28-Days-to-Lean Meal Plan
With the right plan and the right discipline, you can get seriously shredded in just 28 days.
Read articleWith the right plan and the right discipline, you can get seriously shredded in just 28 days.
Read articleAt age 62, "Big Bill" shares his wisdom to dominate one of the ultimate strength marks.
Read articleFollow these fit women we're crushing on for inspiration, workout ideas, and motivation.
Read article11 Ways To Build Your Best Cardio Workout
Close gallery popup button1 of 12
Trying to get back into the gym after a long summer, vacation, holiday or break from the gym all-together can be a daunting task. The average person will hop on a treadmill, get bored after 5 minutes, winded after 10, and quit after 15. The only things you end up with are sore joints, frustration, and an ongoing hate for anything related to cardio.The importance and benefits of doing cardio are clear and in our faces everyday, but unfortunately many people don’t know what constitutes as effective cardio. Gone is the day that you could run around town for a couple of miles and “be healthy” or look “fit”. Today’s “fit” man needs to be strong, fast, and athletic. An hour on the elliptical, a walk on a super inclined treadmill, or a 10-mile jog in your neighborhood will not help you attain these qualities. A successful cardio routine involves some key elements that are not in most programs.Stick with these basics during your next cardio routine, follow these tips, and bring your fitness to new heights.SEE ALSO: 8 Cardio Tips To Burn Fat >>>
2 of 12
Know exactly what you are doing ahead of time. Aim for 2-3 sessions per week and workouts that progressively get harder. Being able to handle more is your first basic indicator that you’re progressing.SEE ALSO: The 28 Day Lean Meal Plan >>>
3 of 12
If you always end up skipping out on your cardio then do it when you first get to the gym or do it on off days. It’s not necessarily when you do it, just don’t skip it.SEE ALSO: 6 Week Full-Body HIIT Workout >>>
4 of 12
If you have a magazine or book that you thought about catching up on while you worked out, throw it out. Nobody has ever gotten fit while reading and doing cardio. You can only focus on one thing at a time, make it your workout. Save the book for before bed.SEE ALSO: How To Rip a Phone Book In Half >>>
5 of 12
Doing a dynamic warm-up will increase mobility, decrease your chance of injury, and prepare your bodies systems for the task at hand. Warm-ups are commonly overlooked, skip them and you’re bound to get hurt.SEE ALSO: The Ultimate Warmup Routine >>>
6 of 12
Unless you’re training for a long-distance race, avoid staying at the same pace for an extended period of time at all cause. Varying degrees of intensity will increase your metabolism greater than steady work.SEE ALSO: Boost the Burn >>>
7 of 12
Incorporate them either into your normal run or as its own workout session. Sprints rev the metabolism and actually can assist will building muscle in the legs.SEE ALSO: The Complete Bodybuilder’s Sprinting Guide >>>
8 of 12
Try mixing in bodyweight exercises in-between your run. This will break up a “boring session” and add a strength-building component to your workout.SEE ALSO: 5 Best Bodyweight Exercises
9 of 12
Ignore that voice in your head that tells you to slow down, take a break, or just flat out quit. Fitness is a discipline, learn to embrace the work.SEE ALSO: 13 More Fat Fighting Tips >>>
10 of 12
Bring your heart rate back down. This will improve your recovery process and progressively slow the body down after an intense session.SEE ALSO: 6 Things You Should Do After Every Workout >>>
11 of 12
Keep a workout log of how much weight you lift? Keep track of how far you went and the tempo used to get there. Numbers don’t lie, documenting your progress will keep you in tune with what works, and with what doesn’t.SEE ALSO: How to Burn Fat in 5 Steps >>>
12 of 12
One great cardio session has never gotten anyone anywhere. One great month of them have. Get into a routine and stick with it. Develop a process from warm-up to cool down.SEE ALSO: HIIT: 10 Minute Treadmill Blast
Trying to get back into the gym after a long summer, vacation, holiday or break from the gym all-together can be a daunting task. The average person will hop on a treadmill, get bored after 5 minutes, winded after 10, and quit after 15. The only things you end up with are sore joints, frustration, and an ongoing hate for anything related to cardio.
The importance and benefits of doing cardio are clear and in our faces everyday, but unfortunately many people don’t know what constitutes as effective cardio. Gone is the day that you could run around town for a couple of miles and “be healthy” or look “fit”. Today’s “fit” man needs to be strong, fast, and athletic. An hour on the elliptical, a walk on a super inclined treadmill, or a 10-mile jog in your neighborhood will not help you attain these qualities. A successful cardio routine involves some key elements that are not in most programs.
Stick with these basics during your next cardio routine, follow these tips, and bring your fitness to new heights.
SEE ALSO: 8 Cardio Tips To Burn Fat >>>
Know exactly what you are doing ahead of time. Aim for 2-3 sessions per week and workouts that progressively get harder. Being able to handle more is your first basic indicator that you’re progressing.
SEE ALSO: The 28 Day Lean Meal Plan >>>
If you always end up skipping out on your cardio then do it when you first get to the gym or do it on off days. It’s not necessarily when you do it, just don’t skip it.
SEE ALSO: 6 Week Full-Body HIIT Workout >>>
If you have a magazine or book that you thought about catching up on while you worked out, throw it out. Nobody has ever gotten fit while reading and doing cardio. You can only focus on one thing at a time, make it your workout. Save the book for before bed.
SEE ALSO: How To Rip a Phone Book In Half >>>
Doing a dynamic warm-up will increase mobility, decrease your chance of injury, and prepare your bodies systems for the task at hand. Warm-ups are commonly overlooked, skip them and you’re bound to get hurt.
SEE ALSO: The Ultimate Warmup Routine >>>
Unless you’re training for a long-distance race, avoid staying at the same pace for an extended period of time at all cause. Varying degrees of intensity will increase your metabolism greater than steady work.
SEE ALSO: Boost the Burn >>>
Incorporate them either into your normal run or as its own workout session. Sprints rev the metabolism and actually can assist will building muscle in the legs.
Try mixing in bodyweight exercises in-between your run. This will break up a “boring session” and add a strength-building component to your workout.
SEE ALSO: 5 Best Bodyweight Exercises
Ignore that voice in your head that tells you to slow down, take a break, or just flat out quit. Fitness is a discipline, learn to embrace the work.
SEE ALSO: 13 More Fat Fighting Tips >>>
Bring your heart rate back down. This will improve your recovery process and progressively slow the body down after an intense session.
Keep a workout log of how much weight you lift? Keep track of how far you went and the tempo used to get there. Numbers don’t lie, documenting your progress will keep you in tune with what works, and with what doesn’t.
SEE ALSO: How to Burn Fat in 5 Steps >>>
One great cardio session has never gotten anyone anywhere. One great month of them have. Get into a routine and stick with it. Develop a process from warm-up to cool down.
SEE ALSO: HIIT: 10 Minute Treadmill Blast
Avoid a common mistake for maximum contraction, says this fitness coach.
Read articleThe experts at RP Strength say 2025 can definitely be the new year of the new you.
Read articleFitness guru Jeremy Ethier shared some “handy” tips.
Read article