Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 2375: Is Summer the Perfect Time to Implement More Cardio-Based Workouts?
Episode Date: July 8, 2024Is Summer the Perfect Time to Implement More Cardio-Based Workouts? Cardio is terrible for fat loss. (1:28) Cardio can be used as a tool to turbocharge fat loss the right way. (2:49) The misconc...eptions surrounding cardio. (3:54) Cardio 101. #1 - Do appropriate cardio. (6:22) #2 - HIIT vs steady state. (13:37) #3 - Watch your performance. (17:40) #4 – Always incorporate strength training. (20:13) #5 - Diet is paramount. (22:00) Related Links/Products Mentioned Visit Vuori Clothing for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! ** No code to receive 20% off your first order. ** Special Promotion: MAPS Cardio 50% off! ** Promo code 50CARDIO at checkout ** Mind Pump Apperal 4th of July sale is live! Get 25% off Freedom tee, Rebellion tee, and Freedom flag. Our equipment and other apparel will be 20% off. This includes Tees, the Love Yourself Collection, Socks, Headbands, and Kitchen items. Mind Pump #1845: How To Do Cardio & Not Lose Muscle HIIT vs. LISS Cardio - Which is Better For Fat Loss? - Mind Pump Media Mind Pump #2372: Five Steps To A Faster Metabolism Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources Â
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
Mind pump with your hosts Sal DeStefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
You just found the most downloaded fitness health and entertainment podcast. This is mind pump. Today's episode we talk about cardio and
summertime. Is this the best time to start adding cardio to your routine?
Of course, because it's summer,
everybody wants to look good in a bathing suit.
So that is what this episode is all about.
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Alright, it's summertime. Lots of people ramp up their workouts right around now
of course because they want to look better in a bathing suit. Now is this the
right time to start implementing more cardio? Should you ramp up your cardio?
What's cardio good for? In today's episode, we're going to talk exactly about that. Coming from team, no sweat.
Yeah, I know.
Let's run.
You know, first, I think it's important we
address what we've talked about many times on
the podcast, which is that cardio type workouts.
Now, cardio workouts are things like running,
swimming, biking.
You could throw circuit training in there,
high intensity interval
training type stuff.
Those kinds of workouts are not effective if they're the primary or sole source of
exercise for fat loss.
We've talked about this many times on the podcast as to why.
It tends to cause the body to want to pair muscle down as it improves endurance and become more efficient
with calorie burn.
So, um, essentially slows the metabolism down and then studies show for fat loss, strength
training is just superior if you were to pick one or the other.
But however, cardio, if implemented in short stints in four weeks, six weeks, eight week
periods can accelerate fat loss because
right around that time, then you start to get maybe that negative adaptation potential,
but we'll talk about how to offset that as well. But in those short periods of time,
then you can see accelerated fat loss.
Cycle it in in short periods. You do actually acquire some really good benefits from it.
But yeah, it's really about staying ahead of that. So that way it
doesn't turn into a problematic situation.
So when I used to coach competitors, the thing the way I would the analogy I would tell them
is that it's like nitric oxide. That's how NOS right? That's how we want to use this.
Like I want to dial in every other aspect of the car, right? This is the suspension, the steering, the tires, the horsepower, the torque.
Like we want to dial all that in, which is our nutrition or sleep.
I was like all the macros like that's, we want to dial all that in.
And then when that is like running sweet, we're, we're seeing every, all the
response we want then in those final weeks, when it, when it comes down to
that, then we hit the nitrous. Then we
use that. We do not want to come out the gates hitting the nitrous before we fine-tune everything
else. That's how I used to explain it to the competitors. And not just that, but the real good,
pure fat burning effects minus the potential negatives for muscle happen in like that short
stance. When you go beyond that is when you start to kind of see negatives.
But of course you also want to combine it with good strength training.
So cardio can be used as a tool to kind of turbocharge fat loss
if you do it the right way.
Now cardio is when it comes to all forms of exercise, the best for other things,
one of them being endurance.
Like if you want endurance and stamina, that's the best way to do it.
Now you can lift weights for endurance and stamina,
you can do other forms of exercise for endurance and stamina,
but for pure cardiovascular endurance, it's the best.
