Image: Nat out on a morning walk
320 steps.
I blinked and looked at my Fitbit’s screen again, but it didn’t change. The truth was there, right on the screen of my fitness tracker.
It was 3pm on an average Tuesday and I had only taken 320 steps in the eight or so hours that I’d been awake.
That’s pretty abysmal when you consider that we’re all encouraged to get to at least 10,000 steps per day.
Here’s the thing: physical inactivity is killing us. And I’m not being melodramatic – it really is one of the biggest killers currently facing the western world.
The World Health Organisation has reported that about 3.2 million deaths PER YEAR can be attitubuted to “insufficient physical activity”. This has put physical inactivity in the fourth spot in terms of the top risk factors for global mortality. It’s killing more people per year than obesity.
The WHO suggests that we each do about 150 minutes of moderate-intensity exercise per week. That works out to be about 21 minutes per day, which doesn’t seem like a lot – and yet we’re still not doing it. We’re not using our gym memberships. We’re not playing organised sport. We’re not walking, or running, or swimming, or walking the dog.
Even when we are being active, we’re not being active enough. I thought I was always pretty good with keeping active until I got a Fitbit and it told me that I only really do an average of 5000 steps per day. That was a slap in the face.
So I've been making an effort to move more, every single day. And in order to do this, I consulted a personal trainer - Vix Erber (also known as Bondi Vixen), who's an expert in all things to do with getting your body moving. Also, she lives and works in Bondi, which is essentially the fitness capital of Australia - so she knows her stuff.