We all know how indisputably good exercise is for you. Yet a lot of folks still find it a struggle to engage in much physical activity. To understand the reason that this conflict and tension exists and how to overcome it, it helps to understand the lives of our human ancestors. Though, not the way the popular culture understands them, but the way someone who’s actually studied them understands them.
My guest is such an expert guide. His name is Daniel Lieberman, and he’s a Harvard professor of human evolutionary biology and the author of Exercised: Why Something We Never Evolved to Do Is Healthy and Rewarding. Today on the show, Daniel shares what we can really learn from our ancestors as to our modern relationship with exercise, while debunking some of the popular myths about our hunter-gatherer history. We begin by talking about how very recent, and actually quite weird, the whole concept of exercise is. We then discuss the fact that our ancestors were not the natural super athletes we typically imagine, what their state of physicality was really like, and how understanding their lifestyle can help us understand the competing interests going on in our own minds and bodies that can leave us feeling ambivalent about getting up and moving around. We then discuss if, as it’s been said, “sitting is the new smoking,” and the less and more healthy ways to sit. Daniel unpacks whether we’re evolved for running, how our ancestors’ strength compares to our own, and whether or not exercise helps us lose weight. We end our conversation with how this background on the past can help us in the present, by showing us the two factors that are critical in helping us moderns make exercise a habit.
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Show Highlights
- Why the human mind isn’t built for exercise
- The myth of the athletic savage
- How do people in hunter/gatherer societies move their bodies?
- What’s going on in our bodies when we’re inactive?
- Is sitting really the new smoking?
- Are humans built for endurance activities?
- Were our ancient ancestors jacked?
- Diet vs. exercise in the battle to lose weight
- How to make something unnecessary, necessary
Resources/Articles/People Mentioned in Podcast
- How Exercise Helps Us Find Connection, Hope, and Courage
- Counterintuitive Advice on Making Exercise a Sustainable Habit
- The 10 Best Ways to Make Exercise an Unbreakable Habit
- Born to Run
- Keep Moving
- Undoing the Damage of Chronic Sitting
- 7 Simple Exercises That Undo the Damage of Sitting
- Humans and Persistence Hunting
- Why Every Man Should Be Strong
- Getting Ripped vs. Getting Strong
- How to Lose Weight, and Keep It Off Forever
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The post Podcast #691: What You Can (Really) Learn About Exercise from Your Human Ancestors appeared first on The Art of Manliness.
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