Should Young People Exercise?
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Summary: Particularly today, when there are so many electronic alternatives, young people may
exercise less than they should. It's during the formative years that individuals lay the groundwork for what later become healthy
or poor habits.
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Kids will usually become quickly bored with routines designed for adults. But the activity doesn't have to involve organized group
sports, either. A gentle jog with an adult, a tennis game, swimming, golf, martial arts, bicycling, dancing, gymnastics and many other sports are
enjoyable for the younger crowd.
Kids are usually sensitive to anything that appears inconsistent or hypocritical from adults. Be prepared to follow your own advice and
exercise with them. That also helps parents share quality time with their kids outside the house and during activities that benefit both. Parents
get the added benefit of monitoring to ensure that the kids are exercising in a safe and proper way.
Like any routine, if it produces pain - even the day after - the individual is less likely to continue. Keep it simple and build up the
difficulty and length gradually. Kids are more flexible, but they too need to warm-up and gently stretch before engaging in vigorous exercise. A
few minutes of static and dynamic stretching will help avoid injury.
Exercise routines should take into account the age group of the individual child.
Children from about 4-7 should focus primarily on developing basic physical skills, such as coordination and balance. These are the years when
motor skills, eye-hand coordination and other things adults take for granted are still fluid. Children take to these activities naturally, as
well. Jumping rope, hopscotch and other simple activities help guide the development of these skills.
From the age of 8 or so, exercises can become more vigorous in order to keep that active metabolism from turning food into fat. Here again,
though, adults need to guide kids in order to build good habits and avoid injury. Weight machines are almost always a bad idea for pre-teens, for
example. They're risky and unnecessary.
Gymnastics, by contrast, helps build on those basic motor skills learned earlier while developing strength, balance and keeping the endocrine
system active and healthy.
For teens, the field is wide open. They have the basic bone and muscle structure that gives them the potential for high performance activity
in a wide variety of activities. But here, too, the possibility of injury remains for those who don't get the proper guidance.
Teens are inclined to roughhousing and rebelliousness. Give them an outlet that directs all that energy and independence to the achievement of
positive goals - fitness, endurance, high scores.
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