Second of three parts
When Sidney Eagles Jr. went in for his annual physical a dozen years back, his physician reminded him that he was overweight, his blood pressure was high, and his cholesterol was up too. The reminders had become a perennial checkup ritual for Eagles, who at the time was 60 and chief judge of the N.C. Court of Appeals.
The annual ritual changed, though, when Eagles mentioned that he'd been short of breath. His doctor became alarmed, which in turn alarmed Eagles. A few days later, he went to the hospital for some routine cardio tests and wound up having an operation to remove an aortic blockage. Eagles had never been big on exercise up to that point, but the event got his attention.
"I don't have the willpower to (exercise) unless I've got some skin in the game," Eagles says. With his skin in the game now, Eagles became devout, hitting the Rex Wellness Center in Raleigh three to four times a week. He still doesn't like to exercise, but he can't ignore the difference working out has made in his life.
"I am - and this really sounds like braggadocio, but facts are facts - I think my balance is better and I know I'm stronger," says Eagles, who is now 72 and in part-time practice with the Raleigh law firm Smith Moore Leatherwood. "I feel good almost all the time."
In a state where 30 percent of all adults are considered obese and thus at significantly higher risk of many maladies, from diabetes to cardiovascular-related problems, Eagles' example is a model for the vast number of North Carolinians who have neither the inclination to exercise nor, in their minds at least, the time. Like Eagles, they don't want to exercise, but they know they need to.
Time
Think you don't have the time to exercise? Can you find a half-hour every day? That's all you need to make a difference in your health, according to the National Institutes of Health. "Most adults need at least 30 minutes of moderate physical activity at least five days per week. Examples include walking briskly, mowing the lawn, dancing, swimming for recreation or bicycling."
Those 30 minutes can come in bits and pieces scattered throughout your day.
"Start small," suggests Kelly Roberts, wellness specialist with Carolinas Medical Center's LiveWELL Carolinas employee health program in Charlotte. "Take the stairs vs. the elevator - that's five calories right there. "Get up from your desk as many times during the day as your job allows. Keep (walking) shoes under your desk: Even 10 minutes walking at lunch is better than nothing."
Caveat: If you do the same thing at the same intensity level during those 30 minutes, you'll only notice the health benefits for so long. "You either need to increase the intensity during those 30 minutes or extend the length of your workout," says Logan Johnson, an instructor with the Rex Wellness Center.
"Otherwise," he adds, "your body adapts and those same challenges are not enough."
It's not enough to focus just on one area. Often, when people think of exercising to improve their health, they think of aerobic exercises, such as walking, bicycling or doing the treadmill. In fact, there are four areas you should concentrate on to improve your health. (See box.)
Payoff
Don't expect results immediately.
"We feel you should be feeling significant differences in within a couple weeks," Roberts says. "If you're taking the stairs, for instance, within a couple weeks you shouldn't be as winded."
Give it another couple of weeks before really putting your new lifestyle to the test.
"After a month or so, go do something you haven't been able to do in a while," Johnson says. "I had one woman who began lifting a stack of plates over her head. She'd never been able to do that before."
Again, he stresses that if you want to see continued progress, you'll need to increase either the intensity of your workout or work out longer.
Ultimate motivation
Sidney Eagles Jr., who's been exercising religiously for 12 years now, says the ultimate motivator for anyone in poor to marginal health is pretty simple:
"If you had been in my position and didn't perceive it as a wake-up call, you'd either be foolish, slow or temperamentally doomed to be in trouble - soon."
Wednesday: The best fuel for your workouts














