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LucyGransnet (GNHQ) Thu 20-Aug-15 15:07:32

The 10,000 step tyranny

Forget 500 miles, it's all about 10,000 steps a day for author Fanny Blake. Are you a slave to the NHS-recommended 10k a day? Or do you prefer to get your exercise by other means? Running around after grandchildren springs to mind...

Fanny Blake

The 10,000 step tyranny

Posted on: Thu 20-Aug-15 15:07:32

(61 comments )

Lead photo

Do you get your 10k a day?

Walking is the new jogging, especially for those of us whose knees are no longer quite the full shilling.

Whenever I can, I drive out of town and find somewhere to walk in the country, but my life has been changed since my new iPhone arrived complete with a mystery app with a heart on it. Once a friend had explained that this would monitor the number of steps I walked everyday (and lots of other things besides), I realised I’d been missing a whole dimension: that of a city walker.

On their website, the NHS explain the health benefits of walking 10,000 steps a day - 10,000 steps is the equivalent of about five miles. For someone like me who spends the day in one place, that’s an ambitious stretch to cover every day. However I decided to stop taking so many buses and start walking instead. But while I got my step level up to an impressive high, other hurdles presented themselves that I hadn’t thought about.

The first time I walked to a meeting, I turned up with blistered feet and in a muck sweat. Not a great look! For some reason, the moment I stop walking, I get incredibly hot. It’s impossible to concentrate or to feel that you’re being taken seriously when you’ve got sweat pouring down your face.

When you're not looking at your surroundings through a bus window but are part of them, you start noticing things you hadn't before.


Apart from requiring a decent pair of trainers and a bag in which to carry my other shoes, I realised the wardrobe required thought. Arriving at a meeting in Lycra or a sweaty tracksuit doesn’t exactly command confidence, so I now have to plan what I wear much more carefully - I need something I can walk and meet in, unless I want to change on arrival and lug around what I’ve worn to walk in all day.

And then there’s the time constraints. How does one fit a walk into a busy schedule? I can’t believe that pottering up and down stairs or the supermarket aisles are as beneficial as a good old brisk walk that gets the heart-rate up. As far as I’m concerned, those steps don’t really count. The solution? I now leave 30 minutes earlier to get wherever I’m going.

Walking has its own community of all types, and I’ve met some obsessives who tuck their phone in their pocket or their Fitbit into their bra all day long counting the number of steps walked that day, and comparing with others. At the moment, I’m keeping the competition limited to myself. Anything more feels too anxiety-inducing.

Are the 10,000 steps a tyranny? On a bad day I’d say so, as I rush to complete them. But despite the extras to take on board, I’m discovering huge pluses that outweigh the minuses.

There are the health benefits laid out by the NHS (above). There’s the feeling of satisfaction and the endorphin rush that comes with exercise. When you’re not looking at your surroundings through a bus window but are part of them, you start noticing things you hadn’t before. Walking costs nothing (apart from the ambidextrous wardrobe!), is easy to do, and you don’t need anyone else.

For me, perhaps the biggest benefit is the thinking time walking gives me. When I’m sitting at home writing, I often get stuck. But a brisk walk clears the cobwebs away so ideas and solutions surface from somewhere in my subconscious. I don’t pretend to understand the process, but for a writer, it’s completely invaluable.

Catching the bus? No thanks, I’d prefer to walk. Only 8,973 steps to go…

Fanny’s new book With a Friend Like You is published by Orion and is available now from Amazon.

By Fanny Blake

Twitter: @FannyBlake1

durhamjen Mon 31-Aug-15 15:08:03

I do not think there is anything on the others that I would miss. It does enough for me. I do more steps than the nurse at the GP surgery, anyway. She was thinking of getting one instead of the pedometer that she wears at the moment.

Rowantree Mon 31-Aug-15 15:32:37

Thanks. I'm going to find out from my SIL whether it would be suitable for my (not very) smartphone. I don't really understand these things, but I will ask his advice as he's very reliable.

I've spent almost two hours this morning, from 6.30am, working out in the gym, which included over 30 mins very fast walking on the treadmill, and I clocked up over 250 calories and over 3 km. I have no idea how that translates into steps but I certainly don't do anywhere near 10,000 a day!

Nandalot Mon 31-Aug-15 16:47:33

Let the Tyranny begin! My Vivofit. (typed carefully this time) is on my wrist. Quite traumatic. I couldn't get my ant in!!! I was being too gentle! The mind boggles. Then I couldn't remember my password for my garmin account... didn't know I had one, then it asked me all sorts of embarrassing questions like my weight and birthdate, and then I had to get DH to help me fit it on my wrist. Then I read Durhamjen's post and found out I could have got it £5 cheaper!
All set now. I am aiming for 5,000 to start as I have no idea how far that is.

yogagran Tue 01-Sep-15 18:29:34

Rowantree I have a Fitbit Zip. It's easy peasy to set up with a smartphone, almost does it itself. I wear mine clipped to the front of my bra, it's never fallen off in the two years that I've had it. With Fitbit you can join various challenges and see how you measure up to others! I love it

I also have the Aria scales which sync with your smartphone everytime you weight yourself so you can see all the statistics (steps, miles, weight, calories if you feel the need to count them too although I'll admit that I can't be bothered with counting calories)

durhamjen Tue 01-Sep-15 19:57:55

You can also do that with a Vivofit, but I'd rather not. If you just want to get fit, competing with others can be bad for your bloodpressure.
You are still put in a group with others and can update if you want and see how you compare at so many steps, but just doing more steps on my own is enough.

Happy4me Wed 23-Sep-15 13:16:18

I appreciate the concept but I don't drive so have walked everywhere all my life and have often walked 10,000 miles every week over the years but never thought to count the steps.

I have sat on buses and trains and seen things I have not see before ... the car has lot to answer for as it robbed us of our natural exercise..

In my case I am probably wearing out gradually having broken ribs on the pathway and often get corns and hard skin on my feet sadly.

Oh that I had another life .... smile

Ana Wed 23-Sep-15 13:21:53

10,000 miles a week, Happy4me? shock

You must be the bionic woman!

Happy4me Wed 23-Sep-15 13:57:11

that should have been 10,000 steps not miles ... I have walked many miles per week

LottieSweetpea Wed 23-Sep-15 14:09:28

Do the Fitbits work with any I phone please?
I have a 4s
Thanks

jinglbellsfrocks Wed 23-Sep-15 14:34:00

My Fitbit is the little green one. I wear it on my bra. I keep getting annoying messages in my email from it. My son bought it and set it up.

hmm

Nannanoo Wed 30-Dec-15 13:22:53

My feet have worn out, and are terminally arthritic after a life of ballet, marathon running, professional nursing and generally walking from A to B, as I don't drive. A foot surgeon has said he doesn't think they can do anything for me, as foot replacements are not yet available.
I love walking, and still manage to take a turn around the block most days, having invested in some very expensive shoes, which really do help, but I would love to do '12 milers' through the forest as I used to.
10,000 steps would be impossible for me, it would be too painful, so I'm waiting for our new local sports centre to open so that I can swim every day - I guess that counts as exercise!

NonnaW Fri 29-Jan-16 13:34:39

I got a FitbitCharge for Christmas and am so far averaging 10k steps a day. Mind you, I don't believe it is really that much, as it seems to count arm movements as steps too. However, I find it interesting to see how much I do each day, and it's not difficult, given we have 2 dogs that are walked twice a day.

I also use it to track my sleep (again, not entirely accurate, but interesting nevertheless). Am now logging food on it, just for a while, to see how the calories mount up!