Jasmine Birtles
Your money-making expert. Financial journalist, TV and radio personality.
Warning: This article contains discussion of food, eating habits and body image. If this is something which may trigger you, please feel free to click off – we have loads of other great articles for you!
Despite popular belief, it doesn’t have to cost a fortune to detox your life. Fitness doesn’t come at the cost of an expensive gym membership, designer Lycra and NASA-accredited trainers. Fitness, in fact, doesn’t have to cost even a penny. This means savings in the bank for a glorious sunshine-filled holiday. Detox your life by reading our guide and shed the pounds – without losing pennies.
If you can control what you eat and get out of the office for a bit of exercise each day, you’ll lose weight and be healthier and happier.
The important thing is to work out what you want. Setting a specific goal will help you achieve it. The first question to ask yourself is: are you a healthy weight? There’s no ideal weight and there are many different factors that determine yours.
You can check your body mass index (BMI) to assess your weight in relation to your height. Or you can check your waist circumference. It’ll give you an indication of how much weight is stored around your middle (holding in your stomach doesn’t count!).
Boots – as well as many gyms across the country – offer scales combined with BMI calculators. You simply jump on for a basic or advanced reading. The advanced reading will include your BMI index and body fat percentage (as well as your height and weight). This should enable you to sit down and work out what you need to do next. In some cases, you may find you’re underweight and need to put a bit of weight on to get healthier. On the other hand, you may be a healthy weight but not happy with the way you look. In this case, you may need a tailored exercise plan helping you to tone specific muscles.
When you decide to lose weight, it should be more than just a short-term thing. It’s all about re-evaluating the way you live, what you eat and how you exercise. This is a total lifestyle change and it has to be for good. Once you achieve your ideal weight, you still need to maintain it!
You need to work with goals. “I’m going to starve myself and go to the gym every day to lose 20kgs” doesn’t really cut it, though. It’s not usually achievable or healthy. A better option is to have an overall goal (such as “I would like to lose 15kgs to become healthier and happier”) and lots of little baby goals.
Concentrate on the first 5kgs, which should take about 4-5 weeks. After you lose the first 5kgs, reward yourself with a new item of clothing, a spa treatment or whatever appeals to you.
Many of us get a new gym membership after Christmas, determined to be healthier as a new year’s resolution. But you really don’t need it. Enlist the help of a friend, or write up your own plan and stick it to the fridge. It’s amazing what exercises you can do in the comfort of your home with a few tins of baked beans, water bottles or elastic to help.
If you sit at a desk for most of the day, you can still keep active. Get up at least once an hour and do two laps of the office or building, or walk up and down the stairs a couple of times. Go to the kitchen to fill up your water glass or bottle. And get out of the office during lunch time.
Physically leave your desk and have lunch for half the time, and then go for a walk during the other half. Shoulder and leg exercises are also quite easy to do at your desk, as well as chair squats and abdominal stretching. There’s lots of tips on exercising at work – give it a quick browse. Cost? Nothing.
Hate housework? Don’t – it can help you detox your life. Combine it with some loud rocking music and go crazy. You don’t have to dance around the house (although it’s fun) but rocking music will help you put more effort and ‘umph’ into scrubbing/vacuuming/sweeping/wiping. Check music sites like Spotify for energetic songs to listen to when doing the tedious household chores.
Another great exercise you can do while running your errands is lifting your shopping. Next time you’re carrying heavy bags home, hold them in both hands at a 90 degree angle and slightly lift them in towards your chest, hold and release. This helps to tone your biceps. And it’s free.
Running’s great. You can do it anywhere: paths in the city, in the country, on the beach or through national parks. All you need is a good pair of shoes, so invest in trainers that are going to support you.
There are many stores across the country that have systems for finding out the right type of shoe for you. If you buy from Runnersworld, they’ll do an analysis in-store to test your arches and flex. They’ll even get you on a treadmill and video your foot strokes to find what type of shoe works best. You can also get some good deals from Sportshoes.com, Sports Direct or Decathlon.
Check out the UK Running Track Directory for ideas on where you can run in your local area. In addition, Nike has a cool run-mapper which lets you map your runs and see how many kilometres you’ve covered. It also has pre-defined maps in different areas for you to check out. Running is free and it’ll cost around £60 for a decent pair of fitted running shoes.
