Other things to keep in mind
Many people “train” themselves to eat before exercise. This takes time and experience. Only practice eating before exercise if your purpose is performance, that is to be competitive in an event.
If you’re exercising for health reasons, eating before exercise may not even be necessary.
And people who are exercising for weight loss may be best served to not eat. But in all cases, seek specific advice from a dietitian or exercise physiologist on specific requirements.
Exercise expends energy. Stored energy is also in body fat or adipose tissue. When we exercise we can potentially use some of the this stored energy, which is why exercise is used to improve body fat loss.
Maintaining a normal diet is probably all that’s required to prepare yourself for between 30 and 60 minutes of exercise.
It’s only when longer, more demanding exercise or a sporting competition is involved that you should pay much closer attention to your nutrition. In those instances, eating simple carbohydrates one or two hours beforehand is recommended.
Author
David Bentley, Lecturer in Exercise and Sport Science, University of Adelaide
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
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