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  • - So if you're sitting while watching this, right,

  • for every five breaths you take,

  • probably about one is paying for your brain.

  • Another is paying for your liver, you know.

  • Another's paying for your muscles,

  • and the other two are paying for all the other functions

  • that are going on in your body.

  • But even now,

  • I'm spending a fair amount of calories just existing.

  • I spend about 3, 4,

  • maybe 500, 450 calories a day just paying for my brain.

  • My muscle, even if I'm not doing anything with my muscles,

  • my muscles constantly require energy.

  • My gut is requiring energy.

  • My kidneys require energy.

  • My liver is requiring energy.

  • My heart is requiring energy.

  • So all of these processes are all adding up.

  • Just existing is a fairly expensive prospect.

  • And we have unusually expensive bodies,

  • and a typical sort of human is spending

  • about 1,300, 1,400, 1,500, 1,600 calories a day,

  • just on all those basic processes,

  • even if they're doing nothing else.

  • There are a lot of ways to quantify

  • how physically active somebody is, right?

  • A simple way of doing it

  • is what's called the 'Physical Activity Level.'

  • It's the total amount of energy you spend in a day

  • divided by the energy you would spend just taking care

  • of the most basic, essential functions of your body.

  • If you're in bedrest in a hospital and, you know,

  • lying in bed with just like a clicker for the TV,

  • and you're doing absolutely nothing,

  • not even digesting food,

  • your physical activity level would be about a 1.2.

  • And if you're like a Tour de France cyclist

  • it would be above three.

  • If you're kind of a desk worker it would be like 1.6.

  • So it's kind of a way to compare individuals

  • but also species

  • because it's standardized by your body size,

  • 'cause your body size essentially

  • determines your 'Basal Metabolic Rate.'

  • So, your basal metabolic rate is a really important number

  • because it tells you,

  • kind of just how much energy you're spending

  • on just the essential maintenance of your body.

  • And it turns out that a kind of typical,

  • say adult male my size,

  • spends about two thirds of his or her metabolism

  • just on basal metabolic rates.

  • So I spend about 1,600 calories a day just existing.

  • The fact that our bodies are so expensive

  • helps explain why

  • we tend to avoid unnecessary physical activity.

  • Until recently, energy used to be limited.

  • It wasn't like 7-Elevens, or Dunkin' Donuts,

  • or Whole Foods,

  • or whatever your favorite place to get food is,

  • right around the corner.

  • You know, if you wanted something to eat

  • you had to go find it.

  • You had to either hunt it, or gather it, or dig it up.

  • And energy was limited.

  • And when energy is limited,

  • you have to engage in trade-offs, right?

  • We think so much about exercise in terms of elite athletics.

  • You know, the fastest, the highest-jumping,

  • the strongest etc.

  • And it's wonderful, right?

  • It's great entertainment,

  • but that's actually kind of what it is, right?

  • It's actually entertainment.

  • The world's fastest runners are able to do,

  • or the world's best basketball players are able to do,

  • have almost nothing to do with what most of us do, right?

  • And so we get this kind of,

  • I think, sometimes a perverted idea about what's normal

  • from elite athletics,

  • because we're looking at the extremes,

  • the best of the best of the best of the best of the best.

  • These are people who've spent years of their lives

  • training to do just one thing, and one thing really well,

  • but that's not what most of us do.

  • For the vast majority of people,

  • what they're trying to figure out

  • is how to just get enough exercise.

  • And I think the important message that often is missed,

  • is that if you're physically inactive

  • and you're struggling to be more active,

  • anything is better than nothing.

  • You don't need to, like, run marathons.

  • You don't need to do a couch to 5k.

  • You don't need to even do necessarily 150 minutes a week.

  • Even an hour a week will be better than nothing.

  • There's no one perfect dose.

  • There's no one perfect type.

  • And I think helping people understand that,

  • I think relieves them of some of the stress.

  • - Get smarter, faster,

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- So if you're sitting while watching this, right,

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