The bar chart illustrates the ways residents prefer to work out, highlighting a significant diversity in how much proportion of time people spend on exercising alone and together with others. To be specific, the percentage of exercising alone, with friends, with their family and in group accounts for 54.3%, 47.7%, 23.9%, 15.8% respectively, showing a noticeable dominance in working out alone and with friends.
Several factors contribute to the tendency. To begin with, it has been widely accepted that working out benefits both physical and mental health, which brings about stress relieving and a more fitting body. In addition, working out alone provides strong support for focus yourself on exercising since you can make a more flexible schedule that suits you better. In the end, not only does exercising with friends enhance friendships but it also enables people to encourage each other.
In conclusion, the high proportion of the time spending on exercising alone reflects the situation that most people’s schedules don’t match in today’s busy society. For the reasons given above, we may predict that an increasing number of people may choose to exercising alone and this trend will not change in the near future.