cardio vs weightlifting
liesevanlingen
Posts: 508 Member
I'm wondering about this because I've read quite a few posts in various forums here that say something along the lines of "Don't waste your time doing cardio--lift weights instead!"
Why is that? What's wrong with doing cardio? I thought that any exercise that gets your heart rate up and gets you moving was good. I know that weight-lifting helps to improve calorie burn because of building muscle (which burns calories at a much higher rate than fat) but it doesn't necessarily follow for me that therefore cardio is a waste of time. I do a lot of treadmilling and my legs are definitely getting more muscle definition and losing fat dramatically. So I'm kind of wondering what's with the negative comments I'm seeing.
Why is that? What's wrong with doing cardio? I thought that any exercise that gets your heart rate up and gets you moving was good. I know that weight-lifting helps to improve calorie burn because of building muscle (which burns calories at a much higher rate than fat) but it doesn't necessarily follow for me that therefore cardio is a waste of time. I do a lot of treadmilling and my legs are definitely getting more muscle definition and losing fat dramatically. So I'm kind of wondering what's with the negative comments I'm seeing.
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Replies
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There is nothing at all wrong with doing cardio. Strength training and cardio serve two different purposes though:
(1) Strength training will help you build muscle mass. Muscle mass will increase your body's caloric needs and therefore, over the long run, help you lose body fat by making it possible to eat more while still losing (or not gaining) body fat. If you are going to for the lean, "toned" (I hesitate to use that word but am) look, then strength training is the way to go. Basically, this is what will make you look good on the beach (body recomposition).
(2) Cardio burns calories now so it allows you to lose weight while eating more than you otherwise would. That said, it is entirely possible to lose weight while doing absolutely no cardio, and there are plenty of people on MFP that look great and just strength train. The other benefit of cardio is obviously cardiovascular health, and also, for many of us, the endorphin release.
The threads you see speaking negatively about cardio, for the most part, are attempting to convey that you absolutely should be engaged in strength training. Cardio alone is not enough for body recomposition/the beach look.
EDIT: I do both and I would encourage both. But that's me.0 -
For the same time/effort weightlifting gives more asthetic benefits than cardio.
Most people care about asthetics more than they care to admit and thats where the suggestions comes from.
Also, some people are very unrealistic about body sculpting and what it really takes to change one's appearance and this becomes a soapbox for those less ignorant of what it takes to get where a poster is implying that they want to.0 -
Cardio, is strength training for your heart and lungs, nothing wrong with it, whatsoever and don't let anyone tell you different.0
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Depends on what you want to do. Can you get fit without cardio, sure, can you run a marathon without cardio and only doing strength training? Having a good balance is always desirable, when I was racing I did a lot of lifting as it helps, but I could never have just done lifting alone.0
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I think that cardio is good for you but as far as weight loss goes...if all you are doing is cardio you really are wasting your time. At first it will be good but after a while, your body will compensate and start getting rid of your existing lean body mass to try and preserve energy for the cardio. As a result, you will eventually plateau.
When you do strength training, your body will burn more fat and try and preserve the muscle since it is being actively used / challenged and the body needs it. If you are strength training and not eating more calories though, you won't gain any muscle...your body just preserves the existing.
Currently, I like to have a balance of both cardio and strength training and that seems to work best for me.0 -
I think it depends on your goals. My goal was to lose weight – I was starting at 289 lbs, so clinically "morbidly obese". I met with a personal trainer when I first started and he had me doing this:
Mon-Wed-Fri: 5 minute cardio workout, 30-40 minutes strength training/weight lifting on a plan he designed for me that included upper body, lower body and core training, finish with 30-45 minutes cardio.
Tues-Thurs: 60-75 minutes cardio (or as much as I could do)
I lost the weight, more than 100 lbs., so he must have known what he was talking about.0 -
Because the trendy thing right now is to hate on cardio and tell everyone that they need to eat more and lift heavier.
Ultimately it comes down to this:
If you want to lose weight, you have to sustain a reasonable and healthy caloric deficit. This can be done with diet alone, or with a combination of diet and exercise.
Exercise comes in 2 basic forms - cardio and strength training. Cardio will have little affect on the shape of your body, but it's great for helping maintain that calorie deficit I just mentioned if your eating habits aren't as good as they should be (which, lets face it, is probably the case for most of us). Strength training won't help as much with the deficit, but will have the biggest impact on your appearance.
