logo
This walking method can improve your BMI, posture and even mood

This walking method can improve your BMI, posture and even mood

New York Post08-05-2025
It's the easiest exercise in the book — but chances are, you're walking wrong.
That's according to sports scientist Joanna Hall, who told The Post that most people unknowingly sabotage their bodies and fitness goals every time they hit the pavement.
Determined to help, Hall developed WalkActive, a science-backed method that promises to turn a basic stroll into a full-body tune up, improving posture, joint health and overall well-being.
Advertisement
Already a hit across the pond, WalkActive recently launched in the US. Curious about the buzz, I laced up my sneakers to see if Hall could teach me to walk smarter (not harder) in just two weeks.
7 Joanna Hall has more than 30 years of experience in the sports and fitness industry.
Ailina Dohn
The four mistakes ruining my walk
When Hall first told me she could improve the way I walk, I was skeptical. As a New Yorker without a car, I easily rack up over 10,000 steps a day. How bad could my gait really be?
But the moment I saw her glide down a crowded street — head high, shoulders back, and stride confident and smooth — my usual sidewalk shuffle suddenly didn't seem so sharp.
Advertisement
'Anybody and everybody can walk better,' Hall told me as we took our first lap. She quickly noticed that I was guilty of the same four mistakes most people make while walking.
First off: my hip flexors were doing all the heavy lifting.
'These muscles are like the bullies on the playground,' Hall explained. 'We've trained them to take us forward, but what we really want is to engage our posterior chain' — the muscles running from the upper back down to the calves.
Advertisement
By overusing my hip flexors and neglecting my glutes and abs, I was unknowingly creating a stiff, robotic walk that shortened my stride and strained my lower back. Worse, studies suggest this imbalance can limit how far you're able to walk.
7 Hall launched WalkActive in the UK in 2010.
Ailina Dohn
Next, I was landing flat-footed, relying on what Hall calls a 'passive foot strike.'
'Wherever we have a joint, we're meant to have movement,' she said. 'When we walk incorrectly — by using a passive foot strike and overusing our hip flexors — we compromise our ability to engage all the joints in the foot.'
Advertisement
Over time, this reduces flexibility in the foot and ankle and can lead to knee pain and poor hamstring function, Hall said.
'This is an intelligent way of connecting with how your body should move, as opposed to the way our bodies have learned to move.' Joanna Hall
Then there was my head position.
As a writer glued to my computer and a Gen Z'er always on my phone, I spend most of my day looking down. That habit naturally carried over into my walk.
'This has huge implications on the way the body moves,' Hall said.
7 Hall said modern shoes are typically narrow and can further restrict the foot's movements.
Dan Welldon Photography
Leaning forward strains the upper back, limits spine rotation, and restricts the diaphragm, reducing oxygen intake. It also diminishes the mental health benefits of walking.
Hall explained that holding your head high enhances 'optic flow' — how we perceive objects moving past us — which helps reduce stress and anxiety.
Advertisement
'If we can take something that's the glue of our life and perfect it, the effect can be profound.' Joanna Hall
'If someone goes out for a walk for their mental well-being, but they're walking with poor technique and looking down, the benefits are actually reduced,' Hall said.
Finally, I was neglecting my arms, letting them hang passively by my sides as I walked.
Advertisement
'When the arm doesn't do anything, we're losing out on the ability to have whole body movement,' Hall said. 'It limits our ability to utilize the abdominal muscles and create shape around the waistline.'
A 14-day stride makeover
To improve your gait and get more from your walks, you might think you need to go longer, harder or faster. But according to Hall, that's not the answer.
'We actually need to find a more intelligent way to connect with our body so that we use the right muscles in the right way, at the right time, in the right sequence,' she said.
To learn how, I tried the WalkActive Method Course — a 14-day program priced at $64.99 that you get access to for life.
Advertisement
7 WalkActive recently launched in the US after more than a decade in the UK
