More than 1 workout a day?
Run_Away_Turtle
Posts: 47 Member
If I get in a workout in the morning but I feel up to it, should I do another in the evening or is that pushing it?
I am in no way in shape and don't want to risk an injury.
It just seems to me I should as much as I possibly can?
I am in no way in shape and don't want to risk an injury.
It just seems to me I should as much as I possibly can?
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Replies
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I personally feel multiple workouts during the day is excessive. Your body does need recovery time from working out otherwise you may leave yourself open to injury. You may also burnout quicker trying to push it.
Maybe take a quick 15 minute walk, but otherwise don't go all gungho about exercise.0 -
Actually, that can work against you. Personally, I wouldn't advise it. You run the risk of injury and of burning out. Pace yourself and remember that rest days are also important so that your body can recover.
What kind of workouts are you referring to? The type and intensity could factor in to the frequency.0 -
I do basic 30 minute cardio workout on the treadmill. It's a Fat Burner program and it is a good burn for me. I understand about burning out, I guess I'm just anxious to jump start my weight loss again.0
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Run_Away_Turtle wrote: »I do basic 30 minute cardio workout on the treadmill. It's a Fat Burner program and it is a good burn for me. I understand about burning out, I guess I'm just anxious to jump start my weight loss again.
Depends on your level of conditioning. 60 total minutes of cardio in a day isn't excessive if 30 minutes already feels kind of easy. If you're just starting out after a long break, stick with 30 minutes for a week or two before you start ramping up. Just listen to your body.0 -
In general, I don't think that walking an hour a day is going to hurt somebody who is in good health. You have to be the judge as to whether your physical conditioning can handle it. If you are brand spanking new to the treadmill, I'd take time to adjust to it before adding the extra walking sessions. It is very easy to let one's enthusiasm outpace one's physical ability in the beginning.0
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Thank you all for the answers.0
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If 30 minutes of walking is your first workout then you don't need to worry about over training or injury from a second workout. If you feel up to it then by all means do it.0
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Run_Away_Turtle wrote: »If I get in a workout in the morning but I feel up to it, should I do another in the evening or is that pushing it?
I am in no way in shape and don't want to risk an injury.
It just seems to me I should as much as I possibly can?
It really depends on what you're trying to accomplish via training, aside from weight-management that is. Having your primary workout at one time of the day and then maybe doing a 30-min walk or bike ride the other part of the day isn't a bad thing, just listen to your body.0 -
if you feel good and up to it you are fine. Over training is hardly a concern for anyone here. I often do two workouts a day because of my schedule, I don't have the time to lift and do cardio in the same session. Or sometimes I do a second round of cardio because I want to , because the things I do for cardio I enjoy.0
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I use to work out twice a day every Wednesday because my favorite workout class and my favorite bootcamp both fell on that day. I did that for over a year and I had no issue. If you have the time start out trying it once a week and go from there.0
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You can try it out and see how you feel. It also depends on what you're doing- when I was just doing cardio, I could totally workout twice a day. Now that I lift, I would probably find it impossible to do two workouts in a day, unless I was splitting my workout up.0
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Another consideration: If you're still sort of new at this, most research seems to show that long-term success is more readily achieved by adopting new habits in increments that are easy to integrate into one's life, and adding more over time.
Everyone is different, but many (not all) of the people I see on MFP who've been successful with major weight loss over time have taken a slow & steady approach, and many I see who jump in aggressively with very low calories & very high new exercise, seem to have more difficulty staying with it very long.
So, to me the major questions wouldn't be so much to us (is it OK to do two workouts) but to you: Is it achievable and sustainable for you to do that over the long term? Will you still have time and energy for all the other things you value in your day to day life? If yes to both, go for it!0 -
I have MS so I decided that I am going to stick with one workout a day until I see how much my disease flares. Plus, the slow and steady just does seem more sustainable. Thank you all so much for the input.0
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Run_Away_Turtle wrote: »I do basic 30 minute cardio workout on the treadmill. It's a Fat Burner program and it is a good burn for me. I understand about burning out, I guess I'm just anxious to jump start my weight loss again.
You can do this twice a day if you would like. Listen to your body
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Run_Away_Turtle wrote: »I do basic 30 minute cardio workout on the treadmill. It's a Fat Burner program and it is a good burn for me. I understand about burning out, I guess I'm just anxious to jump start my weight loss again.