Look at it this way... diet alone, or diet + cardio can both lead to weight loss. If you were a big marshmallow to begin with, you'll end up being a smaller marshmallow after. That's what weight loss is, simply a reduction in what the scale says with little thought given to body fat and/or body composition.
Add in some legitimate strength training and you'll start to see the "softness" in your body go away. Not only will you lose weight, but you'll change how you look as a greater percentage of you weight loss will come from body fat and more lean body mass will be retained. This is the toning effect so many people talk about. Not only is this healthier (losing body fat), but it's also much more aesthetically pleasing for most people.0 -
I only do cardio and plateaued at 10% bodyfat. Woe is me.
Or maybe the plateau is the 3000 plus calories I eat everyday.0 -
There is nothing at all wrong with doing cardio. Strength training and cardio serve two different purposes though:
(1) Strength training will help you build muscle mass. Muscle mass will increase your body's caloric needs and therefore, over the long run, help you lose body fat by making it possible to eat more while still losing (or not gaining) body fat. If you are going to for the lean, "toned" (I hesitate to use that word but am) look, then strength training is the way to go. Basically, this is what will make you look good on the beach (body recomposition).
(2) Cardio burns calories now so it allows you to lose weight while eating more than you otherwise would. That said, it is entirely possible to lose weight while doing absolutely no cardio, and there are plenty of people on MFP that look great and just strength train. The other benefit of cardio is obviously cardiovascular health, and also, for many of us, the endorphin release.
The threads you see speaking negatively about cardio, for the most part, are attempting to convey that you absolutely should be engaged in strength training. Cardio alone is not enough for body recomposition/the beach look.
This is the best answer you are going to get.0 -
I am doing both cardio and weight lifting and I'm within 6-7 lbs of my goal weight (which is approximately 145 lbs). So weight loss isn't so much of a concern anymore. Currently I'm focusing on getting stronger, so weightlifting is the main part of my regular workout (twice weekly at the gym). Aesthetics isn't my main concern--getting stronger and healthier is. Thanks for your replies, I can understand where that is coming from now.0
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I think the problem is people just way over do cardio. They are uneducated and believe that cardio is the only way to lose weight, when the truth is weight loss comes down to a calorie deficit. I say this all the time on this forum-unless you're training for some kind of endurance event, there is just no need to do hours upon hours of cardio a week.
Cardio should be a part of everyone's training regime. I think a split such as 75-80% weightlifting, 20-25% cardio is perfect.0 -
also calorie deficits make you lose weight and strength training in a calorie deficit is the best way to maximize weight lost as body fat.0
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There is nothing at all wrong with doing cardio. Strength training and cardio serve two different purposes though:
(1) Strength training will help you build muscle mass. Muscle mass will increase your body's caloric needs and therefore, over the long run, help you lose body fat by making it possible to eat more while still losing (or not gaining) body fat. If you are going to for the lean, "toned" (I hesitate to use that word but am) look, then strength training is the way to go. Basically, this is what will make you look good on the beach (body recomposition).
(2) Cardio burns calories now so it allows you to lose weight while eating more than you otherwise would. That said, it is entirely possible to lose weight while doing absolutely no cardio, and there are plenty of people on MFP that look great and just strength train. The other benefit of cardio is obviously cardiovascular health, and also, for many of us, the endorphin release.
The threads you see speaking negatively about cardio, for the most part, are attempting to convey that you absolutely should be engaged in strength training. Cardio alone is not enough for body recomposition/the beach look.
EDIT: I do both and I would encourage both. But that's me.
what a fantastic response.
This is all you need to know in terms anyone can understand.0 -
There is nothing at all wrong with doing cardio. Strength training and cardio serve two different purposes though:
(1) Strength training will help you build muscle mass. Muscle mass will increase your body's caloric needs and therefore, over the long run, help you lose body fat by making it possible to eat more while still losing (or not gaining) body fat. If you are going to for the lean, "toned" (I hesitate to use that word but am) look, then strength training is the way to go. Basically, this is what will make you look good on the beach (body recomposition).
(2) Cardio burns calories now so it allows you to lose weight while eating more than you otherwise would. That said, it is entirely possible to lose weight while doing absolutely no cardio, and there are plenty of people on MFP that look great and just strength train. The other benefit of cardio is obviously cardiovascular health, and also, for many of us, the endorphin release.