Instagram / @walkactivewithjoannahall
With over 30 years in sports and fitness, Hall observed a common pattern: Most people are disconnected from how their bodies are meant to move. That disconnect — often caused by injury, poor habits or muscular imbalances — prevents efficient walking.
WalkActive aims to correct this with four simple steps. 'If we can take something that's the glue of our life and perfect it, the effect can be profound,' Hall said.
Advertisement
'Every step you take is going to give you a postural benefit,' she explained. 'It's going to give you a functional benefit from how your joints align. And it's also going to give you a cosmetic benefit from the body shape changes.'
Science backs it up. A study at South Bank University tested the WalkActive method on 24 healthy adults. After 28 days of Hall's training, their average walking speed increased by 23%, body mass dropped by 2%, and body fat decreased by 3%.
7 The WalkActive method has been proven to help people walk faster.
Dan Welldon Photography
The participants also had improved posture and skeletal alignment while experiencing less strain on their knee and ankle joints.
Even more impressive, 96% of participants reported a boost in overall well-being, and all of them were more physically active than before the experiment.
'This is an intelligent way of connecting with how your body should move, as opposed to the way our bodies have learned to move,' Hall said.
From clunky to confident
Hall and I met in Bryant Park to go over the basics of WalkActive.
Her first drill: the 'open ankle' move. You leave your back foot on the ground a bit longer, then peel it off — heel to toe — like it's stuck with Velcro.
'Feel the peel,' she reminded me, step by awkward step. I instantly felt a stretch up my thigh as my glutes and abs engaged.
Next, I had to lengthen the space between my ribs and hips — a small adjustment that flattens the tummy, improves posture and relieves hip pressure.
7 The WalkActive method helps participants optimize their skeletal alignment.
Then, I focused on increasing the distance between my earlobes and collarbone, which pulled my shoulders back and head up.
Finally, I worked on my arms. Hall instructed me to swing them naturally like pendulums, unlike the stiff, robotic motion of a power walker.
I won't lie — at first, I felt like a newborn deer. But after a few laps, the technique started to feel more natural. I could immediately tell I was moving differently.
After our initial meeting, Hall turned me loose on the 14-day program.
The WalkActive app offers a mix of instructional videos and audio coaching sessions to guide you before, during and after each walking session. Hall peppers in tips and reminders throughout, keeping you on track.
At first, maintaining proper form required real focus. I was moving slower than usual and kept slipping back into my old, slouchy habits.
'When you first start, it might be a bit clunky,' Hall reassured me during my first one-on-one coaching session.
7 The WalkActive method has been shown to increase walking speed by up to 23%.
We met virtually several times over the two-week course — a perk available to all WalkActive users. Hall assured me that the adjustment period was completely normal. After all, retraining your body to do something you've done your whole life doesn't happen overnight.
But with time, the method started to click. The tension in my upper back and shoulders eased. I felt new soreness in muscles I'd clearly been neglecting, like my calves and hamstrings.
Once I had the basics down, I was ready to pick up the pace. One of my favorite features in the app is the timed walking sessions, which are set to music with varying tempos to help you find your ideal pace.
Before long, I was excited to lace up my sneakers and hit the sidewalk, Hall's voice in my ear cheering me on with every step.
By the end of the two weeks, I was walking taller, moving faster and feeling lighter on my feet. I could go farther and actually found myself breaking a sweat.
'It's deeply empowering to have a positive connection with your body,' Hall told me after the course wrapped. 'We want to help you achieve that in a format that's fun and enjoyable. But if you take it seriously, it will genuinely help you feel better.'
Two months later, I'm still putting the method to work. I feel stronger, I walk more confidently and I'm even a few pounds lighter on the scale.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

