Even split between cardio and strength training?
BlessedBe23
Posts: 82 Member
Hi folks, I am currently working out 1 hour per day, 5 days per week. I've just started this schedule and am hoping for some feedback on whether I should continue as is....I do 30 minutes of cardio on the treadmill then 30 minutes on the weight machines. I do this at a Planet Fitness gym. I am 45, 303 pounds and 5'3". I am also beginning to track my daily caloric intake here. I'm not sure about how to split the strength training between 5 days a week, 30 minutes at a time. I did arms this morning. Any suggestions welcome! Thanks!
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Replies
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I would do full body 2-3 x a week, and cardio 2- 3 x a week personally.6
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The often prescribed approach for beginners is to follow a proven full-body lifting program 3x/week. These focus on compound movements (squat, deadlift, presses, rows) which recruit multiple muscle groups). You don't need a whole session dedicated to arms; only training a single body part or muscle group each day is less optimal than training all groups multiple times per week. This is an incredibly popular workout style because that's what very advanced body builders often follow, but only after years of training.
Pick a full-body beginner program from the list in this thread.
https://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10332083/which-lifting-program-is-the-best-for-you/p1
As mentioned, that program will likely be 3x/week (likely MWF), which leaves the other 2-3 days for cardio6 -
As to your split I'm not really an expert, but it sounds good to me. Others may chime in on that.
My general advice learned from MFP and experience:
Cardio is good for a quick calorie burn. Weight training will help reduce your muscle loss as you lose weight. (When you lose weight, it comes off as a combination of fat and muscle.) Weight training doesn't burn a lot of calories despite what some calorie calculators tell you.
Counting calories is for weight loss (you can lose weight without exercising), exercise is for fitness. Choose an exercise that you like, be consistent, don't overdo it and get injured or discouraged.
If your main goal is weight loss, make sure you use a scale rather than measuring cups for all solids and find accurate database entries.
Good luck!0 -
I'm making some assumptions here, but...
You're going to benefit most from keeping yourself engaged and challenged. So in that sense, do whatever split you want that keeps you going, that keeps you working out, and that keeps you challenged. That's first and foremost. An ideal routine/split/whatever is worthless if you don't do it consistently.
Going 1 step further, *most* people will see better results breaking up their strength training and their cardio. This allows them to focus on strength on strength days and cardio on cardio days. This may or may not be relevant to you right now, but at the very least, it's something to be aware of as you go. Speaking of strength, as mentioned above, most people will see better results strength training large muscle groups 3ish times per week. There are lots of ways to do that, though, so you have some options there. The important part is the frequency moreso than the actual movement/exercise you choose to do. And I agree with the recommendation to follow an established beginner program.5 -
If you have just started working out, or working out after a long break I would start with 3 days a week not 5. Just to give you time to recover, adjust, and prevent burn out or injury.
Mild activity, like a nice walk would be good for the other 2 days.
I prefer to do lifting x3 on alternate days, and cardio on the other 2 days. But you do what works for you, and fits your goals right now. Be willing to change things up if you need or want. Don't think your choice now is written in stone.
The list of programmes above is wonderful, however, if you are at planet fitness and want to use machines at this point in time, this is a reasonable, well rounded programme.
https://www.bodybuilding.com/content/ultimate-beginners-machine-workout-for-women.html
Cheers, h.2 -
middlehaitch wrote: »If you have just started working out, or working out after a long break I would start with 3 days a week not 5. Just to give you time to recover, adjust, and prevent burn out or injury.
Mild activity, like a nice walk would be good for the other 2 days.
I prefer to do lifting x3 on alternate days, and cardio on the other 2 days. But you do what works for you, and fits your goals right now. Be willing to change things up if you need or want. Don't think your choice now is written in stone.
The list of programmes above is wonderful, however, if you are at planet fitness and want to use machines at this point in time, this is a reasonable, well rounded programme.
https://www.bodybuilding.com/content/ultimate-beginners-machine-workout-for-women.html
Cheers, h.
Thank you! I had reviewed the other routines but couldn’t figure out how to translate some of the exercises to the machines. Greatly appreciate it!1 -
BlessedBe23 wrote: »Hi folks, I am currently working out 1 hour per day, 5 days per week. I've just started this schedule and am hoping for some feedback on whether I should continue as is....I do 30 minutes of cardio on the treadmill then 30 minutes on the weight machines. I do this at a Planet Fitness gym. I am 45, 303 pounds and 5'3". I am also beginning to track my daily caloric intake here. I'm not sure about how to split the strength training between 5 days a week, 30 minutes at a time. I did arms this morning. Any suggestions welcome! Thanks!
Hi. I am also 45 and I am 5'11 & now weigh 377. I've lost 15 lbs in 4 weeks walking with Leslie Sansone DVD. I don't do it everyday like I want too. The first mile is 3 mph for 20 min. Second mile at 4 mph for 15 mins. I see inches come off my hips, thighs, waist and butt. On the treadmill do you set it at certain mph? I also have a Weight Watchers DVD that works the arms with 5-10 lb weights. I like working with the DVD because they know what they are doing and how much to do.0 -
You know what?
Everyone here is going to chime in and give you some pointers on how you can fine tune your program for optimal results.
But I am going to say that is pretty irrelevant right now, if you are just starting out.
The important thing here is that you like what you are doing and you are establishing the habit.
Results won't come from devising the precise best concoction of movements.
Results come from diligence and time.
Do what you think is fun. Do what you will keep doing. That way you won't miss days.
Maybe someday you'll decide that what you really want to be is a powerlifter or a marathon runner or a jump-rope jumper and you will have to follow a directed regimen.
But right now you are establishing the habit of movement and exercise, and that is GREAT!
Congratulations.2 -
If you do cardio on the same day as weight training, switch them around. Weights first, cardio second.
I've been told it's a safety thing, in case you're exhausted post cardio and accidentally drop a weight on yourself.0 -
GiddyupTim wrote: »You know what?
Everyone here is going to chime in and give you some pointers on how you can fine tune your program for optimal results.
But I am going to say that is pretty irrelevant right now, if you are just starting out.
The important thing here is that you like what you are doing and you are establishing the habit.
Results won't come from devising the precise best concoction of movements.
Results come from diligence and time.
Do what you think is fun. Do what you will keep doing. That way you won't miss days.
Maybe someday you'll decide that what you really want to be is a powerlifter or a marathon runner or a jump-rope jumper and you will have to follow a directed regimen.
But right now you are establishing the habit of movement and exercise, and that is GREAT!
Congratulations.
^ Actually, it's pretty hard to argue with this advice.
You're on the right track - you're doing a mixture of strength and cardio training, both of which are great for you. For now, do whatever you enjoy, develop a base of fitness and establish the habit of doing it. Habits will help you succeed long after the initial rush of motivation has faded.
Remember that choosing any particular method or program doesn't mean you're irreversibly locked into it - you can experiment and change as you go along. One of the greatest, coolest things about being a beginner is that just about any even halfway reasonable workout regimen will give you results!1
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