Cardio lovers HELP!
JenGlam7
Posts: 10
Hi guys,
So I see these people at my gym, on the elliptical/treadmill, and they just GO and GO! now I do cardio, usually 30-40min, but I HATE every second of it. I haven't been working out very long (6 months)and I am wondering if in time, as my body becomes stronger, if I will actually enjoy it?
For those of you who enjoy your cardio, have you always enjoyed it? Or did the enjoyment come in time?
So I see these people at my gym, on the elliptical/treadmill, and they just GO and GO! now I do cardio, usually 30-40min, but I HATE every second of it. I haven't been working out very long (6 months)and I am wondering if in time, as my body becomes stronger, if I will actually enjoy it?
For those of you who enjoy your cardio, have you always enjoyed it? Or did the enjoyment come in time?
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Replies
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You're inside so it's bound to get boring. Go outside run or Cycle explore the world it's lovely out here even in bad weather0
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Steady state cardio is booorrrriing! That's my opinion anyway. I used to run at the gym for 40 minutes at a time and every one of those minutes was hated. Then I found Insanity. Now *that's* cardio!! And the 40 minute workouts just fly by - all in the comfort of your own home! Not to mention the incredible changes you see in just a short space of time. Never once did I look at myself after 2 weeks of running and see ANY difference.0
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the best way i found was to mix it up, running on treadmill, walking outside, step aerobics (from my much bashed out 20 year old Cher video!!), stability ball and some kickboxing workouts. good for your body this way as well as you work all the muscle groups
julie0 -
........at my gym, ........ now I do cardio, usually 30-40min, but I HATE every second of it.
Hamster wheels are dull as hel, don't personally understand how people can do it.For those of you who enjoy your cardio, have you always enjoyed it? Or did the enjoyment come in time?
Depends what I'm doing, at the end of a 15km steady state run I've cleared my head and feel good, at the end of last nights 7km tempo run I was hanging out, after a 10km trail run I've challenged myself and enjoyed some nature. Similar for road or mountain biking.
The key thing in all of these is that I'm not stuck inside an air conditioned box.0 -
Yeah, forty minutes on a treadmill is pretty grim...and unless you are training for something specific, the PTs at my gym seem to be pretty much in agreement that it isn't as effective to spend ages on one thing.
I try and mix it up a bit - one workout I do goes like this:
Round 1
Row 3 mins
Run 6 mins
Cycle 6 mins
Stepper 3 mins
Round 2 - higher intensity, shorter period
Row 2 mins
Run 4 mins
Cycle 4 mins
Stepper 2 mins
Round 3 - again, increasing intensity - pretty much all out
Row 1 min
Run 2 mins
Cycle 4 mins
Stepper 1 min
No rest between moving to different apparatus, and I feel like I've done much more than if I'd spent 40 mins on an eliptical trainer at a steady pace.
Of course, you do get gym snobs staring at you because you've only used one bit of kit for a couple of minutes - usually the same ones who spend an hour walking on the treadmill (having driven to the gym).0 -
My job offers a lot of cardio classes to the public. I've been loving the kickboxing and Zumba classes. I'm not a big fan of just running on a treadmill/elliptical either. I prefer to be dancing or moving all over the place.0
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... it isn't as effective to spend ages on one thing.
Define effective?
For building the aerobic base then long slow (relative) is the way ahead, to improve ability to operate at higher intensities then a combination of tempo and interval is the way ahead.
What you describe is predominantly working the lower limbs, with the row working core and upper, You'll get similar effects actually spending longer on each machine but using a variety of sessions; sustained, tempo or interval. Certainly less disruptive to others than tying up four machines for your session.0 -
... it isn't as effective to spend ages on one thing.
Define effective?
For building the aerobic base then long slow (relative) is the way ahead, to improve ability to operate at higher intensities then a combination of tempo and interval is the way ahead.
What you describe is predominantly working the lower limbs, with the row working core and upper, You'll get similar effects actually spending longer on each machine but using a variety of sessions; sustained, tempo or interval. Certainly less disruptive to others than tying up four machines for your session.
Sorry, I was trying to explain how I make my workouts more interesting then spending forty minutes or so on one machine (where I would be only working one area anyway). That's why I don't spend longer on each machine - I find, personally, that I will tend to get bored on longer sessions so like to mix it up. I know I could get similar results varying sessions and doing longer, but that's the point; I don't want to do longer on a particular machine.
I don't see how it's disruptive; I do whatever time on a machine and move on. I certainly don't 'hold' the machines when I'm not using them. I've never had an issue with machines being available - although I do tend to go later at night when my gyms quieter, there's normally at least a good dozen machines free.
