Some call people who just do cardio all the time “cardio bunnies”. If that’s you, listen up! Your go-to way of sweating it out might actually be what’s standing in between you and your fitness goals. Do you usually spend your gym time on the treadmill or elliptical? Then you need to hear these 4 Cardio Myths That May Be Keeping You From Your Goals:
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CARDIO IS MORE IMPORTANT THAN STRENGTH TRAINING FOR FAT LOSS
Sure, you might burn more calories running than you will in the weight room in any given 30 mins, but you have no way of knowing where those calories are coming from— but most of the time it’s from carbs, fat and protein which is the building blocks for muscle. And muscle is not what you want to be using for fuel if your goal is to reduce your body-fat percentage and tone up.
Here’s what’s even more important when discussing this topic – as soon as you finish a cardio workout, your calorie burn stops right then and there. Not so with strength training. After a strength session, your body has to work not only to repair and grow your muscles, but also to return your body’s levels of enzymes and other chemicals back to normal. That process increases your caloric burn, even at rest, for up to 72 hours after you leave the gym. Plus, over the long term, building — not burning — muscle, is the number 1 way to increase your metabolic rate. Which basically means this: the higher your metabolic rate equals the more efficient your body burns fat for fuel. Hence why a study from Harvard showed that individuals who chose strength training for their workouts torched more belly fat than those who performed the same amount of cardio.
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CARDIO DOUBLES AS LOWER-BODY STRENGTH WORKOUTS
One of the most common of the 4 Cardio Myths. And no, it most definitely doesn’t. Yeah, after the workout you may say, “my legs are so tired, or sore.” They’re two totally different forms of training. Running and spinning work your muscles, but they target your slow-twitch muscle fibers. These muscle fibers are in charge of the endurance of your muscle, not strength. Strength training, however, develops your fast-twitch muscle fibers. The most efficient way of targeting your fast-twitch muscle fibers is to lift heavier weights with less reps. None of this light weight high rep business. You have to push your limits on the strength front in order to create change!
To clarify, that means that increasing the resistance on the elliptical or don’t any other types of resistance-heavy cardio doesn’t account for a lower body strength sweat session. Which brings me to another important point – if you’re an endurance athlete it’s crucial that you cross-train and make strength workouts a part of your weekly routine. Strength training and developing your fast-twitch muscle fibers when you spend so much time working your low-twitch muscle fibers will prevent overuse injuries and imbalances. It’ll also actually improve your running tempo/ speed. You need both strength and endurance for optimal performance and health.