Don’t
take life too seriously; you’ll never get out of it alive!
We
had a lovely day yesterday, finally got mom out of the house we drove to Lynnes
which is about 30 miles away, so mom enjoyed the scenery on the drive too. She does make me laugh, we stopped at a
the first
qualification round the thet are top & Wednesfield's Kristian Thomas is top
of the individual table, how fab is that!
Just thinking about all this sport, with the
Olympics being held in this country, a Brit winning the Tour de France, not
forgetting the Diamond Jubilee I’d say national pride is possibly at an
all-time high, but so unfortunately is our weight which is less of a reason to
cheer!
So what’s changed, obviously we’re more affluent
(despite the recession), convenience food doesn’t help, and of course going
back to the Olympics we move much less! I
wasn’t anywhere near athletic yesterday, I wonder what percentage of my members
where? Last week we talked about the
motivation to get active and I was motivated to move a bit yesterday my mates
got a really bad back, so whilst I was at hers I did some ironing for her to
save her a task. Nothing worse for a bad
back than ironing!
Being
a housewife these days is nothing like back in the 50s, according to the National Sizing Survey, in
1950 the average woman’s vital statistics were 36, 24, 35. She was a size 12
and weighed around 9st 12 lb. These days Ms Average weighs 11st and has become
a considerably rounder 38, 34, 40. The average UK dress size is now 16.
In 1966, when records of
obesity began, only 1.2 per cent of men and 1.8 per cent of women had a BMI of
more than 30, meaning they were classed as obese and so at higher risk of a
host of illnesses, from diabetes to heart disease and cancers.
And now? A study published
last week found that 90,000 lives are lost every year through inactivity; 63
per cent of us do no exercise. Statistics from the Department of Health show 62
per cent of adults are overweight – with a BMI of more than 25 – or obese.
Yet many experts believe we
eat less: the National Food Survey of 1952 states that on average women
consumed nearly 2,500 calories a day. By
2000 this figure had dropped to 1,750. It’s estimated that we now consume 1,500
to 2000 calories a day. So where are we going wrong?
Perhaps a clue can be found in
a survey published earlier this year by over-50s group Saga, which showed that
a housewife in the Fifties burnt about 1,000 calories every day going about her
tasks, compared with just 560 calories now.
‘Today’s women have to set
aside time in their busy schedules for exercise,’ says Saga’s director-general,
Dr Ros Altmann. ‘But this is just fire-fighting. In the Fifties, lack of
technology meant a lot of daily physical activity was a necessity.’
With this in mind, Alice Smellie from the Daily Mail set about leading a gadget-free life of a Fifties housewife for a day
to see if there really is a startling contrast with my everyday life. She
measured how many calories she burned and how far she walked (to read the
entire article http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-2176971/1950s-housewives-kept-slim-burning-calories-housework.html?ITO=1490). As a Fifties housework doing all the
housework and cooking herself she worked out she could consume more than 2,600 calories a day without putting on
an ounce. She burned off 1,200 calories
a day being a 1950s housewife, she was walking 9,552 steps – a little less than four miles – and this burns 671 calories.
The NHS recommends we should walk
10,000 steps a day and yet the average person manages only between 3,000 and
4,000.
Mmm, save money on the gym maybe and get active in the house, I might decide to make mine spotless! But not today ;-)
Mmm, save money on the gym maybe and get active in the house, I might decide to make mine spotless! But not today ;-)
Sorry the
blogs a long one, its Sunday I have more time! Enjoy your day whether you’re being active
or not!
Just found this info online if you want a reason to do some of
those housework tasks;
How many calories burned doing house work?
Calories burned per half-hour
Doing laundry 73
Making the bed 68Cooking 85
Washing the dishes 78
Ironing 78
Dusting 85
Sweeping 112
Vacuuming 119
Scrubbing the floors 129
Rearranging furniture 204
Yard work 170
Washing windows 102
Washing the car 102
Gardening 136
Mowing the lawn 187
Raking 146
Shoveling snow 204
Carrying a small child (up to 15 lbs.) up and down stairs 289
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