Since his gym closed, you might find Tom Hippman, 55, working out to Journey's "Eye of the Tiger" in his Dallas living room, using whatever props he can find.
He's been doing situps against the wall, deadlifting 64-load bottles of Woolite, running through his parking garage and other exercises for 45 minutes a day.
"Being in a 700-square-foot apartment is a little more challenging," Hippman says. "I've taken it on as a challenge."
Many people are spending more time at home thanks to social distancing and shelter-in-place orders amid the coronavirus pandemic. That means some can't go to the gym or group classes to stay fit like they usually would.
"With coronavirus out there, there's a tendency not to exercise, but now it's even more important," says Dr. Rajiv Misquitta, director of lifestyle medicine at Kaiser Permanente Medical Center in South Sacramento, Calif. "If people don't have a [fitness] plan at home, they'll become sedentary and that will affect their health."
Regular exercise is important to keep your body and mind healthy. But you don't need a gym, expensive equipment, special clothing or a large space to do many activities at home.
Exercise, but not too much
Adults typically should get at least 150 minutes of moderate-intensity exercise a week, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. But it's different during this coronavirus pandemic, says Tamara Hew-Butler, an associate professor of exercise and sports science at Wayne State University in Detroit.
Instead, Hew-Butler recommends 20 to 45 minutes of moderate exercise three times a week. People, however, can modify that guidance according to their normal fitness routines. But exercise no more than five times a week and no exercise if you have flu-like symptoms, Hew-Butler adds.