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The more out of shape you are, the longer it will take to see results from your exercise program.

Percentage wise, the greatest gains in fitness come in the first few weeks and months of any exercise program. And the less fit you are, the greater the relative improvement will be. People who have undergone operations, for instance, will often improve their fitness by up to 300% in the first month of a two month rehabilitation program. (A trainer athlete on the other hand would be happy with an improvement of just a few percent.)

Being very tired after an exercise session is a sign that you’ve done ‘a really good workout.’

In fact, it’s a sign you’re pushing yourself too hard. Except for the first couple of weeks of a new exercise program (when the unaccustomed stress may leave you more fatigued than usual), your workouts should leave you feeling invigorated, not worn out. One good rule of thumb : You should finish each workout with the feeling you could have easily gone a bit longer if needed. An especially bad sign is if you’re still tired a day or two after a workout. In that case you’re probably overstraining, and need to reduce the length and intensity of your exercise sessions.

When your muscles are sore, it means they’re getting stronger.

What it really means is that you’ve damaged and torn the microscopic-sized connective tissue that surrounds your muscle fiber. There is evidence that this soreness may be due to damage to the muscle fibers themselves. "Delayed muscle soreness" peaks between 24 to 48 hours after an offending workout, and then generally disappears on its own (to speed the process, apply ice to the sore areas for 20 minutes, several times a day).

Muscle soreness is usually caused by eccentric muscle contractions – movements that require a muscle to contract is it is lengthening. Examples : lowering a heavy weight to the ground, or using your leg muscle to break your progress during a hike or a game of basketball or tennis. If you plan to participate in an activity that requires eccentric contractions, build up slowly over a period of several weeks, to give your muscles and connective tissue time to adjust.

People who are out of shape sweat more than really fit people.

The truth is exactly the reverse : One of the natural changes that occurs as you begin a new exercise program is that your perspiration goes up. That’s because you’re producing heat as you exercise. Sweat (a combination of water, salt and trace amounts of iron) helps cool your body and prevent you from becoming overheated. When your body temperature rises, small blood vessels in your skin widen and draw heated blood to the surface. You also begin to sweat from pores in your skin. As the sweat evaporates, it draws heat away from the superficial blood vessels. The cooler blood then recirculates throughout the body, lowering internal body temperature. Faced with the challenge of dissipating this new heat on a daily basis, your body quickly becomes more efficient at cooling itself by increasing the output of your sweat glands.

While fit people perspire more than sedentary folks, their sweat is less salty as well, since the body also adapts by increasing its rate of sodium absorption as perspiration fluid moves from the sweat glands to the skin surface.