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#2
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When your doing cardio you should keep in mind there is a Heart Rate (number dependent on age) that is telling you how hard to are working. Listen to you body -- but the HR is a good reference point if you are just being a bitch or if you are going psycho.
For early 30s its like 140-160 is moderate to moderately high intensity exercise...you want about 30 mins of this. Look up what it is for you (its on the machines a lot of times) and try to obtain this HR range for at least 15-20 mins. It can be problematic to weight loss to do too much exercise in this zone though. In addition you can do some time in the fat burn zone. I would say 15-25 mins. Fat burn zone is like 125-139 for early 30s and will burn calories. The intensity will be low enough for you to talk to someone if you wanted to -- or pay attention well to T.V. etc. This way you can do a full hour -- get aerobic conditioning in and burn maximum calories -- without getting into that long distance conditioning stuff. I hear that can slow weight loss down a lot toward the end of you de-fatening. so to recap: 5 mins warm up 5 mins fat burn 30 mins aerobic 20 mins fat burn or something like that. You just modify the setting of the machine you are on. For example: I tend to go up in intensity for 2.5 mins, up again 2.5 mins, down for 2.5 mins, down for 2.5 mins, up... etc. And by up and down I mean mostly incline but also speed. This keeps heart rate up but prevents it from slowly overloading constant high settings. Obviously if you are just getting started -- you don't burn yourself out trying to run an hour out of no where. Start with 30 mins -- or AT LEAST 20. Try to get the speed up to like 5.0 for most people. You can slowly increase everyday until you are working off way more fat than most around you. Unless you become a running addict you should probably not buy into the "take it easy" mantra. Just be age appropriate. | ||
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Last edited by JurisDictum; 11-28-2017 at 04:27 PM..
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#3
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Quote:
If you're only slightly overweight, I'd still start pretty small but work up the changes little by little. It's more important to get in the habit of doing it everyday than trying to find the ideal workout. Successfully losing weight is the exception, not the rule. | |||
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#4
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HIIT is recommended more for its longer duration metabolism boost than low steady cardio. At least this year it was, not sure what the new fad might be.
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#5
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If you can't do stuff like un-assisted pull-ups and 50 push ups at once...chances are your going to have a really hard time just doing a HITT program without failing every stage .Doesn't mean you wasted time -- its just rough and arguably worse than doing less intensity right. HITT I think is the kind of training they do in the military. No expert but that's what it seems like. It will make you generally more atheletic and strong as a person. But I heard that its not necessarily good to be doing this kind of jumping from high intensity to rest for 35+ year old men. That's a brand spanking new study -- but it appears that HITT might be more of a young mans game (or women oddly). | |||
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#6
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When I'm losing/gaining I personally just track my food intake on myfitnesspal.com and make sure I have a deficit/excess. Just doing it a while you get pretty educated on how much simple junk adds up fast in calories, and how you can eat some stuff all day and not gain. | |||
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#7
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young dietitian
__________________
![]() <Kimmie and Nalkin> | ||
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#8
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best way to not be fat is to make healthcare a luxury.
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#9
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What is HITT
No I won't google it
__________________
God Bless Texas
Free Iran | ||
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#10
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Quote:
__________________
<Millenial Snowfkake Utopia>
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