The threads you see speaking negatively about cardio, for the most part, are attempting to convey that you absolutely should be engaged in strength training. Cardio alone is not enough for body recomposition/the beach look.
This is the best answer you are going to get.
Agreed. They both serve different purposes and it depends on what your goals are. I do both as I want to improve my cardiovascular fitness (running and hiking have added years to my lung health after years of smoking and asthma) but also want a great looking body, which means picking up weights too.
I also find each suits my mood better - if I'm glum and in need of a pick-me-up mentally then getting outside for a run is best. Out of breath and dripping with sweat I don't have time to think about the day-to-day things that are bothering me. If it's waist-deep in snow outside, my arms are looking a little saggy and I want to watch TV while working out, it's free weights at home all the way.0 -
also calorie deficits make you lose weight and strength training in a calorie deficit is the best way to maximize weight lost as body fat.
Another good point. Since starting weight training my bodyfat % has dropped faster than when just doing cardio alone. Difficult one to get your head round but once you do you won't look back.0 -
There shouldn't be a "versus." It should be an "and."
It's like chocolate and peanut butter. Both are wonderful, but AMAZING together.0 -
GOOD BALANCE IS BEST APPROACH. Ido my strength training for about 60 minutes then do my cardio afterward. Reason is they say doing strength training firstboosts your metabolism turn burn fat when doing cardio. Also cardio first would make it so you do not reach full potential for lifting weights.0
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There is nothing at all wrong with doing cardio. Strength training and cardio serve two different purposes though:
(1) Strength training will help you build muscle mass. Muscle mass will increase your body's caloric needs and therefore, over the long run, help you lose body fat by making it possible to eat more while still losing (or not gaining) body fat. If you are going to for the lean, "toned" (I hesitate to use that word but am) look, then strength training is the way to go. Basically, this is what will make you look good on the beach (body recomposition).
(2) Cardio burns calories now so it allows you to lose weight while eating more than you otherwise would. That said, it is entirely possible to lose weight while doing absolutely no cardio, and there are plenty of people on MFP that look great and just strength train. The other benefit of cardio is obviously cardiovascular health, and also, for many of us, the endorphin release.
The threads you see speaking negatively about cardio, for the most part, are attempting to convey that you absolutely should be engaged in strength training. Cardio alone is not enough for body recomposition/the beach look.
EDIT: I do both and I would encourage both. But that's me.
Well said and the best I've ever seen it explained!!! I do both as well. Five days of weightlifting and two days of cardio. Good luck!0 -
It shouldn't be cardio vs weightlifting, it should be cardio + weightlifting = win0
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I needed to lose 25 pounds last year. I did cardio 6 days a week for 4 months and lost the weight. No strength training. I wasn't "skinny fat" like all the horror stories you will hear on here.
Now that I've lost the weight I'm doing cardio + lifting. I plan on posting an all cardio after pic and a cardio + lifting after pic.
That's my story.. not saying it's the right way, but it worked for me.0 -
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There is nothing at all wrong with doing cardio. Strength training and cardio serve two different purposes though:
(1) Strength training will help you build muscle mass. Muscle mass will increase your body's caloric needs and therefore, over the long run, help you lose body fat by making it possible to eat more while still losing (or not gaining) body fat. If you are going to for the lean, "toned" (I hesitate to use that word but am) look, then strength training is the way to go. Basically, this is what will make you look good on the beach (body recomposition).
(2) Cardio burns calories now so it allows you to lose weight while eating more than you otherwise would. That said, it is entirely possible to lose weight while doing absolutely no cardio, and there are plenty of people on MFP that look great and just strength train. The other benefit of cardio is obviously cardiovascular health, and also, for many of us, the endorphin release.
The threads you see speaking negatively about cardio, for the most part, are attempting to convey that you absolutely should be engaged in strength training. Cardio alone is not enough for body recomposition/the beach look.
EDIT: I do both and I would encourage both. But that's me.
x20 -
There is nothing at all wrong with doing cardio. Strength training and cardio serve two different purposes though:
(1) Strength training will help you build muscle mass. Muscle mass will increase your body's caloric needs and therefore, over the long run, help you lose body fat by making it possible to eat more while still losing (or not gaining) body fat. If you are going to for the lean, "toned" (I hesitate to use that word but am) look, then strength training is the way to go. Basically, this is what will make you look good on the beach (body recomposition).