How sleeping with your earrings in can age you prematurely: dermatologist warning
How sleeping with your earrings in can age you prematurely: dermatologist warning

New York Post

timean hour ago

  • New York Post

How sleeping with your earrings in can age you prematurely: dermatologist warning

Talk about a lobe low. According to a dermatologist, keeping your studs in while you sleep isn't doing your future self any favors. 'I'm gonna give you some advice so that when you're sitting around with your girlfriends 20 years from now and they're all complaining of this cosmetic issue, you're gonna be like, well, I saw this random doctor on social media talk about this 20 years ago,' shared Dr. Samantha Ellis. The cosmetic issue in question? Saggy earlobes. 'As we age, our earlobes get saggier, they get looser, and if you wear earrings, that can become a problem because your earrings can start to look very sad in your ear holes,' she explained. Ellis noted that the issue typically doesn't express itself until we reach 40 plus, a point at which 'your earrings are not looking as cute in their holes as they once were.' The good news? You can keep your lobes pert with one quick trick. 'The easiest thing you can do to prevent premature stretching of your ear holes is to not sleep in your earrings,' she said. This does not apply to piercings in the upper ear, where the cartilage is fortified — if sleeping with earrings in those areas doesn't bother you, there's no harm or aesthetic pitfalls in doing so, she said. 'What I'm talking about is wearing earrings in this loose, floppy earlobe night after night, year after year, putting unnecessary strain and stress on your piercing holes and causing them to stretch out way sooner than they actually should,' she explained while pulling on her own earring-less lobe. 4 The combined effects of gravity and sleeping in your statement earrings can lead to yawning, piercing holes, and a loose fit for your favorite studs. sameer – Indeed, the combined effects of gravity and sleeping in your statement earrings can lead to yawning piercing holes, and a loose fit for your favorite studs. For those whose lobes have already been compromised from years of overuse, help is available in the form of ear fillers. The extra volume from fillers gives earring posts more cushion, which helps studs stick out straight and allows diamonds to catch the light. Unlike facial filler procedures, ear injections rarely go awry. There's a small risk of hitting a blood vessel, which could prevent healthy cell turnover, 'but you're not going to lose your hearing,' Dr. Melissa Doft, an uptown plastic surgeon, previously told The Post. There's also no downtime post-treatment. 'You can come in, have it done, and go to a luncheon afterward, or do a pilates class afterward.' Other experts maintain that, in addition to stretching out from wearing/sleeping in accessories, ear lobes naturally enlarge as we age. 'In general, as people get older, their ears get bigger,' New York-based plastic surgeon Dr. Stafford Broumand previously told Page Six. 4 Kris Jenner (pictured in 2016) underwent earlobe reduction surgery in 2018. Getty Images 4 Jenner (pictured in 2022) got the procedure in an episode of 'Keeping Up With the Kardashians.' Getty Images for Baby2Baby 'You think that they stop growing at a certain age, but they slowly get bigger. The earlobe tends to elongate so that gives an aging appearance. 'You want to sort of have a perky, full, small, tight ear, and as people age, they want to sort of minimize the subtleties of aging, and one of those is the ear size.' While critics call the treatment an easy way to prey on the insecurities of the aging population, Doft says having floppy earlobes can be surprisingly upsetting. In many cases, she said, her clients most miss wearing the earrings they'd received as mementos of significant life events or gifts. Lobe improvement for the love of bling is exactly what Brielle Biermann claimed her mother, Real Housewives of Atlanta star Kim Zolciak, did, tweeting in 2018: 'My mom gets filler in her ears because her diamond earrings are too heavy… #richpeopleproblems.' Kardashian matriarch Kris Jenner took the desire for perky ears a step — and a scalpel — further, surgically reducing her earlobes in 2018.

Parents pack survival kits for college-bound kids — Narcan, Plan B included
Parents pack survival kits for college-bound kids — Narcan, Plan B included

