
Kate Hudson, 46, says even 20 minutes of movement a day is "golden" for her wellness.
"I danced. So, like if I'm not moving, I feel awful, you know?" she said.
She says she varies her workouts according to her mood, doing yoga on some days and weightlifting on others.
Kate Hudson says there's one thing she can't skip each day if she wants to feel like herself.
During an appearance on Wednesday's episode of the "Table Manners" podcast, the 46-year-old spoke about her approach to wellness and the daily habit she prioritizes even when she's busy.
"I danced. So, like if I'm not moving, I feel awful, you know? And I'm like the kind of person that's like, and even if it's 20 minutes a day, you're golden," Hudson told podcast hosts Jessie and Lennie Ware.
The actor said she often uses that to encourage people who are reluctant to start exercising.
"I'm like, just go in for 20 minutes. Just like, move your body. Just go lift some weights. Stand in front of the mirror and just do something," Hudson said.
Even a small amount of daily movement can create a "domino effect" that motivates people to make healthier choices and be more active, she said.
Hudson said she varies her workouts depending on how she's feeling, sometimes focusing on yoga, stretching, and breathwork, and other times on weightlifting.
"Even this morning, it's like, I couldn't not wake up and move my body," she said.
She told Women's Health in a 2019 interview that she eats about five times a day and her go-to workout is Pilates.
"I love how flexible I get and what it does to the shape of my body," Hudson said.
In an October interview with EatingWell, Hudson shared her morning routine, which includes going outside barefoot and spending time in the sun.
"I wake around 6 a.m. and do some sort of meditation practice while I drink warm water with lemon. I also try not to look at my phone during this time," Hudson said.
Hudson isn't the only celebrity who has spoken about fitting shorter workouts into their busy schedules.
Helen Mirren, 80, has long been a fan of a 12-minute military workout developed by the Royal Canadian Air Force in the 1950s.
"It is the exercise I have done off and on my whole life. It just very gently gets you fit," Mirren said.
In February, Kristen Bell, 45, told Business Insider that she tries to fit short bursts of exercise into her days by treating them like exercise "snacks."
"I keep a set of 10 or 15-pound weights underneath furniture so when I'm cooking dinner, if I haven't worked out that day, I'll do a set of bicep curls or shoulder presses while something simmers on the stove. Sometimes my workouts are sliced into my day in one-and-a-half-minute segments," Bell said.
Read the original article on Business Insider
latest_posts
- 1
Amazon sued over 'punitive' handling of employee absences - 2
Coffee Prices Finish Higher on Brazil Cop Concerns - 3
Vote in favor of your #1 Kind of Cap - 4
Tear gas and arrests: Iranian regime continues crackdown on protesters amid economic unrest - 5
The Electric Toyota Hilux Is Finally here, But It's Not Cheap
Drenched in Pixels: A Survey of \Vivid Interactivity Experience\ Game
Island Travel Guide: Must-Visit Objections for 2024
Conquering Language Boundaries: Individual Accounts of Multilingualism
Dominating Monetary Administration: A Bit by bit Manual for Making an Individual Financial plan
Relentless rise in carbon pollution from fossil fuels slightly dampens climate-fighting hopes
Native artists in Texas and Mexico shared their vision of the universe for 4,000 years, ancient murals suggest
Astonishing interstellar comet captured in new images by NASA Mars missions
'Home Alone' actor Joe Pesci said 'no' to this stunt until he saw a 9-year-old girl do it, says director Chris Columbus
German foreign minister backs abandoning EU's unanimity principle