There’s strength in numbers. If you prefer exercising in a group, don’t think packed classes with lots of lycra. Instead, get your mates together at the park. Playing Frisbee for an hour will help you lose 200-300 calories, depending on how much you run and jump.
Alternatively, you could take a football and flaunt your Beckham-like ball skills. Or get a team together for a bit of healthy competition. Your local newspaper and notice boards at leisure centres will have information on where you can join. Post an ad on Gumtree asking for teams, or check out TNT Magazine, which has a section on getting into sport in London. It costs nothing to enjoy nature, but you would pay around £10 for a new football or Frisbee.
Our car-crazed culture means that we’re inclined to jump in the motor just to get a pint of milk from the corner shop. If this is the case, take a moment to think about how much money you’d save by using a bit of leg work. Short journeys are the least efficient journeys to make in a car. They take a high petrol usage as well as wear and tear. Taking a bit of time to cycle, walk or run to the local shop is also a great way to detox your life by squeezing a few extra fitness points into the daily routine. For free.
Most of us have a bike collecting dust at the back of the garage. Get it out, dust it off and get on it. Cycling is a great way to get around. It could even be a good option for the daily commute, especially for city dwellers. A cycle to work not only helps shed the pounds and save pennies on petrol or public transport costs, but it can also save time. The commute and the fitness regime are combined and whilst buses and cars sit in traffic, the bike is an independent beast.
Get your togs on and head out to the beach or your local pool. Kick your legs and swing your arms as much as possible to make it really effective. Swimming in the ocean is harder work and therefore better for you. It’s fun, and you can do it on your own or take your mates. Playing ball or Frisbee in the water is an even better workout. Cost-wise, the beach is free, but the local pool may set you back a quid or two for entry. If you end up going often, see if you can get a weekly pass for cheaper travel.
If you’d like to do more, the BBC offers a lot of tips and ideas to detox your life exercising at home.
Okay, this one isn’t free, but if you really need that extra motivation but don’t want to pay through the roof for it, then you can use Bark.com to search for Personal Trainers near you.
You’ll have a much easier time losing weight through exercise if you also watch what you eat. Remember it’s not a matter of starving yourself. This actually makes the situation worse. When your stomach isn’t being fed properly, the fats you do eat will store themselves, because your body doesn’t know when you’ll be fed next.
If you eat 500 calories less than your recommended daily amount, you can lose a healthy 0.5kgs a week. There are no ‘bad’ foods. Just think of ways to cut down on the things that aren’t as healthy as others. For example, including ice in a glass of coke cuts out 70 calories. Switching from a cream-filled doughnut to a chocolate covered doughnut cuts 100 calories. Or, rather than having four scoops of ice cream, have two scoops with one banana. Once you’re on the right track, start substituting the coke for water with ice, or eat crudités (sticks of celery and carrot with tzatziki dip) instead of crisps.
You can always find healthy alternatives. Check out some of the recipe books in your local library to find out how to make proper meals. And remember to eat a small portion of protein at least once a day.
Coke, doughnuts and ice cream are more expensive than water, bananas and crudités. Especially if you shop at a farmer’s market.
Finally, lay off the fast food. It’s so easy to pack a lunch or take a snack for in between meals. And it costs a hell of a lot less in the long run. If you find yourself craving fast food there are always better options. For the cost of one fast food meal, you can afford to make sandwiches for an entire week of lunches. Have a look at our article on making your lunch money go further.
Great ideas if you do not have a gym, cannot afford a gym or just want to go it alone!
Also sadly, the only people who think its sad are the people who already know it.
Here’s my daily routine. Can’t do it everyday, but almost. Going on 2 months now. Up at 5:30am – 100 pushups, 100 situps, 100 squats, spin cycle 30 min. (1hour total time) I feel better than when I was 20. I’m almost 50 now. More energy, enthusiasm, and vigor than I could ask for. Good diet and plenty of sleep is crucial. Also lots of water every day. And it costs nothing except a little discipline.
Awesome site. Gives me the motivation to lose weight this year. Will be visiting again
I bought a pair of last year’s model trainers from Ebay for £49 and downloaded a free 5k run training schedule. Now I’m out running with my next door neighbour.
I used to run 10k and run regularly in my lunch break. Haven’t done a thing in over a year so expect it to hurt but it’s brilliant and cheap!
Sadly I think the only ones who will think this is great advice, are teh people who already know it.