Female
Fitness: Special Considerations for Active Women
For female athletes and fitness gurus out there,
heeding to popular advice about diet, energy, and even supplemental
needs as they pertain to your level of fitness may not actually be
in your best interest. In regards to gauging what your body needs
in response to the physical stress of exercise, the needs of you,
as a woman, are not the same as they are for men. To anticipate and
address your needs as a female fitness guru, make
sure the information you seek speaks directly to your needs not
only as an active person, but also as a woman.
Common
Pitfalls
It is probably a given that most women exercise
to live healthy lives, decrease their risk of certain diseases,
also to boost their self-confidence. But another reason that a lot
of women become active is to lose weight. Active women who adapt
low calorie diets to lose weight need to be aware that if their
caloric intake is too low they are putting themselves at risk not
only for vitamin and nutrient deficiencies, but also for stress
fractures, low energy levels and the disruption of their menstrual
cycles. Healthy female fitness should include adequate energy
intake, which varies from person to person. Make sure your meals
are timed around your workouts, allowing you enough time to eat a
meal or snack before you hit the gym. The key to optimal fitness as
a female is appropriate energy intake.
In regards to strength training for female
fitness, a common myth that women often fall prey to is the notion
that using added weight for resistance exercises will cause a
substantial gain in muscle mass. Many people believe that using
lighter weights with fewer repetitions is the best way to tone up
the female body without bulking up, but the truth is that in order
to increase your overall strength you’re better off gradually
increasing the weight you’re using for your exercises. As long as
you’re mixing strength training and cardiovascular exercises you
won’t bulk up without an excess of caloric intake.
Carbohydrates
Even if you’re not taking in a high number of
calories each day to add muscle weight, many women use sports
drinks, gels, bars, powders, etc. to supplement their
workouts. While these products can be a very convenient way
to meet your energy needs before and after a workout, women still
need to pay attention to the content of the products they’re
using. Recent trends in female fitness
information seem to send the general message that consuming
carbohydrates is bad, and ramping up your protein consumption is
more conducive to becoming leaner. But your body needs
carbohydrates before and after exercise, more so than it needs
protein in that period of time. Not consuming enough carbohydrates
before or after exercise will impair your body’s ability to recover
from exercise, and to perform in the future.
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