Quote:
Originally Posted by NYRabbit
I would love some input on this one though: One thing though that I wonder about is my WW leader, when explaining the activity calculator to us, said that in general, not one of us will ever actually exercise at "high" intensity. She said that "high" intensity is practically the equivalent of running a marathon or doing a decathalon, etc. She said that normal things we do at a gym (i.e., elliptical, weight training, treadmill, etc.) are really only "moderate" intensity. She said it may feel like more work than it really is because of our previous inactivity/extra weight we're carrying. But despite feeling "high" it really is not. So all along I have been counting everything I do, even if it feels really hard, as moderate and never high, which naturally means fewer activity points.
What's everyone's take on this? I am intrigued.
There's an article in the January Self magazine about this. it says there's two ways to track how hard you're working. the high-tech way (a heart monitor), and the low tech way (if you can sing, talk, say a few words).
according to the high-tech way, you have subtract your age from 220 to figure out your maximum.
low intensity:
(maximum) x .65 = (low intensity heart rate)
moderate intensity:
(maximum) x .80 = (moderate intensity heart rate)
hight intensity:
(maximum ) x .9 = (high intensty heart rate)
i just take my pulse to see where it falls, or some cardio machines have sensors.
maybe your instructor meant that you ladies are not in the physical shape to be doing high intensity? i don't know, i'm glad things are working for you, but she seems to be giving you some wrong information.