(2) Cardio burns calories now so it allows you to lose weight while eating more than you otherwise would. That said, it is entirely possible to lose weight while doing absolutely no cardio, and there are plenty of people on MFP that look great and just strength train. The other benefit of cardio is obviously cardiovascular health, and also, for many of us, the endorphin release.
The threads you see speaking negatively about cardio, for the most part, are attempting to convey that you absolutely should be engaged in strength training. Cardio alone is not enough for body recomposition/the beach look.
EDIT: I do both and I would encourage both. But that's me.
Very well said, I agree with everything, except "Cardio alone is not enough for body recomposition/the beach look."0 -
This was a really helpful thread to read! I've also wondered the benefits/balance of cardio and strength training.0
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this whole thing is a table, and a table has four legs. nutrition, strength training, cardio, and rest. no one leg is more important than than any other.
If you want one quarter of the results you have the potential to reach, then by all means, only do one.
If you want maximum results - then you're going to have to do all four.0 -
There shouldn't be a "versus." It should be an "and."
It's like chocolate and peanut butter. Both are wonderful, but AMAZING together.
Quoted For Truth0 -
There is nothing at all wrong with doing cardio. Strength training and cardio serve two different purposes though:
(1) Strength training will help you build muscle mass. Muscle mass will increase your body's caloric needs and therefore, over the long run, help you lose body fat by making it possible to eat more while still losing (or not gaining) body fat. If you are going to for the lean, "toned" (I hesitate to use that word but am) look, then strength training is the way to go. Basically, this is what will make you look good on the beach (body recomposition).
(2) Cardio burns calories now so it allows you to lose weight while eating more than you otherwise would. That said, it is entirely possible to lose weight while doing absolutely no cardio, and there are plenty of people on MFP that look great and just strength train. The other benefit of cardio is obviously cardiovascular health, and also, for many of us, the endorphin release.
The threads you see speaking negatively about cardio, for the most part, are attempting to convey that you absolutely should be engaged in strength training. Cardio alone is not enough for body recomposition/the beach look.
EDIT: I do both and I would encourage both. But that's me.
Just a little carification about your first point...
First, most people are going to be on a calorie deficit in order to lose weight. As such, they aren't going to be building any muscle, certainly not any meaningful amount.
Second, while muscle does increase caloric need, the effect isn't significant in the grand scheme of things. Yes, in the long run every little bit helps, but people run around thinking that if they can just build 1 or 2lbs of muscle in the next few weeks their bodies will some how turn into fat burning furnaces. In reality, neither is true. No one is putting on 2lbs of muscle in a month while on a calorie deficit. And even if they did, that 2lbs of muscle would have an insignificant impact on their BMR and caloric need in general.0 -
this whole thing is a table, and a table has four legs. nutrition, strength training, cardio, and rest. no one leg is more important than than any other.
If you want one quarter of the results you have the potential to reach, then by all means, only do one.
If you want maximum results - then you're going to have to do all four.
Depending on your goals, this may not be the case. Cardio goals and strength/mass goals are in direct opposition with each other.0 -
There is nothing at all wrong with doing cardio. Strength training and cardio serve two different purposes though:
(1) Strength training will help you build muscle mass. Muscle mass will increase your body's caloric needs and therefore, over the long run, help you lose body fat by making it possible to eat more while still losing (or not gaining) body fat. If you are going to for the lean, "toned" (I hesitate to use that word but am) look, then strength training is the way to go. Basically, this is what will make you look good on the beach (body recomposition).
(2) Cardio burns calories now so it allows you to lose weight while eating more than you otherwise would. That said, it is entirely possible to lose weight while doing absolutely no cardio, and there are plenty of people on MFP that look great and just strength train. The other benefit of cardio is obviously cardiovascular health, and also, for many of us, the endorphin release.
The threads you see speaking negatively about cardio, for the most part, are attempting to convey that you absolutely should be engaged in strength training. Cardio alone is not enough for body recomposition/the beach look.
EDIT: I do both and I would encourage both. But that's me.
Very good advice I do both too0 -
Cardio is great for your health.
It's not necessary for body recomposition.
Strength training is necessary for recomp.
I encourage moderate levels of cardio - a few hours a week - and a heavy strength training regiment for people who want to lose fat and get toned.0
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