New York Post

time3 hours ago

  • New York Post

Parents pack survival kits for college-bound kids — Narcan, Plan B included

Pencils, notebooks — and Narcan? Concerned parents of incoming college freshmen are adding the life-saving nasal spray to back-to-school lists this year — along with condoms, Plan B and more modern must-haves that might have been unthinkable a generation ago. And that's just fine with students like Summer, 20, who said they prefer a matter-of-fact approach to the way campus life is lived now. Advertisement 8 Narcan, an opioid antagonist, is rising as a top back-to-school necessity for college kids heading to campus in the fall. Getty Images 'I administered Narcan to a girl who was passed out on the front lawn of an off-campus frat party,' the psych major from North Carolina, who didn't want to use her last name, told The Post. 'It literally saves lives.' Narcan, officially known as Naloxone, is an opioid antagonist that reverses the effects of illicit substances, such as fentanyl. Advertisement It's a serious topic of discussion among older folks with chickadees poised to leave the nest. From Facebook mom groups to viral TikTok clips, 'college survival kits' with the miracle medication are all the rage — along with contraception pills and other grown-up adds. 8 Sophia Green and her mom, Jamie, went viral after revealing the Narcan and Plan B pills packed in the teen's college survival kit. Courtesy Jamie Green Idaho mom Jamie, 42, and daughter Sophia Green, 18, recently made a big splash with a social media reveal of their list of nontraditional necessities for Sophia's first day of classes at Boise State University this fall. Advertisement And while the 5.6 million viewers of their clip were largely supportive, digital detractors downed the trend, arguing that plying adolescents with the preventative products is 'sad' and 'embarrassing.' One contrarian commenter even wrote, 'Damn, teach your daughters common sense, resilience and willpower.' Protesters of the ultra-progressive shift may rush to shame so-called 'helicopter parents' for inadvertently giving teens the green light to experiment. Advertisement But Yamalis Diaz, an adolescent psychologist at NYU Langone Health, said cautious adults are neither overstepping boundaries with their kids — nor granting them permission to party. Instead, they're simply preparing the pups for real-world eventualities. 8 Narcan is commonly administered through the nose and counteracts the effects of an opioid overdose. Dennis A. Clark 'Millennials and Gen Xers, who grew up in a very flexible, open-minded time, are now sending their Gen Z children off to college fully equipped to handle difficult situations,' Diaz told The Post. 'If parents choose to get Narcan or condoms for their kids, the message isn't, 'Here, go do drugs and have sex,' ' she insisted. 'The message is, 'I don't want you to get into any kind of tricky predicaments, but here are some tools that you can use to make smart choices after the fact.' ' It's a message that youngsters need now more than ever, statistics show. An alarming 50,000 teenagers confessed to misusing fentanyl, a synthetic opioid, in 2023, per a recent report from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, a branch of the Department of Health and Human Services. Researchers discovered a 47% spike in teen fentanyl use from 2022 to 2023. They attributed the startling uptick to the fact that many youngsters could have taken it without realizing. Advertisement Representatives for the Drug Enforcement Administration have deemed fentanyl, a Schedule I drug, the 'leading cause of death for adults ages 18 to 45 in the US,' according to the DEA's Campus Drug Prevention site. Summer's distressed schoolmate could have ended up just another statistic — but luckily, the quick thinker had taken an on-campus harm reduction seminar and knew what to do. 'She was super pale, her breathing was shallow and her pupils were pinpoint, which is a sign of overdose,' she recalled. Advertisement Now, she's always prepared with a supply of the medication, which is available as an over-the-counter commodity at most nationwide drugstores and online outlets like Amazon, where it costs around $45. 'I always keep Narcan in my purse when I go to college events, parties and festivals — because you just never know,' she said. 'Better to be safe than sorry.' 8 Gretchen is proudly giving her daughter all of the tools she needs to navigate difficult situations during the upcoming semester. Courtesy Gretchen Schaefer Maine mama Gretchen Schaefer, 50, who's sending her daughter, Ingrid, 19, back to school with a stash of Narcan and Plan B, agrees. Advertisement In fact, the mother of two said she's encouraging others with college kiddos to follow suit. 'The most common objection I hear is, 'Well, my kid doesn't hang out with drug users,' ' said Schaefer, noting that Ingrid kicks it with the sober crowd at her school in Massachusetts. 'But what if someone was slipped something and they have to reverse an overdose?' @snappity207 I made my kid a health kit for college instead of buying a prepackaged first aid kit. She may not need a few of these things, but knows to share if someone does and I will happily resupply. #college #dormhaul #firstaid #backtoschool ♬ original sound – Gretchen's Kitchen The vigilant mom is also keen on reversing the effects of unprotected sex. Advertisement 'In the case of sexual assault, I want her or someone on her dorm floor to have the Plan B on hand,' she added. 'It was $6 at Costco.' To ensure that Ingrid knows how and when to use all of the remedies in her 'health kit,' Schaefer's even created, printed and laminated an emoji-coded list of detailed instructions. Schaefer's medicine how-to prompts include, 'Can't poop? Take 2 SennaLax before bed,' and 'Oops, condom broke? Take 1 Plan B ASAP after unprotected sex (within 72 hours).' 8 As an extra precaution, Schaefer curated a detailed list of all the medical emergency items, their uses and recommended dosages in Ingrid's college health kit. Courtesy Gretchen Schaefer 8 Schaefer tells The Post that she purchased the Narcan, Plan B contraceptive pills and other emergency health supplies for Ingrid because there aren't many pharmacies near the teen's school. Getty Images She's not being overprotective; she's simply passing the torch. 'I'm the Swiss Army knife mom,' said Schaefer. 'I want her to be the Swiss Army knife roommate.' Jamie Green wants her Sophia to gain a similar reputation around the dorms. 8 Jamie says her family openly discusses drug and sex safety practices. Courtesy Jamie Green. 'It super important to be prepared,' Jamie, a social worker who's also at Boise State pursuing a master's degree, told The Post. She hopes Sophia's new crop of college friends feels comfortable turning to her for support when necessary. 'The Narcan and Plan B aren't necessarily for Sophia, but they're for anyone on campus in need,' said Jamie. 'They can confidentially come to her and get help.' 8 Sophia dreams of becoming a doctor who specializes in women's health and care. Courtesy Jamie Green Sophia, an aspiring OB/GYN, looks forward to being a safe haven over the next four years. 'My mom and I have always had a very open relationship, and it feels really great that she's setting me up for success in case of any emergencies because s–t happens,' said Sophia. 'It's better to be prepared than keeping secrets, lying and maybe ending up in a worse situation. 'I'm glad other girls in my dorm will be able to trust me or my mom if they don't have anyone else.'

