time taken to cycle your favourite ride or time
to swim 1000m.
You can modify your training diary to
record any special goals; for example you may wish to ride the
Around the Bay in a Day 220km ride. This is a major achievement for
most people and most would need to train for this goal. Your diary
can help you set clear goals and help show progress.
And remember that before you embark on
any new fitness regime, you should check with your doctor first.
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