And so there's a lot of value there.
It's also valuable for health.
All forms of exercise are valuable for health, cardio included.
So those are all the reasons, good reasons why you
should implement cardio.
Well, this is important to talk about because this is where the
misconception around our points on cardio are at.
Like if it's for fat loss, you'd heard us say, anti-cardio a lot, right?
That's been a lot of the conversation that's come out of here.
If I had a client that that was their specific goal, it doesn't matter whether I would use it
the last four weeks or not,
the point that I try to get across to that client
was that that's not the go-to move
for us to go towards cardio.
Different scenario, the small percentage of people
that come to me and say like,
hey, I wanna be overall healthy,
or I want to build endurance.
If you say things like that to me as a client
and your primary goal isn't fat loss
then it's a no-brainer that we're incorporating cardio training within our within our training routine because
Endurance most certainly cardio is the best tool for building endurance and overall health is that has some sort of incorporation of
Cardio in there also piece of the formula for that. Yeah, I also like it too
I mean not especially for athletes, but also just
like your everyday average weightlifter,
it's going to cross over and benefit
in terms of the endurance and stamina
while you're getting through your sets.
And so just cycling that in every so often,
once, twice a year, where you do a good few weeks of really
focused, dialed in cardiovascular
training is going to really help, uh, you know, carry you through some of those,
like grueling workouts.
Yeah, totally.
And, uh, again, when it comes to fat loss, if we're talking about short stints,
like I said, four weeks, six weeks with other aspects being controlled and done
properly, then what it will do and what it can do is take fat
loss and just make it happen a bit faster. It's like a turbocharger. Like Adam said with competitors,
I'm pretty sure you didn't incorporate cardio or didn't ramp it up until the final four weeks or
five weeks or sometimes even less. Because you would see that accelerated fat loss. Beyond that,
you start to see that kind of adaptation. I think the first point around cardio though,
needs to be made, which is, this
is true for all forms of exercise, including and especially strength
training, which is you need to do the appropriate amount.
People overdo exercise across the board.
They think if some is good, more is better.
And cardio tends to be the one that gets abused the most in this category. And I think it's because you can abuse it more often and not necessarily feel as
beat up.
Like, you know, it's, it, it, you'd be hard pressed to find somebody abuse
strength training in the same way where they're going to be in the gym.
I mean, there, there are people that do it, but in my experience, uh, you know,
overdoing cardio tends to be more common,
although overdoing exercise in general is common.
And it's more detrimental than if compared to strength training.
Like if you both are abused, I think that both strength training and cardio
are abused in the fitness community.
The idea of more is better is a constant conversation that I think
that we're always having.
The difference though of abusing cardio versus abusing resistance training. Normally if you abuse resistance training, it causes a hard plateau.
You don't see a lot of results. Abusing cardio will actually put you in the opposite direction
of your goal a lot of times. Like if your goal is-
It's hard to lose muscle.
Yeah. If your goal is to reduce body fat and you just do tons and tons of cardio,
what you see sometimes with clients is actual body fat percentage go up. Even though their scale
went down and so they think, Oh, I'm doing the right
thing. So they continue on this hamster wheel, but then it ends up even hurting
them more because they ended up paring down so much.
Yeah. And I want to, I want to explain that because someone might've heard that
and said, what? They lost weight, but their body, they gained body fat.
How's that possible? If you keep the same amount of body fat on your body,
but you lose muscle, your body fat percentage went up.
Or if you lose the same and you got smaller, your percentage.
Right.
So, body fat, it's all about body fat percentage.
Okay.
So 20 pounds of body fat on a 200 pound man is lean.
That's 10% body fat.
20 pounds of body fat on a 100 pound man is fat.
20, now it's 20%.
Now your, now your body fat percentage is quite high.
So it's really about percentage.
That's the important thing to consider here.
And overdoing cardio, it gets your muscles, your body wants to pair
down muscle when you overdo it.
Um, and so it needs to be appropriate.
You need to feel better at the end of your cardio session
than you did getting started.
You should feel invigorated.
It's okay to feel like you worked out.
