Working out twice a day
ayannabayer
Posts: 153 Member
Is working out twice a day, 5 days a week over doing it? Is it unhealthy/dangerous?
0
Replies
-
Why are you asking us? We don't know you.-1
-
ayannabayer wrote: »Is working out twice a day, 5 days a week over doing it? Is it unhealthy/dangerous?
How many hours are exercising everyday? 10 minutes of exercise twice a day would not be a lot, 2 hours twice a day would be over doing it.
0 -
Yes it is.0
-
Depends.
Are you training for something?
Exactly what are you doing?
Are you fueling properly to be training twice daily?
How long are each of your training sessions?0 -
yes, over doing it.
no, not unhealthy/dangerous
end thread/0 -
training twice a day is fine provided you get enough rest between sessions, eat enough good food to fuel yourself and you get plenty of sleep.0
-
There are reasons why high schools and colleges have restrictions on how many two a days they can do. Your profile says you're 19 with 80 lbs to lose. That doesn't indicate conditioned athlete training for an event.0
-
brianpperkins wrote: »There are reasons why high schools and colleges have restrictions on how many two a days they can do. Your profile says you're 19 with 80 lbs to lose. That doesn't indicate conditioned athlete training for an event.
Well, I kind of disagree that two-a-days are athlete only depending on what she's doing.
For example, doing a 30-60min strength training or cardio session (depending on the day) in the AM and then a 30-45 min yoga session or walk in the PM. I think that'd be perfectly okay even if she's not an athlete in training.0 -
PikaKnight wrote: »brianpperkins wrote: »There are reasons why high schools and colleges have restrictions on how many two a days they can do. Your profile says you're 19 with 80 lbs to lose. That doesn't indicate conditioned athlete training for an event.
Well, I kind of disagree that two-a-days are athlete only depending on what she's doing.
For example, doing a 30-60min strength training or cardio session (depending on the day) in the AM and then a 30-45 min yoga session or walk in the PM. I think that'd be perfectly okay even if she's not an athlete in training.
For a teen that is looking to lose 80 pounds ... overdoing it. It's the recipe for disaster ... start exercising, then quickly escalate to overdoing it, either burn out or get injured, quit.0 -
brianpperkins wrote: »PikaKnight wrote: »brianpperkins wrote: »There are reasons why high schools and colleges have restrictions on how many two a days they can do. Your profile says you're 19 with 80 lbs to lose. That doesn't indicate conditioned athlete training for an event.
Well, I kind of disagree that two-a-days are athlete only depending on what she's doing.
For example, doing a 30-60min strength training or cardio session (depending on the day) in the AM and then a 30-45 min yoga session or walk in the PM. I think that'd be perfectly okay even if she's not an athlete in training.
For a teen that is looking to lose 80 pounds ... overdoing it. It's the recipe for disaster ... start exercising, then quickly escalate to overdoing it, either burn out or get injured, quit.
Well, that's true for anyone, honestly. Was just putting it out that two-a-days isn't really "excessive" as long as you educate yourself in managing it (i.e. making sure you take at least 1 rest day a week, fueling your body properly, not doing two extensive workouts the same day, etc.)0 -
The only thing that I can add to this is that when we were kids we would run around and play all day, bouncing around, climbing stuff, riding bikes and kicking a ball. Nobody told us that that much exercise was bad for us then. So unless you have some serious medical condition preventing you from doing excess exercise I would imagine that it is ok as long as you vary the types of workouts that you do. Afterall if you don't exercise all the muscle groups equally you might end up looking really toned in places whilst looking saggy in others. Good luck.0
-
I'd like to know how many calories she's consuming everyday...0
-
I have been going to the gym
in the morning for a 20-30 minute stroll on the treadmill (2.5-3.0 MPH pace). Then back for 20 mins of strength training and 20 intense cardio. The morning stroll keeps my osteoarthritic knee pain at bay all day.0 -
-
Probably not overdoing it...though it would be helpful to have many of the details indicated above.0
-
PikaKnight wrote: »brianpperkins wrote: »PikaKnight wrote: »brianpperkins wrote: »There are reasons why high schools and colleges have restrictions on how many two a days they can do. Your profile says you're 19 with 80 lbs to lose. That doesn't indicate conditioned athlete training for an event.
Well, I kind of disagree that two-a-days are athlete only depending on what she's doing.
For example, doing a 30-60min strength training or cardio session (depending on the day) in the AM and then a 30-45 min yoga session or walk in the PM. I think that'd be perfectly okay even if she's not an athlete in training.
For a teen that is looking to lose 80 pounds ... overdoing it. It's the recipe for disaster ... start exercising, then quickly escalate to overdoing it, either burn out or get injured, quit.
Well, that's true for anyone, honestly. Was just putting it out that two-a-days isn't really "excessive" as long as you educate yourself in managing it (i.e. making sure you take at least 1 rest day a week, fueling your body properly, not doing two extensive workouts the same day, etc.)
Agreed. And I would think a strong, young teenager is who could pull off something like this for sure. Just don't injure yourself OP. Listen to your body and take a break when you need it
0 -
Do you feel it's unhealthy? It's easy to fall into an unhealthy relationship with exercise. If you enjoy it and don't over exert yourself or injure yourself, I don't see anything wrong!
There are days I wake up and run a few miles and then go to the gym at night to do weights. I don't feel like I'm hurting myself. I also make sure to fuel my body with enough calories to function.0
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.2K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 422 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 23 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions