Hello ForMyGirls,
Love your avatar. It is a stunning scenery. How many girls do you have?
It was so nice to read your words. I love mountains too. It is my element - some of my friends used to call me "mountain goat or blond buck" and I plan on getting to the top of one next weekend.
Ten years ago, I was on antidepressants and followed by a psychiatrist. After the third week, I had seen a drastic upswing in my mood, so the psychiatrist asked me what I had done all week. I was doing 90 to 120 minutes of bike per day (the bike was my means of locomotion). I was also walking a lot.
He looked at me and said, your present well-being is not from your meds , it is from your physical activity, and if you want to stop your meds that's fine with me which I did.
Too bad I did not stick to the exercise.
There are numerous studies that correlate the good short and long time effects of exercise on moods. Exercise is even doing better on the long run.
Quote:
Some of the evidence for that comes from broad, population-based correlation studies. "There's good epidemiological data to suggest that active people are less depressed than inactive people. And people who were active and stopped tend to be more depressed than those who maintain or initiate an exercise program," says James Blumenthal, PhD, a clinical psychologist at Duke University.
The evidence comes from experimental studies as well. Blumenthal has explored the mood-exercise connection through a series of randomized controlled trials. In one such study, he and his colleagues assigned sedentary adults with major depressive disorder to one of four groups: supervised exercise, home-based exercise, antidepressant therapy or a placebo pill. After four months of treatment, Blumenthal found, patients in the exercise and antidepressant groups had higher rates of remission than did the patients on the placebo. Exercise, he concluded, was generally comparable to antidepressants for patients with major depressive disorder (Psychosomatic Medicine, 2007).
Blumenthal followed up with the patients one year later. The type of treatment they received during the four-month trial didn't predict remission a year later, he found. However, subjects who reported regular exercise at the one-year follow-up had lower depression scores than did their less active counterparts (Psychosomatic Medicine, 2010). "Exercise seems not only important for treating depression, but also in preventing relapse," he says.
Nice talking to you ForMyGirls, for the last twelve years I have felt a special kinship with people from Australia on a political message board. One of my closest friend is from Melbourne. I wish you a successful weight loss journey.