I don't mean like you feel relaxed, but when you hop off the treadmill or you're
done, you shouldn't feel like you're just, you just survived.
You should feel pretty damn good.
It's okay to be tired because you just exerted yourself, but you
should also feel really good.
Um, it should not impede or crowd out, uh, strength training.
If fat loss is your goal, if endurance is your goal, that's perfectly fine. Strength training then becomes more of a
supportive role. And it definitely shouldn't crowd out things like sleep. And you definitely
shouldn't try to replace a poor diet with cardio. But it needs to be appropriate. And I think the
best way to kind of encompass that is you need to be able to do enough, the right amount of cardio for your body, for your fitness level, for the context of your life.
So if you are doing no cardio and you don't work out and you're listening to this, you
know, two 10-minute walks a day is going to be great.
If you're listening to this and you do cardio all the time, you get great endurance and
stamina, what's going to be very different for you?
Or if you're listening to this and you have poor sleep and a lot of stress, you just had a baby or whatever, too much cardio is going to stress your
body and you're not going to be able to recover very well from it.
It's just going to put your body in a really, really high position of stress.
So you have to pick the appropriate amount of cardio.
Now, in my experience, cardio, shorter bouts frequently tend to do
better for most people versus the long bouts done infrequently.
So instead of doing an hour and a half or an hour
or two days a week, 20 minutes a day or 15 minutes a day
seem to work better for a lot of people I work with.
Now, what does that have to do with our body's
energy systems, right?
I remember reading that if you were to do intense cardio
for longer than an hour,
it's like the body shifts over into like this.
Yeah.
So it's, you know, it's funny about that.
So we've done studies on that and it's like, okay, it takes this long to
burn up your glycogen and you start to tap into fat.
But if your calorie intake is higher than your calorie burn, it doesn't matter.
Doesn't matter that you're, you know, that you fasted and now you're in ketosis.
Even if your calories too high, you're going to gain body fat.
If they're below what you're burning, then hopefully you lose body fat.
So really it's just about frequent shorter bouts of cardio tend to be easier to be consistent,
easier to schedule.
They tend to not beat up the body as much.
You know, if you watch the way somebody uses a
stair master or a treadmill past the point of
fatigue, their form starts to get real sloppy and
crappy.
So injury risk kind of goes up.
Um, it's easy to recover from it, but it feels
more recuperative.
So, uh, it just, in my experience, it seems to be
better to do a little bit daily versus a lot.
Well, that's a really good point to make too Sal,
like understanding through the mechanics of the cardio
that you choose to do too, I think is so important.
Like, you know, you might typically tell someone to
go for a light jog or run, but if that person has
really poor running mechanics, we might be better
off going for a swim or doing the elliptical or
choosing a piece of cardio equipment that is more
conducive for their mechanics versus you have
somebody, and a lot of people make this mistake of thinking that just because they can go run,
that they're doing a good job and they're not making things worse.
It's like, just because you can pump your arms and move your legs a little faster than a walk,
doesn't necessarily mean that you're helping yourself.
Think of the, everybody you ever see running when you're going for a walk or outside.
Easily 95% of them have terrible running mechanics.
Most people shouldn't run for cardio because they
don't know how to run properly because they
stopped running when they were kids.
It's a skill at the end of the day.
It's a skill.
If you look at it, you do see, it's rare to see
good mechanics.
It's rare to see somebody with good form and they've
actually been coached as to how to run and how to
do that appropriately.
And it's definitely something that you can invest in,
a coach, and get somebody to help you.
If that's like your thing, if you wanna be a runner,
you should really go get a coach to help you.
Yeah, so if you're getting started
and you haven't run for years
and you're not like an athlete in that sense,
I don't think you should choose running
as your form of cardio.
There's cardio machines that make it,
that are less technical, I think is the
right way to put it, right?
Running is very technical.
It's a skill that once you lose, you got to
rebuild it and relearn it.
That could take a while.
Those lower impact options.
You can go on a stationary bike, stationary
bike, elliptical.
I mean, walking, I love walking.
I think that's another great, and so yeah,
when it comes to appropriate cardio, it's like, yeah, pick the one that
you feel like you can still move well within that you don't start to feel your
knees and your joints start to bother you.
