It's no secret that being physically active is paramount to our overall health. Thankfully, it's also something nearly everyone can do, regardless of age, ability, ethnicity, shape or size. You might be surprised by the number of ways exercise — the CDC recommends 150 minutes a week — can benefit you, from head to toe:
Brain + mood
If you could bottle the mental health benefits of exercise in a pill, you'd have the most effective and bestselling blockbuster drug of all time:
Short bouts of physical activity help boost mood, combat depression, reduce stress, lower anxiety, enhance creativity, sharpen focus and concentration, and generally improve one's thinking skills. The only known side effect is better body composition.
High-intensity interval training (HIIT), or brief but intense bursts of activity, trigger the same feel-good pathway in the brain as taking opioid drugs or eating sugar.
A simple 10-minute walk can put you in a better mood.
Immune system
Exercise helps strengthen the body's natural defense system, a fact that has had special relevance in the past year and a half as we navigated through a pandemic:
Regular exercise has been shown to improve a person's response to vaccinations, making their bodies more agile and responsive when facing a new stressor.
Regular exercise enhances the function of natural killer cells, which help control the growth of certain tumors and limit the spread of some microbial infections.