Itâs time to get your groove on.
Dancing has a way of taking your cares away. It doesnât matter if itâs the Electric Slide, the Macarena or your own crazy moves. Who hasnât gotten lost in an upbeat song as they jumped around?
But not only does it feel good to the soul, dancing also has some major health perks. Research shows dancing can improve your mental health by boosting your overall happiness. If youâre looking for a reason to shake it off today, check out some of the benefits below. Dance party, anyone?
- Dancing is a great cardio workout.Like any good, low-impact cardio workout, dancing can improve cardiovascular health, increase stamina, strengthen bones and muscles and stave off illnesses. But aside from the perks associated any heart-pounding activity, dancing has a cardio edge with unique benefits that actually canât be achieved by other low-impact exercises.
âDancing can give you more than traditional cardio,â Fabio Comana, an exercise physiologist and education team member for the National Academy of Sports Medicine, told HuffPost.
Comana describes five components of fitness: cardiovascular endurance, flexibility, muscular endurance, body composition and muscular strength. An activity like running on the treadmill may improve cardiovascular endurance and body composition, but an activity like dancing can actually target those two as well as muscular endurance and flexibility. And thatâs on top of improved balance, agility, coordination, power, reactivity and speed, he explains.
But weâre not talking slow dances here â to count as true cardio, Comana suggests aiming for an exertion level somewhere between a 5 and a 7 on a scale where 1 is resting and 10 is the hardest thing you can do. Try the talk test: You shouldnât be so out of breath that you canât speak, but your words should be a little choppy and your breath heavy. - Itâs fun.âIf exercise is not an enjoyable experience, weâre not going to do it,â Comana said. And the bottom line is that dancing is, plain and simple, fun in the way a monotonous treadmill run probably never will be. Plus, busting a move can trigger the release of feel good hormones like serotonin and endorphins.
âPeople think, âIâm not exercising, Iâm dancing,ââ he continued. âBut at the end of the day, youâre moving and youâre burning calories. Itâs just as good as a cardio class.â
And, as fitness expert Tracey Mallet explains, not only will you be more likely to stick with a fitness routine if itâs fun, but youâll also want to do it for longer. âThis will push you to move for a longer period of time than typical exercise, purely because itâs a lot of fun and not the dreaded word âexercise,ââ she told HuffPost. âDance inspires people to get in shape with something they love to do, which doesnât feel like dreaded exercise or a bad chore, but fun and exhilarating.â - It can be a social activity.As much as we all love to dance when thereâs nobody watching, thereâs something irresistible about dancing with other people, whether itâs with a partner or a class-full of fellow booty shakers.
âGroup fitness is seeing a surge in popularity because of Zumba,â Comana said. And working out in a class can help to up the difficulty level and increase accountability. - Anyone can dance.âThe nice thing about dance is that itâs inclusive,â Comana explained. âExercise is not inclusive, some people feel like they donât have the skill set and theyâre embarrassed ... I think anyone can just start to dance and enjoy the experience.â
Nervous about dancing in front of people? Start out in your own living room, moving to a song you just canât resist. âThere is a dancer in all of us,â Mallett said, âand when we move our body to the music we naturally smile and want to keep moving.â
And donât let two left feet keep you from joining in on the fun. âDonât get intimidated because you feel like youâre not a good dancer. Who cares?â Mallett stressed. âItâs about you moving your body in your way not like the rest of the people in the class. Zone out and focus on how great you feel and that no one is judging your abilities.â - It can keep your brain sharp.Weâve all heard by now that lifestyle habits like aiming for better sleep can help to keep your brain sharp. But, according to one study, so can dancing.
The findings, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, suggest that getting footloose on a regular basis is linked with a 76 percent reduction in dementia risk â about as much as playing board games or a musical instrument. Other physical activities, such as bicycling, walking and doing housework, werenât associated with any decreased risk. - Itâs gentle on the body.
Add caption The wide variety of moves (anyone up for the robot?) that we bust out when boogying down can actually be a lifesaver for your body, as youâre avoiding the wear and tear of repetitive motions.
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