The irony of that is I feel like a lot of people choose what is hardest thinking
that that's what's best for them.
It's like, yeah, this is the most difficult for me to do.
Therefore, I think this is the best form.
Then the burnout is like immediate.
Yeah.
And the truth is it's more often than not
the opposite of that.
It's like it's the one that is,
that you can be more consistent,
that isn't putting all kinds of pressure on your joints
or causing any sort of other issues while you're doing it.
That's probably the better form of cardio to choose.
Totally.
And now another point is to kind of go over
the different general categories of cardio.
On the one hand you have the most commonly done form of
cardio, which is steady state. So this would be you're on a bike and you're going the same speed
for 30 minutes or 40 minutes, or you're going for a walk, it's the same speed, or you're jogging,
it's the same speed, or whatever. Steady state meaning it's steady. It's steady, consistent,
and it's about just how long you could do it for for or you're doing it for X amount of time.
Now, would you guys, when you, so when I would explain this to a client,
I used to use the talk test to teach them like, how do I measure how hard I'm going?
How do I know I'm not pushing too hard or I'm not, I say you want to push yourself hard,
but to a point where you can still hold a conversation while you're doing it.
Yeah, if you can't talk.
Yeah, if you're running so hard or you're doing the elliptical so hard
that I can't have a conversation with the person next to me, that means I need to scale back.
So that would be how I talk to people.
Yeah, and I know some people are familiar with heart rates and zones and breathing patterns,
but when you really start focusing on those things, it's such a distraction.
And a lot of times it ruins the rhythm of what you're doing, it interrupts a lot of the process.
I think that's the most simple way to evaluate how intense you're going is the talk test.
Totally.
Then the other general category of cardio is high intensity interval training.
This is cardio that's characterized by sprints of exertion followed by really low intensity movement or rest.
So it would be like the different steady state on a treadmill would look like a
slow jog for 20 minutes or 30 minutes. High intensity interval training would
look like a sprint for 15 seconds and then a walk for 30 seconds to
catch your breath and then a sprint and then a walk again. High intensity interval training you burn the same calories of steady state
in a shorter period of time. So in terms of calorie efficiency you can do less and
burn more calories than you can in that same time. So it's
efficient. Now the downside of it it's more intense. It is way harder.
If you're somebody that can hurt yourself easily on steady state, you're going to hurt
yourself for sure on high intensity.
It also requires a greater ability to recover in my experience.
If somebody is high stress and they're just getting into working out or they already work
out a lot and they want to add more, more exercise. They don't want to over train, uh,
HIIT style training, high intensity interval training. It just, it, it,
it hammers the recovery system way more rest.
Steady state can actually be quite recuperative in comparison.
Yeah. I would just say like a prerequisites out there.
If you have any kind of joint restrictions or like pains or like,
it's probably the form of cardio I would avoid for most people.
But in terms of like if your body's able to handle
a kind of stress, very effective, very efficient form
of doing cardio and you get it done
in that nice little window.
Keep in mind too that high intensity is relative
to your current level too.
Yes.
So the mistake that like, and this is where I used
to see stuff like this, I get clients that would come in
and be like, hey, I got this hit protocol this is where I used to see stuff like this, I get clients that would come in and be like hey I got this HIIT protocol and it
says I supposed to go speed whatever for this much time it's just like well
that's a really generic formula depending on where your cardio level is
at right now would dictate how I would tell you to push. So again this is one
of those things where it's like you know you go as hard as you can for 15 to 20
second you know all out when you're all out might be a super hard power walk.
That's I was just going to say. So I use the example of a sprint.
I hate cardio for some of my clients was an uphill power walk. Yeah.
Yeah.
Just a quick little steep as you could go power walk and then coming right back
down. And so it's important that they understand that it's like,
you are pushing just your max exertion for a very short period of time,
and then bringing it all the way down
to like a slow movement or no movement
to gather heart rate.
And that's the idea is to let the,
you want the heart rate to come all the way back down
to almost to where, not quite resting.
You're not gonna get resting at that state,
but your normal heart rate, right, throughout the day.
That's what you wanna come back down to.
Now the next point, and we love making this point
with strength training.
