I have written before about how I used
to do 2 hours of cardio a day. You probably think all that exercise
made me so lean, fit, and muscular... a super human!!!
WRONG!
Logging a couple hours a day on the
road made me tired, hungry, and anxious. It made me fat, too! I was
not overweight, but my body was clinging to my fat, breaking down
muscle, and killing my metabolism.
I knew I had to stop the madness, and
somehow I did. I managed to get my workouts down to an hour and
fifteen minutes a day. It was still too much cardio, but I at least I
had made some progress!
Would you believe
it if I told you these days I am fine if some of my cardio workouts
only take me 40-45 mintutes? That's because when you work out at such
a high intensity, there is no need to go longer. No more taxing
my body with hours of running on a daily basis. I have finally
discovered what athletes have been doing for years- High-Intensity
Interval Training! (HIIT)
What is HIIT?
HIIT is any
activity in which you alternate bursts of high intensity activity
with short periods of less intense activity- or even rest.
Examples:
running sprints
spinning sprints
hill repeats
circuits
Tabatas
Why is HIIT so awesome?
There are so many
reasons HIIT is so effective! It takes less time, burns more fat, and revs up your
metabolism even beyond your workout. Also, you can design your
intervals so you're doing something you actually enjoy. It doesn't have to be
running.
Check out this
article: 8 Benefits of High-Intensity Interval Training by Charlotte Andersen.
(And her awesome
blog: The Great Fitness Experiment)
How do I incorporate HIIT into my training?
These days, my
HIIT is either speed work on the road or circuits in my backyard. My speedwork is
pretty simple- 1 mi warmup, 5 mi alternating .2 miles sprinting and
.2 miles jogging, 1 mile cooldown. The circuits are more for when I'm
feeling a little ADD and need to change things up...
Example of
backyard circuits:
Circuit 1
pushups
jump rope
wall sit
Circuit 2
burpees
walking lunges
plank
Circuit 3
high knees
jump squat/lunge
jumping jacks
Circuit 4
mountain climbers
side planks
ski jumps
I repeat each
circuit 3-4 times without a break, but then take 1-2 minutes rest
before beginning the next circuit. I feel like this is a warm up that
will prepare me for when I finally decide to try a true Tabatas
workout. (Don't worry, I'll blog about the horror of horrors when that
happens!)
How do you incorporate HIIT into your training? Do you have any tips on how I could improve the way I do HIIT?
Tabatas are super fun. Don't be scared of them. They make the workout FLY by.
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