Little-known synthetic opioid nitazene is up to 43 times more deadly than fentanyl, resistant to Narcan and killing young Americans
Little-known synthetic opioid nitazene is up to 43 times more deadly than fentanyl, resistant to Narcan and killing young Americans

New York Post

time9 hours ago

  • New York Post

Little-known synthetic opioid nitazene is up to 43 times more deadly than fentanyl, resistant to Narcan and killing young Americans

A pair of Texas friends died less than three months apart after ingesting pills laced with a dangerous new synthetic opioid, and now their mothers are begging US officials to sound the alarm on the little-known drug up to 43 times more lethal than fentanyl. The young men both died this year after swallowing different pills secretly tainted with the deadly, often Narcan-resistant opioids known as nitazenes, which have begun seeping into the US at an alarming rate. Lucci Reyes-McCallister, 22, died January 26 near Houston, Texas, after taking a pill labeled as Xanax that was actually laced with N-Pyrrolidino Protonitazene, an emerging form of nitazene. Advertisement 4 Lucci is seen baking with his mother. Youtube / City of League City TX The particular strain of the new synthetic narcotic that killed Lucci is 25 times more lethal than fentanyl, but other nitazenes are between five and 43 times stronger, depending on the type, according to the Inter-American Drug Abuse Control Commission. The stronger the strain, the more resistant the nitazene is to the overdose antidote Narcan, as seen in Lucci's case. Advertisement 'It was the first time I'd ever heard of it,' Lucci's heartbroken mother, Grey McCallister, told The Post of nitazene. 'It took them seven rounds of Narcan to try to revive him,' she said. But Lucci never came to. 4 Lucci died in January after he took a nitazene-laced counterfeit pill. Crowder Funeral Home Advertisement Nearly six months after his death, Grey received a call from another mother in the area who revealed her son also died of the same form of nitazene. It was Lucci's friend, Hunter Clement, 21. Hunter died on April 10 after taking a nitazene-laced pill branded to look like a Percocet. A few weeks after his death, Ruthi came across a news article about the dangers of nitazenes. Advertisement 'I told my husband, 'I feel like that could be what Hunter died from,'' she recalled. Nitazenes are produced in clandestine Chinese labs and may have made their way to the cartels in Mexico using 'their existing relationships' with 'suppliers' in China, according to the Drug Enforcement Administration. The drug was developed over 60 years ago as an alternative to morphine, but was never approved for medical use because of its high risk of overdose. Authorities in Europe have already seen several overdoses from the synthetic narcotic and the devastating poison is now starting to hit US shores more. Last January, a Florida man confessed to distributing protonitazene that he received in the mail from labs in China, according to the IRS. Customs officers at JFK are seeing the drug coming through the airport 'at least a few times a week in quantities ranging from just a few grams to upwards of a pound or more,' Andrew Renna, Assistant Port Director for Cargo Operations at the airport, said in May. And it's all part of China's 'ongoing attack against America,' former acting DEA administrator Derek Maltz told The Post. 'As America is just now really starting to talk about fentanyl, we have now seen all these other substances that are popping up everywhere, and they're coming out of these labs in China,' Maltz said. Medical examiners in Houston and the surrounding Harris County have already seen four cases of nitazene-related overdose deaths, according to the Harris County Institute of Forensic Sciences. Advertisement 4 Hunter Clement pictured in a photo posted to his obituary. Dignity Memorial Hunter's mother, Ruthi Clement, fought through tears as she recalled finding her son that fateful night with his face down in his bed and his body cold and purple. She quickly started giving Hunter chest compressions and two doses of Narcan, but it wasn't enough to save him. 'Sometimes I get mad because I couldn't save my own son, but I do want to save other people, even if it's just one person in honor of him,' Ruthi told The Post. Traditional drug tests don't look for nitazenes since US authorities are just now learning of their existence, the two grieving mothers said. Advertisement 4 A DEA instructor holds a bag of isotonitazene pills. DEA Nitazenes are not in the standard toxicology tests used by Harris County medical examiners and the screenings are only ordered 'if there is suspected nitazene use and there is no other toxicology to explain the death,' the office said. The mothers are now warning America's youth in the hopes of saving lives. 'They could think something is clean or rather safe when it's actually pressed for something that's 20 to 40 times stronger, more deadly than fentanyl,' Grey said. Advertisement 'It just really lit a fire under me. There was no way Lucci was going to die in vain,' she added. Maltz urged the feds to run educational programs and social media awareness campaigns to meet kids on platforms 'where they are.' 'You have to educate these kids, you have to have mandatory education. The social media influencers, the athletes, the role models to speak out on social media sites with these video reels to educate the kids. That's where they are, they're not watching the news,' Maltz said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store