We love making this point with mobility, with any form of exercise, which is
watch your performance.
Now there's other things to measure too, like fat loss and stuff like that, but
when your performance is improving, it means you're probably doing a lot of things right.
When your performance is decreasing or declining, many times it means something's off.
Either you're training too hard, too often,
you're not getting enough sleep, something's off with the nutrition. Now I do understand that fat
loss being a calorie deficit can cause a reduction in performance. So it's not a perfect measure,
but if your performance is improving, especially if you've cut your calories and your performance is proving, man, you are doing great.
So I like to tell people to pay attention to their
performance with their cardio.
Last time you did 30 minutes, this time you did 30 minutes,
same speed, did it feel different?
Oh yeah, like my perceived exertion this time, like last time it was kind of hard.
This time it felt a lot easier.
Or I did hit, you know, I would do a 15 second sprint with 30 seconds of cruising.
Now I only have to cruise for 20 seconds.
Like if you see your performance improving, then you're probably doing a lot of things right.
So I like to tell people to focus on that.
Plus the mirror and especially the scale can lie.
If you're watching your weight go down, like the example we got Adam gave earlier,
you might lose weight, but go up in body fat percentage.
A lot of people don't realize that.
They'll stand on a scale, see they've lost weight, and they're celebrating, but they
don't realize that they're flabbier because they're lying to themselves because the scale
went down.
Because we talked earlier about how this is abused so much and even more detrimental than
resistance training.
When I would move clients up, like when
we're trying to push the performance in the
cardio world, it's very incremental.
Yeah.
Like I would, it would be a, like a adding 15
seconds or, you know, 0.2 on the speed.
Yes.
It does that each time.
What's really neat about cardiovascular training
is almost every single workout you can see like
an improvement.
And there's no need for you to go from, you know, you pushing like, let's say
five, speed five is really hard for you.
And then the next time you come to the gym, you get to push speed six or seven.
It's like, no, you just make a goal for yourself to incrementally really small
amounts or shaving time off by a couple seconds each time and after a month or
two months of training this way, you'd be surprised how, how much you've shaved off or how much that you've improved your performance just by doing these
real subtle incremental changes or increases in intensity. Yeah. Now next up is to always
incorporate strength training. Now, fat loss is your goal. Strength, and that's your ultimate goal.
Strength training should be the cornerstone of your routine. You shouldn't be doing more cardio than strength training.
Now, if endurance is your goal, then it flips.
Now strength training is there as a support.
But the reason why strength training should always be there is because it
benefits all other forms of exercise because strength is the foundation
for all physical pursuits and it'll also prevent injury.
If you do it properly, it prevents injury, improves mobility, and it maintains and strengthens
performance in almost every, if I can, I mean, every
physical pursuit.
And maintains lean body mass during this time too.
That's it, 100%.
So always strength train.
Now, again, if endurance is your goal, you're an
endurance athlete, you might only strength train
once a week.
If fat loss is your goal and you don't care so much
about endurance as much as
you just, I like it, then strength training should be more frequent than that.
And an example that Sal would be with, uh, we had a client who hired us that is
training for an OCR race or a marathon or triathlon has very specific endurance.
Cause some people will say things like, well, I want more endurance.
Well, what they mean is they want more
stamina during the day.
Exactly.
So that's important to note that it's like, if
you're, you still are going to have strength
training as a cornerstone, even if you quote
unquote want more endurance, the only time
where strength training, I would limit someone
all the way down to just one time per week.
And then the rest of it is endurance training is
if we have a very specific thing that a goal in
mind, like we're trying to do a marathon, triathlete, whatever, something like that.
If you're just trying to improve endurance, well, you still are going to have strength
training as a core stone because not only can we intermittently do these bouts of cardio,
but we could also do things within the training program too that's going to help build the
endurance also.
Totally.
And then finally, this is especially true for fat loss, mainly for fat loss, although it
affects everything. It's diet. Diet is paramount. Okay. So, you know, I'm sure a lot of people have
heard this before, but, you know, I'll mention this because it just really illustrates it. Like,
it's really hard to burn calories. It's really hard to burn. It takes work. It takes a lot of
work to burn calories. And yes, you can speed up your metabolism and that's a great way to do so
because then you don't have to do the work.
