by NATALIA HAWK
“I can’t run anymore,” a friend said to me the other day. “It hurts my body too much. It makes my bad knee worse and I always have pain in my ankles. But I don’t want to give it up, because it’s such a good workout.”
Sound familiar? It probably does. If you’re a runner, you might suffer from all sorts of pain and injuries in various parts of your body – after all, it’s a high-impact exercise that puts a lot of pressure on your joints. And while it’s fantastic for fitness, it can be really damaging if done in excess, or done if you’re already prone to certain injuries.
There are many other types of high-impact exercise – CrossFit, boot camps, team sports such as footy and soccer, interval training, aerobics, Zumba, Body Attack – that are seriously good for increasing your heart rate and getting your fitness up. But they’re also best avoided if you’re pregnant, prone to injury, suffering from chronic problems, or simply new to exercise.
But I have some excellent news for you. You don’t have to do high-impact exercises in order to get a decent workout. In fact, it’s actually highly recommended by fitness professionals that you mix high-impact with low-impact to avoid injury and work out your entire body.
Here are some low-impact exercises to kick you off:
1. Walking
I don’t mean strolling along a boardwalk by the beach, casually sipping a latte. I mean walking relatively quickly, preferably over varied terrain, with hills and such. If you want a bit more of a workout, try wearing a weighted backpack, ankle/wrist weights, or carrying dumbbells.
If you’re still worried about injuries, try walking on a treadmill – it’s even lower impact than walking outside, and you can control the incline.
2. Swimming
Top Comments
As someone with osteoarthritis of the ankle, I can tell you that even something as simple & slow as walking can be sheer agony. Water exercises are pretty much the only option. Climbing, paddle-boarding, stationary bikes & elliptical machines work the ankle just as hard, albeit without stamping pressure. If you have a fused ankle (stationary joint via surgery), you can't really do any of those things at all. Maybe stationary bike. Definitely hand-bikes are ok. Roller blading is completely out of the question unless your ankles are iron-strong.
I just started playing netball after 20 years and with 20kg more on me. Seriously loving the game, but with little fitness and very little exercise in the last year my knees and ankles are struggling... hoping a Saturday exercise class and some walking during the week will help, now I've started I'm a bit loathe to give it up!