All sensible advice, but if I had listened to my doctor, I'd have been on statins for the past three years instead of having lost over 3 and 3/4 stones. He couldn't believe it, said people tell him they'll lose weight, but never do.I used to be a keen runner in the past. When I was forty, I could do a half marathon in 1 hour 18 minutes. It is important for those who have not been running recently, that they start SLOWLY and GENTLY and do SHORT distances, gradually increasing in all three dimensions.
If you don't start easy and build up, but instead just rush into it, you will suffer for it and this will stop you continuing.
A good approach for the non runner wanting to get fit, is to walk 100 paces, or a fifty meter lamp post interval, then slow jog the next same interval, and then walk, and then slow jog. After a daily round of about a mile like this, after about a week, increase the speed a little, and do another week. Then double the length of the running distance, but keep the walking one the same. Then stop the walking and run the mile for a daily exercise for a week or two, then do two miles. Pretty soon you will be doing half marathons if you build it up like this.
No pain
No exhaustion
No bad joints.
People who have heart problems should talk to the doctor first. Other people can just do what I said above. Never keep going as a beginner if you start to feel bad. Just walk home and sit down.
I never ran marathons, because I think they're bad for joints. I did run three miles or more every night, or every other night for years until life got in the way. What you decsribe is known as "Fart stopping" in the army. An ex-SAS dude many years told me about it: run a little, calm down as you walk a little, run, walk etc - "Start/stopping". And that's how I resumed jogging (but slow, not bounding about like when I was young) three years ago... first time out I slow jogged about 10 feet and almost died shouting "WHAT THE HELL HAS HAPPENED TO MY BODY?!?! IT'S ONLY BEEN A FEW DECADES!!!" Six months later I was able to run three miles in one go again. But I lost weight through intermittent fasting, not exercise.
That hill becomes steeper further up, while it's absurdly easy to shoot up at 25kph, even with the 36V BBS01B controller on my 20" wheels at only 18.4A, not the 20A available...
(apologies to Richard Strauss, who can't possibly care, because he has no glands)
... I'm down to about 6
This good looking bird says ebikes are good for you...
...mine isn't! But it isn't meant to be. Exercise is not what my ebike is for. I can't imagine an appropriately programmed 20" wheeled cadence sensing Bafang mid-drive conversion being beaten for ease of hill ascents, at least not using the same basic inexpensive 36V battery. I reckon even extremely old and ill people would be able to pedal activate such conversions easily.
Off now for more slow uphill running. It's easier for feet to land silently uphill.
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