Your metabolism does it for you. 100% true.
That's what we talk about all the time on our show.
But nonetheless, even that is very hard in comparison to eating calories. Eating calories is easy.
It's figuratively and literally a piece of cake. Like if you ate a couple slices of pizza and had 600 calories, it
would take you two hours or three hours maybe of exercise of cardio to burn off
those those calories. Although I know cardio machines lie they say you burn
800 calories doing 30 minutes. That's not true. It's a lot less. It's a lot of work
right? One soda. Like how much you know that's 20 minutes or 30 minutes on a
piece of cardio equipment. So your diet has to be really, really good or at least put you in a deficit with adequate
protein if you're trying to get leaner and don't try to create the fat loss with exercise
alone.
It's really, really tough to do.
And the opposite is true if you are using this primarily for endurance.
So if you're somebody who is trying to,
again, triathlete or someone running for OCR,
something like that, and you are running a program like this
to improve your endurance,
then staying fed becomes really important.
Fat loss is not our important,
we're not trying to be catabolic at all.
You need to be fed.
So you wanna be fed.
And I see this as a mistake a lot of times
with those types of athletes is they're dieting to, you know, get lean or get in shape, but then
they're also trying to improve performance.
And that's conflicting right there.
It's like, you want to fuel, if you're really doing, if you're chasing the
cardio for endurance and performance, like out on a triathlete,
impede on that performance.
A hundred percent.
You got to make sure that you're getting adequate calories, adequate protein, enough fuel for
that body to perform at a higher level and to continue to perform better.
The opposite is true if you were trying to use it as a way to reduce body fat.
But equally important to make sure that you're hitting your protein intake, because one of
the things that you see people do in pursuit of fat loss is they just cut calories
and they don't realize that they also dramatically reduce their already low protein intake. Now that
are even lower protein intake and they're sending this catabolic signal. So yeah, the body not only
loses weight, it loses muscle along the way too. And endurance athletes, they're not making this
mistake as much, but you still see this, this was very common, you
know, just 15 years ago.
And you still see it now, which is, you
know, athletes know that carbohydrates are
the primary source of energy.
But then, so when you look at their diet,
it's a lot of carbohydrates, which is okay,
but they don't eat adequate protein.
Protein is just as important for the endurance
athlete as it is for the strength training athlete. They need to eat adequate protein. Protein is just as important for the endurance athlete as it is for the strength training athlete.
They need to eat adequate protein to repair their
body because all exercise causes damage.
And I'm not talking about the minimum.
Don't eat the minimum.
Now you might not need to go one gram per pound of
body weight, like somebody wants to build muscle,
but it's got to be up there.
Otherwise you're going to notice decrease in
performance.
In fact, that was my go-to with my, my, my
well-seasoned endurance, endurance athletes
that would hire me who had already done 10
marathons or had done two triathlons or a half
mer, a half iron man, when they would come to me,
I'd look at their diet, I would increase their
protein intake and they'd be blown away.
What do you mean more protein?
Shouldn't I be eating more starch, your
carbohydrates or whatever?
It's like, no, the protein.
But diet is going to be paramount, especially for fat loss.
Cause if you're trying to create that calorie deficit, right?
If you're trying to create a situation where the fat loss happens because
solely because of the exercise, it's going to be a very slow,
almost impossible process.
Put yourself in the deficit with the diet and then compliment it with the
workouts and again, cardio within those
short periods of time is a great way to help do that. Now, because we're doing this episode,
we have a program called MAPS Cardio. It is a strength training cardio based workout program.
It's the only cardio based workout program that we really have that specifically, that's why it's
named this. It's great for endurance, great for for stamina It's a great fat loss program. It also has great strength training in it
You're doing in fact you're doing some form of strength training three days a week one day a week is traditional
Strength training in the program because of this episode. It's 50% off. So if you're interested in this go to
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Now you can also find all of us on social media.
Justin is on Instagram at mind pump Justin.
I'm on Instagram at mind pump DeStefano and Adam is on Instagram at mind pump Adam.
Thank you for listening to mind pump.
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