How to Increase Your Family’s Physical Fitness
- Plan a family hike through a scenic park. If you announce to your children that everyone in the family will be required to take a 2-mile walk on Saturday, chances are good that your idea will be met with resistance. However, if you turn the walk into a family outing and allow your children to participate in the planning, your children will be more likely to cooperate.
- Challenge your children to a basketball, volleyball, tennis or baseball game. Children like the idea of competing against adults. They are likely to have fun, and, at the same time, everyone physically benefits from this activity. This also promotes being active at any age.
- Join a community center that offers fitness and recreational programs. Check out your local YMCA or department of recreation. Many of these organizations offer community sports, and some also have swimming pools, skating rinks and fitness centers that the entire family can enjoy.
- If your child is involved in organized sports, offer to help out. Coaching is not the only way to get involved in your child’s sports program. Offer to help at the concession stand or transport children to and from games. If you stay involved in your children’s activities, chances are greater that they also will wish to remain involved.
- Emphasize fitness and fun, rather than competition and perfection. Not every child is going to be a great athlete. When children are made to feel inferior, they tend to withdraw from organized sporting activities.
- When picking indoor activities, select those that will offer some type of physical activity. Bowling, skating or touring a museum are better choices than seeing a movie.
- Allow your children to include their friends when you are planning your exercise activities. Establishing friendships and forming peer groups are of vital importance to your children. Your children will be more likely to want to participate in activities that include their friends.
- Discuss ways that everyone can be more active in daily life. Take the stairs instead of the elevator. Park farther away from mall entrances. Take a short walk after dinner. Don’t drive somewhere that you can easily walk.
- Limit the amount of time that is spent watching television and playing video and computer games. Allow your child to select one or two favorite programs and do not leave the television turned on continuously. (Studies show that the average American child spends about 24 hours each week watching television.) Bargain with your children. For every hour of television they watch, get a commitment for equal time engaged in physical activity.
- Try not to take away physical activities as punishment for your child. Exercise promotes good health and is needed on a daily basis. If necessary, withhold other activities that will not interfere with your child’s need for physical activity.
- Don’t stifle informal play. While organized team sports have value, encourage your children to “play” often. Some of the best ways to promote fitness and creativity are through playing outside with friends.
- Openly support physical education and recess at your child’s school. With so much emphasis on classroom learning, physical education time is constantly fighting the chopping block of school budgets.
And for inspiration I thought I would let one of Hollywood’s finest show us all how its done.
reprinted from http://www.healthatoz.com

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