You do 10+ hrs/week of cardio? |
| I'm getting about 2.5 hours of zone two a week, but I'd like to be closer to 3 and get 3 and up more often. 53yo. |
Nah - that was 4.5 hours of running and then just walking around. I think garmin is pretty generous with intensity minutes and also giving a "bonus" for higher intensity. However, at peak marathon training, I was closer to 8-9 hours of running. |
| I go to one-hour HIIT classes three times a week (Orangetheory). Totally love it. So yes! |
| Yep. I ride ~4 times a week for an hour. Plus grooming and stable chores before/after the ride. Plus hiking out to the back 40 to get the darn horse in the first place. Plus throwing hay (bales @45 lbs.) and taking regular feed deliveries (bags @50 lbs.). |
| I'm a chronic exercise avoider in her early 50s. Recently had a big scare with a heart issue (with no risk factors or comorbitities). I'm now in cardiac rehab for 3 months and they have me doing 120 mins of light to moderate cardio per week plus some weight lifting (divided over 3 sessions per week). Putting it out there as point of comparison, for someone looking for a starting point to getting to 150 min or more. |
That's awesome! I am so proud of you internet stranger. I'm glad you are proud of you. I'm not OP but I do run outside. I think people who say they hate running aren't doing it right. They are going too fast (almost always the case, especially when you are first starting, you should almost be speed walking), they are ill-equipped (strength shoes should be tight and running shoes should be quite big), or they are going for too long. You should start slow and walk/jog, like 30 seconds at a time x 4, then the next time is 30 seconds x 6, then 1 minute x4 etc.... download a couch to 5k program and you may really surprise yourself! Get a fitness watch or download one on your phone, find a nice trail/route near your house, and DON'T QUIT. Consistency is so important! But if you really don't like it, look into a Peloton bike, an elliptical, a cheap treadmill etc. |
I understand you are trying to be encouraging, but let people decide what they like. You are not the arbiter of what kind of exercise people should like the most or what they "should" stick with. Not everyone needs to be a runner. There are so many options out there. |
| I do but work only part time so that’s a huge factor. |
| It is so easy to get injured while running. If you are really committed to it and really focus on safety you can hopefully avoid injury. Though for me I have found that I had to do a fair amount of resistance training before I could run without developing tendonitis. If you don't even like running there are so many other ways to get cardio that have much lower injury rates. |
Just saying .
Running isn't the problem, it's people not following a proper program and running way too hard too early. Pretty much like every other type of exercise out there. |
| (and yes I'm the garmin screenshot poster above) |
| No, I wish I did. I need to. I just need to carve out time to do it. |
Just a warning. I am older and not at all athletic. However, I did slightly less than this for a number of years and ended up with osteoporosis. Swimming--which I did 3 or 4 times a week for 45 minutes--and cycling do NADA for bone density. They are great aerobic exercise but you need to do weight bearing exercise as well. (Depending on what you do, the HITT might qualify.) When I got to the osteopenia stage the doctor told me that if I couldn't spend more time exercising I should cut back on swimming and start walking. If you are white or Asian and on the short side you are generally at higher risk. I use a Fitbit and it tells me that I am in excellent cardiovascular shape. My bones are a different story. |
Walking can help, but for osteoporosis, weightlifting (resistance training) is generally superior to walking for building bone density, as it provides the intense, targeted stress necessary to stimulate bone-forming cells, particularly in the spine and wrists. While walking is excellent for overall health and strengthening lower-body bones, it does not provide enough resistance for significant, systemic bone growth. |