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I have a job where I'm away from my home and my regular day to day life. At home I usually bike ride every day 7-12 miles a day, or run 3-5. Then skateboard in the afternoon for a few hours with my friends. While at work I'm active and moving around and getting exercise, on top of the hard labor.

I do eat healthy, salads every day, chicken, veggies and Hummas, plain yogurt. I'm pretty strict on myself, diet wise.

But does taking a week off from that daily routine to a much more lax routine, lead to any setbacks in my weight or appearance? Keep in mind I eat the same while I am at work.

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The question you are asking could be better answered by yourself than anyone else, and if you are talking about setbacks; did you life change? – Informaficker Feb 4 at 11:10
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I don't know, does it affect you? This is a highly individualized question. – JohnP Feb 6 at 18:50
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There may be a way to phrase the question behind the OP's problem, but this isn't it. Drew, you seem to be either asking permission or asking us to describe how your particular body works. I recommend rethinking your situation and seeing if you can phrase your problem in the form of a specific question about a particular course of action or physiological process. – Dave Liepmann Feb 6 at 20:45

closed as too localized by JohnP, Kate, Informaficker, Dave Liepmann, FredrikD Feb 7 at 12:58

This question is unlikely to help any future visitors; it is only relevant to a small geographic area, a specific moment in time, or an extraordinarily narrow situation that is not generally applicable to the worldwide audience of the internet. For help making this question more broadly applicable, see the FAQ.

3 Answers

It's great that you manage to find time for exercise even when you're working. The answer to your question will depend on your body type, metabolism, etc.

But generally speaking, there shouldn't be any setback in the short term. However your long term fitness might get affected.

Our bodies are amazing at adapting to the stress and load put on it. So if you run 7 - 12 miles everyday your body will get used to it and unless you increase either the length or the intensity of your runs you will hit a plateau. That is why it's recommended to gradually increase and improve oneself.

If you were to take a week's break and then begin again you will have to work to get back to the point that you left off!

I would recommend taking breaks during the week rather than taking an entire week off. Either exercise on alternate days or exercise a couple of days with a couple of days rest. This will not only allow you to have a more relaxed routine but also keep your motivation high as it may be more difficult to get back to exercising after a week's break.

That would be my suggestion. Would be glad to hear back from you.

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I've found that if I take a week off, I tend to get soar whenever I return to my physical activities.

Also, if your goal is physical improvement, you will likely experience slower gains.

Do yourself a favor and try to get something in when you are at your "week of work" (run a couple of flights of stairs, jump rope, jumping jacks).

There's no correct answer, though, in my mind.

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We cant really say anything for sure about how your body will react, but we can give you some advice.

As I understand this question, youre asking us about weight/looks, and NOT athletic performance, and your "training sessions" also dont indicate that youre working on improvement. You are just doing some physical activity for health.

The short answer We cant really say anything for sure, there are just too many variables. You should simply strictly control your bodyweight, and if you start putting on some unnecessary lbs, try increasing your activity on slack weeks or cutting on kcal intake on those weeks.

long answer We are not considering performance, breaking the stress adaptation pattern does not worry us. You wont ruin your progress or strength gains, since youre not training for improvement.

Since we are discussing simple weight gain lets check how much calories you burn while running. A very rough estimate would be that by skipping your running you burn about 400kcal less on a daily basis. In a weeks perspective this sums up to 2800 kcal less burned per week. The estimate I gave includes your resting energy expenditure, ignores completely your speed and weight, and is flawed in many, many other ways but just bear with me. Lets say that the ADDED energy expenditure would be half of the mentioned amount, giving us 200kcal a day and 1400kcal a week. Around 7000kcal excess is said to make you store around 1kg of fat. If this was the case, you could be putting on an additional 1kg every 5 weeks

But this isnt the whole story! Lower physical activity may decrease your hunger and the amounts of food you eat on slack days. To be honest, its a LOT easier to cut 200kcal from food than to burn it exercising. A single donut has around 250kcal! Thats why all weight loss programs MUST include changes in diet. Simply exercising isnt enough.

Also, we cant really say, how your metabolism will react to the change of activity level. There are hormonal responces both to physical activity and the types/amounts of food we eat, everything is connected, and the variables are not independant.

You could write a scientific paper on the topic, even several, but the bottom line is this: we cant accurately predict how your body will adapt to your lifestyle changes, and you should try careful observation

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