Skip to main content

Mark Sisson explains why walking is the secret to fat-burning and brain health

Walking insights from Mark Sisson

man walking outside in nature hiking trees forest
Maeva Vigier / Unsplash

As we approach the warmer weather of the spring season, many are focused on getting active. Yet, health experts Brad Kearns and Mark Sisson (co-authors of Born to Walk and Two Meals a Day) say even elite athletes are turning to walking to stay healthy. Kearns and Sisson believe traditional endurance training may actually hurt your health, noting that walking could be the answer to fat-burning, brain health, lowering cortisol, and slowing aging. Kearns and Sisson argue that walking is simple, accessible, and low risk for virtually anyone of any fitness level. With minimal risk of injury and no intimidation factor, walking is a routine that anyone can adapt to at any time.

I interviewed Mark Sisson to learn more about the power of walking for our health. Mark is a pioneer of the primal and paleo lifestyle, and is known for his bestselling books and top-ranked blog. A former marathon runner and Ironman triathlete, he also founded Primal Kitchen, revolutionizing healthy condiments before its 2018 acquisition by Kraft-Heinz. Here’s what he shared.

Recommended Videos

Walking as the gold standard of recovery

Sisson shares that walking has always been the recovery gold standard for humans regarding health and fitness. “When we stop walking, we soon die. Walking forms the foundation for more sophisticated fitness activities, including forming an outstanding aerobic base for faster jogging, running, and sprinting. Walking is a central healing method for many overuse injuries, acute injuries, illnesses, and surgeries. Many patients are allowed to be released from the hospital when they are able to walk on their own power,” he says.

Not only is walking critical to healing and recovery, but it also forms the foundation for healthy fat metabolism. Per Sisson, this important benefit of walking is often overlooked, as our current fitness world focuses too much only on caloric expenditure. A sole focus on caloric expenditure “Simply doesn’t work and has been scientifically proven with emerging research known as the compensation theory of exercise. When our workouts are too strenuous, the body responds with genetically programmed survival mechanisms to move more slowly throughout the day, burn free, or calories, and eat more calories as a reaction against a perceived life or death starvation exhaustion episode,” Sisson says.

Walking for fat-burning

“Walking is non-strenuous, so it helps balance mood, energy, and appetite. In contrast, many endurance runners are exceeding comfortable heart rates and getting into the sugar-burning zones, which prompts sugar eating afterwards,” he says. While walking itself won’t magically melt the fat pounds away, Sisson says it sets us up for success by promoting a stable appetite and encouraging fat burning around the clock. In addition, walking helps improve your aerobic fitness enough to absorb and benefit from high-intensity workouts that can prompt genetic signaling for fat reduction.

“You can’t really thrive doing strength training circuits in the gym or occasional high intensity, cycling a group exercise workout or sprint workout unless you have an aerobic foundation which is built at the lower heart rates. The elite athletes we see in the Olympics will jog for miles daily because they are still at very comfortable heart rates. However, for most recreational exercises, a truly comfortable workout equates to walking, not running.”

Walking also helps fight against chronic cardio, a pattern of workouts that are “Slightly to significantly too stressful, eventually resulting in breakdown, burnout, illness, and injury. In measurable terms, it’s doing steady-state workouts where the heart rate exceeds the maximum heart rate for some or much of the workout. When you drift beyond fat max and into the more anaerobic, glucose burning, stress hormon producing zones, you might feel good with an immediate endorphin rush, but you were sending the genetic signals to your body to being lazier throughout the day, eat more food, and basically trained to be a sugar burner rather than a fat burner”

How walking impacts brain health and aging

Another interesting factor contributing to the “magic” of walking is its ability to boost cognitive function and ward off risks of cognitive decline. Per Sisson, “Walking stimulates the production of Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor (BDNF), which helps with neuroplasticity- the development of new neural connections. This can be described as an essential anti-aging benefit.” Additionally, walking works as a stress reliever to help normalize cortisol levels and other stress mechanisms in the body.

“Walking helps build musculoskeletal resiliency with minimal risk of overuse injury. The maximum impact load with walking is only around 1.75x bodyweight, so you get skeletal load and connective tissue activation without the pounding of running,” he says.

Lots of research also suggests that being inactive has extremely adverse effects on cognitive health. For example, one UCLA study reference in the book Born to Walk revealed that seniors who failed to get 4000 steps a day had smaller brains, inferior short-term memory, inferior processing, and inferior pattern recognition and long-term recall than another group who exceeded 4000 steps routinely.

Topics
Emily Caldwell
Emily is a freelance journalist with a focus on food, travel, health, and fitness content. She loves to travel to new…
Can playing racquet sports improve your heart health? Here’s the research
Is swinging that racket good for your heart? What does the research show?
Man swinging tennis racket playing tennis happy

Could swinging the paddle or racket and playing that game of pickleball, badminton, tennis, squash, or ping pong be good for your heart health? Researchers decided to find out. Personally, I like a game of tennis here and there to work up a sweat and get my muscles moving. I’m not a reigning champion or anything, but I can definitely feel the benefits. Not only do I feel the calories burning and my muscles working, I can also feel my heart rate ramping up and my flexibility and balance improving over time. Let’s look at the research on racket sports and heart health.

Interesting research

Read more
Zombie sit ups — the popular variation that isn’t just for Walking Dead fans
It doesn't have to be Halloween to get the benefits of zombie sit-ups
man sitting up in bed zombie sit up

As much as sit-ups are falling out of favor, they remain effective for targeting your rectus abdominis, obliques, hip flexors, transverse abdominis, and lower back muscles. You’ll see people doing this classic bodyweight exercise at the gym because it remains popular and provides several proven benefits, including improving core strength and muscle mass. Recently, fitness buffs have been discussing zombie sit-ups — a more advanced variation of the original sit-up. Let’s take a look at the zombie sit-up, the differences between the two, and the benefits.

What is the zombie sit-up?

Read more
Here’s why ‘ruck and lift’ plans are popular for a well-rounded workout
When you incorporate both weightlifting and rucking into your workout routine, you get the benefits of both.
Man wearing red and backpack rucksack rucking hiking walking in nature outdoors

Rucking is one of my favorites of all the growing fitness trends that have stuck around. I love getting out in nature surrounded by sun-speckled trees, and rucking encourages you to do just that. The benefits of rucking range from burning calories and improving heart health to getting stronger muscles and bones. There are also plenty of proven benefits of exercising outdoors.

If you’re not really much of a runner or you want to mix it up a bit, rucking is one way to elevate your walking to the next level. Rucking involves walking or hiking while wearing a backpack or rucksack. Rucking typically means walking at a moderate or faster pace, more like a purposeful march, while carrying a loaded pack on your back. Lately, ‘ruck and lift’ plans have been surging in popularity. 

Read more