milehighadam
New member
For a while I simply walked for exercise, but recently that hasn't been giving me much of a work out. Literally, yesterday I walked to a buddies house who lives exactly 4.5 miles away from me, door step to door step according to google maps using the route I took. The walk is about half up hill at a pretty substantial grade, about 1/4 downhill and the rest flat. I walked this with my school backpack on (carrying my school books - which weighs in at 20lbs). It took me exactly 1 hour and 10 minutes, which includes 5 minutes somewhere in the middle where I slowed down to answer a phone call. When I got there, sure I was sweating but I wasn't sore and I didn't feel like my breathing was elevated much at all. Also, I checked my heart rate and it wasn't much higher than it is throughout the day. This same walk even 1 month ago would have taken me close to an hour and 45 minutes and I wouldn't be able to move once I arrived. Now, I'm starting to feel like walking for exercise is a complete waste of time. I walk at least 3 miles a day at a pretty brisk pace, and many days do more than that (walking and the bus/lightrail are my only reliable means of transportation right now).
I've started jogging a bit, and it is hard for me. I want to get to the point where I can jog, or even better run, for miles at a time. I would rather be at that point sooner than later. Right now I can jog or run for about 1.5 minutes before I have trouble keeping my breathing under control. My heart is pounding and I usually stop and walk for about 2-3 minutes before doing it again. I can do this about 3 times before I am completely worn out. My question is, Would a continued routine like this benefit me more than simply running or jogging at lower speeds over a longer period of time by increasing weight loss more quickly and build more endurance faster? I really don't care how much my muscles hurt or how hard it may be to catch my breath as long as I know there is a light at the end of the tunnel. Also, I am a bit concerned about how hard it is to catch my breath after stopping, I literally slow to a crawl when walking because it feels like someone is standing on my chest; my muscles don't ache after this either probably because of how much walking I do (?), is this normal?
So, the questions are: Would a continued routine of jog/run for 1-1.5 followed by walking for several benefit me more than sustained running/jogging at lower speeds for longer distances, in relation to weight loss and building endurance faster?
Should I change the routine at all? For example, run/jog for less time, walk for less time and aim for more sets? Or anything else.
Is it safe for me, i.e. my heavily labored breathing?
Do I need to get a bit more conditioning first; perhaps by sustained running or jogging? Or can I will myself to do it (I'd prefer this because I'm all for more work/pain for a higher pay off)?
On a somewhat unrelated note, I don't have a treadmill but my parents are willing to give me theirs if I want it. I do all of my walking, jogging and running on the street, I find it easier if I am actually going somewhere (even if that somewhere is around the block). Is there any benefit to a treadmill other than convenience (I'm sure it would be nice once the snow hits the ground)? I live in Denver so I have no problem finding all different types of inclines in close proximity to my house.
I've started jogging a bit, and it is hard for me. I want to get to the point where I can jog, or even better run, for miles at a time. I would rather be at that point sooner than later. Right now I can jog or run for about 1.5 minutes before I have trouble keeping my breathing under control. My heart is pounding and I usually stop and walk for about 2-3 minutes before doing it again. I can do this about 3 times before I am completely worn out. My question is, Would a continued routine like this benefit me more than simply running or jogging at lower speeds over a longer period of time by increasing weight loss more quickly and build more endurance faster? I really don't care how much my muscles hurt or how hard it may be to catch my breath as long as I know there is a light at the end of the tunnel. Also, I am a bit concerned about how hard it is to catch my breath after stopping, I literally slow to a crawl when walking because it feels like someone is standing on my chest; my muscles don't ache after this either probably because of how much walking I do (?), is this normal?
So, the questions are: Would a continued routine of jog/run for 1-1.5 followed by walking for several benefit me more than sustained running/jogging at lower speeds for longer distances, in relation to weight loss and building endurance faster?
Should I change the routine at all? For example, run/jog for less time, walk for less time and aim for more sets? Or anything else.
Is it safe for me, i.e. my heavily labored breathing?
Do I need to get a bit more conditioning first; perhaps by sustained running or jogging? Or can I will myself to do it (I'd prefer this because I'm all for more work/pain for a higher pay off)?
On a somewhat unrelated note, I don't have a treadmill but my parents are willing to give me theirs if I want it. I do all of my walking, jogging and running on the street, I find it easier if I am actually going somewhere (even if that somewhere is around the block). Is there any benefit to a treadmill other than convenience (I'm sure it would be nice once the snow hits the ground)? I live in Denver so I have no problem finding all different types of inclines in close proximity to my house.