Get on the weights get a professional to write you a full body weights program that's no longer than 20min you can do it 1-2 times a week in the morning then do your cardio in the afternoon I don't recommend 2 hard sessions in any day but I lift in the mornings and then walk 3km in arvos (walk dogs to kids bus stop)0 -
OP, 10 year old article but thought it may interest you...
news.ufl.edu/archive/2005/01/study-shows-weight-training-gives-ms-patients-physical-emotional-benefits.html0 -
Totally depends on what kind of work out you are doing. If you are really training and pushing yourself to the limits, then no, you need time off or you'll overtrain - you need to let your body recover.
If it's not extremely strenuous? Go for it if you want.0 -
Jennloella wrote: »if you feel good and up to it you are fine. Over training is hardly a concern for anyone here. I often do two workouts a day because of my schedule, I don't have the time to lift and do cardio in the same session. Or sometimes I do a second round of cardio because I want to , because the things I do for cardio I enjoy.
This. I used to do two workout days (cardio in the morning and lifting in the evening). Let your body do the judge on how hard you can push yourself. There really is no set standard as to how much is too much.0 -
You can do an additional workout of a different type. Just make sure you alternate hard and easy days/workouts, take a rest day when needed, and cross train. I just decided to do two 30 minute workouts a day. The first will be light cardio and strength, the second will be cycling or swimming. Complimentary workouts! Good luck!0
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I think your body can handle it and it may not lead to injury, but since it sounds like you're starting out, I would ease in and increase your workout frequency slowly so you don't burn out. I've found in the past that when I'm just starting out, I would want to jump in at 6 or 7 times a week because I had that brand new, gung-ho attitude, and then a month later I wasn't going at all. I'd say whatever you are doing now, increase it by one workout a week and do that for a few weeks and get used to it. Then see how that feels and go from there.
Working out for me isn't just physical, it's also finding a frequently and intensity that I will stick to.0 -
I would say do twice a day and do max 10 minutes high intensity
Please if your not used to doing 30 min of activity why put itself through punishment of a 30 min workout
If u still intent on it split it throughout the day in 5-10 min segments
It's not the workout it's your daily total that counts
Kind regards0 -
I train for 2 hours in the morning, during my lunch hour and then an hour or two after work. I'm still alive )0
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I've started hitting the gym in the morning (I only manage half an hour, so currently doing c25k). The idea is that I will actually GO, and it leaves me free to do fun stuff in the evenings like go to the cinema, or go to my dance class (which is pretty much a workout anyway!!).
Yesterday I ran in the morning and then swam in the evening. Today I am shattered and didn't make it to the gym (I'm also thinking of putting stronglifts into the alternate days). That's okay because officially it's a rest day, but I'm keen to up the morning gym trips to daily.
Listen to your body - if you can do two, then go ahead, if it starts to become a chore then back off before you walk away from it completely.0 -
Most of you have been super helpful, thank you!
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Asher_Ethan wrote: »I use to work out twice a day every Wednesday because my favorite workout class and my favorite bootcamp both fell on that day. I did that for over a year and I had no issue. If you have the time start out trying it once a week and go from there.girlinahat wrote: »I've started hitting the gym in the morning (I only manage half an hour, so currently doing c25k). The idea is that I will actually GO, and it leaves me free to do fun stuff in the evenings like go to the cinema, or go to my dance class (which is pretty much a workout anyway!!).
Yesterday I ran in the morning and then swam in the evening. Today I am shattered and didn't make it to the gym (I'm also thinking of putting stronglifts into the alternate days). That's okay because officially it's a rest day, but I'm keen to up the morning gym trips to daily.
Listen to your body - if you can do two, then go ahead, if it starts to become a chore then back off before you walk away from it completely.Run_Away_Turtle wrote: »Most of you have been super helpful, thank you!Run_Away_Turtle wrote: »Most of you have been super helpful, thank you!
M0 -
I've done twice a day before. I wasn't beat, but it got the job done. My later work out was the more intense one. I can't do too much at 9am lol0
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I am within 20 lbs of my goal, and my weight loss has slowed... I decided to work out for an hour a day, instead of the hour I've been doing the last 7 months, and have seen my weight loss pick back up again... But then I've been working out consistently and at a high intensity for over 8 months now, so I knew my body could handle it...0
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I vary the intensity when I do several things in a day. Going gangbusters all the time could be a problem. Yesterday was a holiday for me: I really wanted to enjoy the day so I took a beautiful six mile hill hike with a good friend in the morning, went to my normal kickboxing class in the late afternoon & ended the day with a dog walk with my neighbor. Three very different intensities & durations, so not a problem. Just a relaxed active day.0
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