- Joined
- Jun 14, 2024
Yes, you should do dedicated cardio. Even most physically demanding jobs won’t get you enough aerobic training to substantially improve your cardiovascular health. And those benefits are frankly too numerous to list, from helping you live a longer healthier life, it’s cross-training benefits with lifting, burning more calories so you can eat more on a cut, and so many more.1. First, I do not do cardio at the gym as a rule because I absolutely hate it, I justify this because I get tons of steps and physical activity in during the day (I work a physically demanding warehouse job) but should I be doing cardio anyway? I think I could talk myself into it if it had a benefit for my overall routine, mostly I avoid it because its boring
I personally don’t do it at the actual gym, as I prefer outdoor running. But that’s just personal preference. As for it being boring, to see the benefits you can do something as simple as walk on an incline treadmill at a slower pace, and then throw on a podcast, tv show, movie, audiobook, etc.
Depends entirely on how the rest of your program looks. Generally speaking though, most programs will require you to go hard enough on training days that you’ll likely want/need at least one dedicated rest day for proper recovery. I’d say most well designed programs will have you resting at least 2-3 days per week, but I could see certain splits that may have only one. I’d be wary of those though, especially if they have you doing retardedly high volume. May be a result of the very flawed trend that went/is going around, especially in the “science based community,” that says high volume low weight is “optimal” for hypertrophy.2. What sort of rest day frequency should I have, and should it truly be a complete rest day or just "go a little less hard" type day?