What type of exercise gives you best weight loss results?
dxtra30
Posts: 498 Member
Do you find that you lose weight faster by doing Cardio, Strength, Both, or something else? I'm losing weight but some weeks are better than others.. I'm not sure If I should be sticking to 1 exercise type than the others or combine everything.. Currently I'm doing running (Sat, Sun, Mon) and then cardio / strength (Tues/Wed/Thur).. What do you find effective to see weight loss each week ? Any other suggestions?
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Replies
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You need two main exercises:
1. table push aways: When you start to get full, just push away from the table
2. Head shakes: when someone offeres you food not on your diet, twist your head right and then left and repeat going 'No thank you'.
~Lyle McDonald0 -
Diet.
Exercise simply burns a few extra calories.0 -
I've been dieting the last 2 months and exercising..0
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You need two main exercises:
1. table push aways: When you start to get full, just push away from the table
2. Head shakes: when someone offeres you food not on your diet, twist your head right and then left and repeat going 'No thank you'.
~Lyle McDonald
^^^This0 -
You need two main exercises:
1. table push aways: When you start to get full, just push away from the table
2. Head shakes: when someone offeres you food not on your diet, twist your head right and then left and repeat going 'No thank you'.
~Lyle McDonald
Fork put downs are getting popular too.0 -
> Cardio, Strength, Both,
The answer is both. According to studies, subjects who did both cardio and resistance training lost more fat than subjects who did either one alone. If you have to pick one, do cardio. Those subjects lost more fat than those who did strength training alone.
All other things being equal, cardio burns roughly twice as many calories as weightlifting.0 -
Calorie deficit for weight loss
Cardio AND strength for fitness
Weight loss isn't linear - some weeks you will lose more than others, that's just the way it is0 -
As others have said, it's about maintaining a calorie deficit, which is mostly about diet.
On bad days can you exercise to burn additional calories to help get you back in a deficit? Sure. In this situation, it's going to be whatever you burn the most calories doing, which for most people means whatever cardio activity they can work the hardest at for the longest period of time. For me, that's generally cycling, but for others it could be just about anything.0 -
Ah great tips all.. Thank you!0
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You need two main exercises:
1. table push aways: When you start to get full, just push away from the table
2. Head shakes: when someone offeres you food not on your diet, twist your head right and then left and repeat going 'No thank you'.
~Lyle McDonald
^nicely said!0 -
cardio but both are important. lately i've been trying to get in a solid hour of cardio at least twice a week, rather than my usual 30 mins0
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I can't say what would be best for YOU but I can tell you what worked for me: eating clean and lifting heavy. The best thing I did was hire a trainer and learned to do squats, deads and bench presses. I do variations of these 3 times a week, and a bit of cardio in between.0
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I am surprised this hasn't been mentioned yet - HIIT - High Intensity Interval Training. It was discovered accidentally by a college coach who had his distance runners cross train with the sprinters. They were on strict diets (not low calorie, just the right stuff in the right portions) and started needing more food to keep from losing weight. You can do some Googling and get the heavy science behind it, but this is one of the few things that is pretty much proven to up your metabolism for quite a while after you stop.
So why isn't HIIT more popular? Because it is really hard to do properly. You have to push yourself really hard; so hard that you shouldn't do it until you are in decent shape at least with respect to the exercise you choose to do intensively. Here is what I do when I can (not always able to if I haven't been running regularly) - I run a 5k route and pick a few places on it to sprint between landmarks like streetlights or speed bumps or whatever. At the end of the sprint I drop back to a regular 5k exercise pace (not a racing pace). You can do it with running, swimming and most cardio exercises; just go at normal activity level and intersperse bursts of intense exercise and then don't rest right after; drop back to the normal level. Please note that if you have any risk of circulatory problems this it not recommended.
EDIT - a recent article:
http://www.wellandgoodnyc.com/2012/10/08/why-high-intensity-interval-training-is-having-a-moment/0 -
You need two main exercises:
1. table push aways: When you start to get full, just push away from the table
2. Head shakes: when someone offeres you food not on your diet, twist your head right and then left and repeat going 'No thank you'.
~Lyle McDonald
Fork put downs are getting popular too.
AHAHAH!!! Fork put downs!! That's hilarious!0 -
what you eat is 80% of the battle. if you are eating clean and within your caloric target for weight loss, then i would alternate cardio (HIIT) with interval weight lifting to maximize caloric burn.
i'm a fan of beachbody programs; insanity is a great program that will shred you like nothing else. i also like GSP Rushfit because it's intense yet short. i also lift every other day (Body Beast or P90x/P90x2)
insanity is what helped me drop the majority of my weight fast (within 2months) and p90x further accelerated my weight loss through building lean muscle mass.0 -
I am surprised this hasn't been mentioned yet - HIIT - High Intensity Interval Training. It was discovered accidentally by a college coach who had his distance runners cross train with the sprinters. They were on strict diets (not low calorie, just the right stuff in the right portions) and started needing more food to keep from losing weight. You can do some Googling and get the heavy science behind it, but this is one of the few things that is pretty much proven to up your metabolism for quite a while after you stop.
So why isn't HIIT more popular? Because it is really hard to do properly. You have to push yourself really hard; so hard that you shouldn't do it until you are in decent shape at least with respect to the exercise you choose to do intensively. Here is what I do when I can (not always able to if I haven't been running regularly) - I run a 5k route and pick a few places on it to sprint between landmarks like streetlights or speed bumps or whatever. At the end of the sprint I drop back to a regular 5k exercise pace (not a racing pace). You can do it with running, swimming and most cardio exercises; just go at normal activity level and intersperse bursts of intense exercise and then don't rest right after; drop back to the normal level. Please note that if you have any risk of circulatory problems this it not recommended.
EDIT - a recent article:
http://www.wellandgoodnyc.com/2012/10/08/why-high-intensity-interval-training-is-having-a-moment/
HIIT is really one of the most effective ways to workout (I'm a HIITER- I LOVE IT... people ask me what about my cardio??? I say I just lift weights- faster)
But ultimately weight loss is through your diet. You can work out 3 times a day and 2 hours a time for 7 days a week. You can still get stronger- but ultimately results come from what you do in the kitchen.
this is not my original phrase- but everyone at the gym knows it's my schtick- six pack abs are made in the kitchen.0 -
AWESOME!.. Thanks for the links and comments.. This is good advice.. Thank you!0
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For me it was a mixture of walking/running an hour a day, 4-5 days a week along with clean eating. I lost 30lbs. in 7 months. Granted, I built some great leg muscles in the process, but I never went to a gym to lift weights other than the occasional workout in my living room with a Jillian Michaels DVD.0
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You need two main exercises:
1. table push aways: When you start to get full, just push away from the table
2. Head shakes: when someone offeres you food not on your diet, twist your head right and then left and repeat going 'No thank you'.
~Lyle McDonald
This.0
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