And part of going down that route was because (as you handily edited out of your quote) the PTs in my gym said that it wasn't as effective .0 -
Hi guys,
So I see these people at my gym, on the elliptical/treadmill, and they just GO and GO! now I do cardio, usually 30-40min, but I HATE every second of it. I haven't been working out very long (6 months)and I am wondering if in time, as my body becomes stronger, if I will actually enjoy it?
For those of you who enjoy your cardio, have you always enjoyed it? Or did the enjoyment come in time?
Hopefully, you love the endorphin rush you get from sustained cardio work!!!! And the stress relief.
I spend a lot of itme indoors on an exercise bike (thanks to it being the coldest winter since 1979 here in the Midwest). I'm not going to say that there are "not" moments of boredom, because there are. During the warm months, I am out on my bike which provides a lot more stimulation so boredom does not creep into the equation.
It helps a lot to be following a structured training plan rather than just hopping on and going for "some time" on a machine. As mentioned above, structured training will have different intensity levels and different durations so some days you are doing recovery cardio of just 30 minutes, some days you are doing intervals within a 60-90 minute session, some days you are doing long, slow, and steady such as 2 1/2 - 3+ hours, and at least one day you are resting. I think if you had a plan to follow so each day you knew how long and at what intensity you were going to do the session, it helps provide a goal. Accomplishing each daily goal is a nice task to complete and helps remove some of the boredeom by providing a great sense of satisfaction. Couple that with the endorphin release that kicks in about 20-30 minutes into a nice intensity session - and whoa!!! Talk about a free drug!!!!
I barely even get warmed up during a 30-40 minute session, but with time - you get used to it. Music, television, etc... can help alleviate the boredom if you have access to that. I've got 5 1/2 hours on the hamster wheel this weekend. But I'm used to it. And the caloric burn adds up like a meter in a Taxi cab which makes it all worth it.
Think about getting a 6, 8, 10, 12 week plan that breaks it down into daily, and weekly goals that are more task oriented and allows you to keep your eye on the ball better.
Best of luck.0 -
i get bored doing cardio indoors. i'd rather bundle up and run outside than spend more than ten minutes on a treadmill.
and 30-40 minutes is a long time!! and you don't know how much they hate their work out.
maybe find different things to do while on an indoor cardio machine. i know some people that love audio books to work out with instead of music.0 -
Sometimes I will mix it up and do 10 minutes each on 3 or 4 different machines. Exercising outside in Michigan is really not an option right now. The only one I cannot stand is the stationary bike. I know many people love it, but I HATE it! I have no idea why.0
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I still dislike cardio, though I do a fair bit of it at the moment.
Plenty of people DO start to like cardio after a while.
Most people, however, get to like a treadmill only AFTER they've been running outside, I'd say.
For me, running with others makes a big difference.
Yesterday, I kept procastinating and it was after midnight when I took the dogs out for their 4.5 mile run.
Today I was meeting others, which meant I had to be there on time. It was a fairly slow 'social' group, however there was a kid there (maybe 9-11) who was making a bit of an effort, so I generally either kept up with him or stayed just infront.
I have never got the 'endorphins' than others have.
Other ways I DO enjoy cardio is with things like cross country mountain biking and enduro motorcycling. The cardio isn't the bit I enjoy, but you need good cardio health to do them and it's a serious workout (the motorcycles actually more than the mountain bikes if anything!)
Having something on TV etc to watch helps keep me doing cardio on a stationary machine.0 -
Define effective?
Sorry, I was trying to explain how I make my workouts more interesting then spending forty minutes or so on one machine (where I would be only working one area anyway). That's why I don't spend longer on each machine - I find, personally, that I will tend to get bored on longer sessions so like to mix it up. I know I could get similar results varying sessions and doing longer, but that's the point; I don't want to do longer on a particular machine.
OK, so if I can play that back. By effective you mean something that you'll actually do, then that's fair enough. Different people are motivated by different things and as upthread the prospect of spending 40 minutes on a hamster wheel in an air conditioned room really does not appeal to me either.
Notwithstanding that there is no real physiological reason to do what you describe, and if anything the calorie consumption is probably a bit less than you'd get from doing a tempo or interval session on a single machine, or using a similar machine cycle for longer periods.And part of going down that route was because (as you handily edited out of your quote) the PTs in my gym said that it wasn't as effective .
Without being clear about what you meant by effective it wasn't really important, it also depends on what motivates them0
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