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also, i was watching tv and you should run flat footed, not heal toe, the heal toe motion is harder on your joints. can someone confirm this? i couldn't run before too, but then just try. try the bikes and ellipticals first. everyone starts somewhere. |
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Heel toe as in Heel makes contact with the ground first then the toe? And Flat footed as in Heel toe makes the contact at the same time? If that's what you mean, then I highly doubt flat footed is the way to go. I can't imagine myself running like that :( |
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This is why they make running shoes to comfort both styles of running. Theres also another type of movement in running known as pronation/supination.....of course depending on which movement you run with, theres a suitable shoe for that too. |
Wifey Says: For me, I stop time to time especially during winter (since I get fevers from the cold :cry:). I start in the beginning of spring, I start the season off by doing simple workouts such as running and biking. Once I get my stamina back up like usual I go up another level by doing something more challenging such as martial arts or cardio boxing. And every end of the month me and xNguyen (my hubbies account) would go up grouse grind through the hiking trail and it'll take me foreverrrr but you'll see dramatic results next day (It happens you just gotta try!) Here is my example Frist Month: Mon-Fri: Speed Walking, Jogging, Running, Biking [ 2-3 Hours ] (at your own pace) Sun-Sat: Break End of the month: Grouse grind, Next morning measurements. Second Month: Mon-Fri: Warm ups, Cardio Boxing, Muay Thai, or the gym [ 2-3 Hours ] (or other martial arts; either way it's still good for you) Sun-Sat: Break End of the month: Grouse grind, Next morning measurments. Next Months: Etc. etc. Key is taking it step by step! :thumbsup: |
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Its arguable whats 'better' to start.....but treadmills (good ones you find at the gym as opposed to home ones) are designed to provide less impact on the joints. |
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This is the exact way they taught them in military in taiwan. :thumbsup: |
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So... I've been working out a while without thinking much about how running, specifically on a treadmill, would affect my body. I just went with the assumption that the harder you ran, the faster you ran, and the longer you ran, the better the end result. Now, mind you, I'm not unfit or uncultured in the mechanics of working out... I'm a pretty athletic build at 5'9 at 165-170lbs... and I've worked my way up on a treadmill to a point where I'm running for 20-25 min at a constant 6 (sometimes 6.5 mph?) every time I work out (which is 4-5 times a week). The thing I dont understand is that I'm actually GAINING weight as opposed to what I expected to LOSE from running. It's not exactly having aversive effects since I feel great, and I THINK I'm still losing body fat (which was the ultimate goal of losing weight, since I want to be more toned) but I don't think It'd be healthy for me to really go above 170 at my height. Anyone have any insight into this? |
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I'm 175lbs and 6ft, I feel so skinny now lol. How's your diet? Do you watch your calories? Running alone will not make you lose weight or tone up, your diet has to be clean and keep it balanced by eating healthy.. There's tons of articles on this vary subject on google and 9 out 10 of them point to a bad diet. |
^i try to stay wary of what I eat. Lots of lean meats, fruits, veggies and protein supplement if I feel like I need it, which isn't all too often. I don't think I indulge myself too much in eating whats unhealthy, and I definetly try to watch what I eat. And I don't believe I'm taking in more calories than I need either, atleast not so much that I can't burn off. I'm 21 btw, just for a reference point as to my stage in life. edit: though I'll try to be even stricter on myself in terms of what I eat.. whether it affects my weight or not, its a win-win scenario anyway. Thanks. |
Remember that cardio doesn't necessarily mean you're losing weight; its building up the stamina and endurance of your cardiac and inhalation system. You can still gain weight fat and/or muscle and still increase the level of your cardio. Football players do it all the time in their training. So if you are looking for that effect to supplement your weight loss with cardio....you really gotta be watching what you eat. |
I want to achieve the cut body type, are there certain things that I should do and shouldn't do? eg cardio for more than X minutes after weight lifting, lifting more than X% of my max etc |
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I think there is gonna be a popular answer to that....you see the answer on this part of the forum all the time. HIIT. X amount of minutes whether its 20 minutes or 90 minutes of cardio isn't gonna make you 'cut.' HIIT....get your heart rate to what its capable of as long as you can....rest....do it again. Of course, HIIT is best when you build a bit of tolerance to your cardio...... |
just one more question i suppose... given whats been said, and that hypothetically I watch my diet very well... what type of running is actually better for weight loss? cardio (fast, hard) or that weight loss option on treadmills (mild speed) for the same periods of time? |
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Regarding to HIIT, how should I do that on the treadmill? For example, I am sprinting at 10-13mph(assumption, dont know the MPH to sprint), and I am at my 30th second and want to stop. Wouldn't it be super difficult to press the down arrow until walking speed? And if I press STOP, I think it'll resume at whatever speed before it's turned off. What should be the best way to do HIIT on a treadmill? Or is running outside the best option? |
Most treadmills have HIIT programs. If you want to do HIIT manually, start off at a comfortable pace and start to increase the speed every 2 mins until you're doing a sprint or at a speed that you know is your max and slowly decrease back to a comfortable pace. And HIIT is best on the treadmill because it's controlled. |
Going to try some HIIT tomorrow :) |
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Yea I think HIIT is better to be done outside and like others said just work your way up. I found that doing HIIT on the stairmaster is really efficient as well and much easier to control the intensity than the treadmill if you're doing it manually. |
Hmm not safe for newbies, why? DO you mean newbies to treadmills or newbies to running? |
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