3 Little Known Tips for Cardio
I've got a confession to
make...
In the year 2006, I've seen
so many articles on cardio
that it even made me
confused! Everything from
don't with it "good night to
cardio" to cardio is
worthless to HIIT training
and all kinds of crazy
ideas. There's anti-cardio
gurus and cardio masters.
At times, cardio seems like
a diet plan.
Let me explain that...
With a diet, you have so
many foods to choose from
that you can literally make
any combination up and call
it a "diet."
Cardio seems to be that way
lately. There's a lot you
can do with your cardio
workouts. Keep them short,
make them intense, do all
kinds of machines, do it
every day, do it once a
week, don't use machines at
all but go outside and run
hills... etc. List goes on
and on.
Let's try and answer the
question of the best time to
do cardio and how much
recovery after your weight
sessions you need in order
to get workout but without
burning up any precious
muscle.
3 Simple Steps to Effective
Cardio Workouts
1- Use cardio as a tool.
Cardiovascular exercise is
good for the heart. However,
so is weight training. And
lifting weights and building
muscle will do more to get
you leaner than 6 spin
classes 6 times a week.
If your goal is to build
muscle and gain weight or
burn off the fat, then use
cardio sparingly as a way to
your goal.
Did you know that 1 lb of
muscle burns more calories
than 1 lb of fat? By
focusing on building more
muscle, you'll get leaner
quicker than if you plug
away at a treadmill all day
long.
Let's put it this way...
If you cut bread with a saw
(weight training) it gets
the job done nicely. But if
you cut the bread with a saw
and then use a finely
sharpened knife to make the
slides perfect (cardio)
you'll get the best of both
worlds.
You'll get slides of bread
quickly (saw) and you'll get
them neatly carved out
(knife).
If you can think of cardio
as a tool to stripping off
unwanted fat AFTER your
weight training and
nutrition is in order,
you'll use the tool as it's
meant to be used.
2- Do your cardio at the
right times.
There's a loaded question if
I ever saw one!
a) the right time is anytime
it works for you. If you
read several articles about
morning cardio and you
simply cannot do it, then do
it when you can. There's
plenty of studies that
debate the optimal time to
do cardio but they all point
to the single fact that it
doesn't make a massive
difference in your overall
gains. When it comes to
eliminating body fat.
Whether it's early morning,
late evening, the most
important thing is that you
just do it.
b) do your cardio AFTER your
weight workouts. Why after?
Because your weight training
workouts require something
called glycogen. That's
short term fuel. If you burn
off and use up your short
term fuel first, you'll have
little to give when it comes
to your muscles.
The fuel your muscles need
for a weight training
workout is different from
the potential fuel sources
you can use when doing
cardiovascular activities.
When you do your cardio
AFTER your weight training
sessions, you are warmed up
and have a better chance at
using fat as a fuel source
over glycogen.
3- Separate your cardio
from your weight training
sessions
If at all possible, try and
give yourself plenty of time
between a cardio workout and
a weight session. Some
programs recommend 8 hours.
This means you'll do cardio
in the AM and weights in the
PM. You'll have plenty of
time for post-workout
nutrition and a few meals in
there as well to help with
recovery.
But what if you can't?
2 Tips to Cardio Workouts
Tip #1 - Do your cardio
AFTER your weight session as
in the step above. While
this won't be ideal, it
allows your body to use
glycogen for short term fuel
for the weights and
potentially fat as a fuel
source.
Tip #2 - Engage in
post-workout nutrition
(protein and carbs) after
your weight training
session. While you probably
won't burn as much fat, you
won't risk burning off as
much muscle either.
The reason your body burns
muscle is that it costs a
lot to maintain it
(metabolically speaking). In
that case, make sure you can
support the muscle by not
overtraining and engaging in
proper nutrition.
Those two simple concepts
will go a long way in
helping you to preserve
muscle when you have a short
rest period between a weight
training session and a
cardiovascular workout.
The bottom line is that
cardiovascular exercise is
part of a health and fitness
routine. It should be used
as a tool. Sometimes more
(getting ready for a
competition) and sometimes
less (lean bulking). Lately
it's been over-rated but it
certainly isn't worthless.
About the Author
Marc David is an innovative
fitness enthusiast and the
creator of the
"NOBull Bodybuilding System"
method on nobullbodybuilding.com
He can show you how to
reduce your body fat thru
diet, how to gain weight or
create more muscle thru an
abundance of workout tips by
training LESS, not more!
Once a self-confessed
skinny, "135-pound
weakling." Today Marc is a
200 pound bodybuilder who
teaches thousands of people
to gain weight, build muscle
and reduce body fat with a
workout and nutrition system
so simple that even a
complete beginner can
understand it!
Marc dispels many
"bodybuilding myths", tells
you what most people never
realize about nutrition, and
what the drug companies
DON'T WANT YOU to know.
visit nobullbodybuilding.com
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