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Take It Outside! Treating ADHD with Exercise

Take it Outside! Mother Nature as as Alternative ADHD Treatment

Krista Jeremiah is an active 37-year-old adult with ADHD who loves to exercise, but don’t ask her to work out surrounded by four walls. “I don’t last two minutes in a gym,” says Jeremiah. “It’s just boring. You’re not going anywhere!”

Jeremiah’s reaction to indoor exercise is typical for people with attention deficit disorder, because a gym or spa offers little mental stimulation. The blank walls and repetitive machines turn some people off to exercise fast. After all, the very symbol of boredom is a treadmill.

Yet vigorous exercise is essential for adults and children with ADHD. It relieves stress, and studies show that exercise may positively affect brain chemistry — even alleviate mood diorders.

Luckily, there’s no rule that says you have to get fit indoors. After buying and dropping three spa memberships, Jeremiah went outside to keep her mind and body in shape. She rides a bicycle and plays Ultimate Frisbee, a team sport that resembles soccer played with a flying disk.

[Free Guide to Natural ADHD Treatment Options]

“It’s all about motivation,” says Stephen Putnam, author of Nature’s Ritalin for the Marathon Mind: Nurturing Your ADHD Child with Exercise. Putnam went from heavy smoker to canoe racer as he found that exercise allowed him to control ADHD symptoms while avoiding the side effects of medication. From a fitness standpoint, he says, “an hour on a treadmill is just as good as on the street, but it’s more stimulating outside.”

The great outdoors offers many ways to keep things interesting while you get fit (and avoid expensive health club fees, too). Whether you choose a forested park, suburban streets, or sidewalks and skyscrapers, there’s lots of change and visual appeal.

Exercise is particularly beneficial to young people with ADHD, says Putnam, and going outdoors offers them new options. “For kids who are independent, for kids who aren’t team players, find an independent sport,” he suggests. Sports like running or bicycling allow children to move at their own pace.

Shake a Leg!

Ever since humans learned to walk on two legs, they have invented new ways to move with them. Your legs are the key to outside exercise, whether you walk, hike, jog, sprint, climb, or blade. Add hand-held dumbbells and your upper body gets a workout, too.

To keep it interesting, vary your legwork with new locations. Downtown streets offer continually changing sights. In the country, secondary roads and trails take you literally off the beaten path. Find a historically or architecturally engaging area, and a walk becomes a stroll through time that keeps a child’s imagination humming. Even the suburbs make good walking territory. Setting goals works well for suburban ramblers, like covering every single mile of a subdivision, meeting ten more neighbors, or counting the dogs you pass on your way.

[Exercise and the ADHD Brain: The Neuroscience of Movement]

Any kind of exercise at a steady pace is fine for burning calories. However, aerobic exercise is best for relieving ADHD symptoms, says Putnam. If your current exercise regime is already aerobic, push your endurance to a new level as you add variety to your routine with interval training. Instead of keeping a steady pace, work as hard or as fast as you can for a short burst, followed by a longer time — the interval — at an easier pace to recover.

Interval training can be incorporated into many kinds of exercise. For running or jogging, move at a comfortable pace for five minutes, then hit full speed for one minute, and repeat the cycle throughout your workout. Another way to set intervals is by distance — jog a certain number of city blocks, then sprint one or two. Some athletes pace intervals by following how their body feels. However you time your intervals, be sure to start and end your routine at a slow pace. (For more on incorporating interval training into your workout, log onto Sport Fitness Advisor.)

In interval training, it’s essential to know your limits. Consult a physician or fitness expert to learn what your maximum heart rate should be and how to measure it. A simple sports heart monitor that attaches to your wrist like a watch can keep track of your pulse.

Mix It Up!

Here are some outdoor activities that adults and children with ADHD have found to motivate and sustain their exercise habit. Most of these can be enjoyed solo or with a partner, including a child. Some can lead to new ways of combining exercise with the outdoors — who knows, you may even invent a new sport!

Interval training is easy to do on a bicycle, and it’s a thrill! A bike “computer,”an inexpensive device that attaches to your bicycle and tracks mileage and speed, can time the intervals. You can go for maximum speed on a flat surface, but for a real workout, try climbing hills. Don’t try to go fast up a difficult hill — stay in a low gear and concentrate on keeping balance and maintaining your pedaling at a consistent pace. And remember that the harder it is going up, the more fun it is coming back down!

Children can try new trees for a greater challenge. (Never let them climb too high or step on a branch that isn’t sure to support them.) For adults, climbing trees is a great muscle workout, and because your whole body is involved, it becomes a cardiovascular challenge, as well.

Another popular park workout: tai chi, the slow-motion martial arts regimen. From its martial origins in China, tai chi has evolved into a meditative discipline that stresses relaxation over combat. A tai chi instructor may lead a group in moving in unison. However, anyone can learn a basic routine and do it alone. Most people learn tai chi from videotapes or classes at recreation centers. (See PatienceTaiChi.com for more information.) Yoga is also good for stress, quick to learn, and perfect for outdoors on pleasant days.

The ADDitude Guide to Alternative ADHD Treatment

Whatever exercise you choose, the best part of taking it outdoors is making it your own — keyed to your timing, ability level, age, your family’s needs, and your thirst for adventure. To keep your routine from getting routine, rotate different kinds of outdoor activities, and try a new one now and then. Make your workout work for you!

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Updated on September 16, 2021

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