Editor's Note: Have you ever wondered when the
best time is to workout? Will you get better results with morning
workouts or evening workouts? Does it even matter? Tom has the answer!
Dear Tom,
What are your thoughts on workout timing? Do you recommend that cardio
and weights be done successively or separately? For example; wake up, warm
up, cardio, lift, eat, or wake up, warm up, cardio, eat, lift later in day?
Dr. Michael Marasco
When you do your training is not nearly as important as just doing it
consistently on a pre-planned schedule, with meticulous attention to
progressive overload. Timing is a secondary and in my opinion, a highly
overrated factor. Don't lose sleep over this or get caught up in the
arguments either way.
The very first thing everyone needs is to establish a pre-planned training
and nutrition schedule that is so regular that training and eating on a
routine become habits as deeply entrenched as brushing your teeth, taking a
shower, driving a car, or putting your pants on with the same leg first
every day.
Training and nutrition can eventually become so habitual that they turn
into automatic behaviors requiring no conscious thought - and that is a
great place to arrive at. For someone still struggling to overcome bad
habits or stick to a regular schedule (i.e. you're still skipping workouts
or eating junk), the workout timing issue is moot.
Once you've developed that kind of consistency and regularity in your
training and nutrition habits, then it pays to start nitpicking and tuning
the fine details - and yes, one of those details is workout timing and meal
timing.
The ideal timing of training depends on (1) your goals (fat loss versus
gaining mass) (2) practical considerations like job, family, and time
available, and, (3) whether you are doing cardio only or cardio and weights
the same day.
First, lets talk about fat loss. When fat loss is the goal, I believe that
30 minutes of cardio first thing in the morning on an empty stomach has many
benefits.
Editor's Notes: Tom references another article he wrote about the
benefits of morning workouts but unfortunately, the link to the article is
no longer valid. I wrote an article about the importance of cardio workouts
in general and list specific benefits of morning workouts. The article is
titled, Cardio Exercises are Vital for
Weight Loss and General Fitness.
What about if you're on a fat loss program and you're doing weights and
cardio the same day? You have a few good options. One, do your cardio only
early in the A.M. on an empty stomach, then eat meal one immediately
afterwards. Hit your weights in a separate session later in the day - late
morning, afternoon or evening.
Two, since working out twice a day isn't practical for everyone, eat meal
one, then do weights and cardio in the same session, with the weights first
and cardio second, followed immediately by meal two. If you're doing both in
the same session, DO NOT do cardio first followed by weights or your weight
workout will suffer greatly.
On a mass gaining program, things are different. I DO NOT recommend morning
cardio in a fasted state on mass programs. In fact, I recommend a minimum of
cardio on a mass gaining program: 3-4 days per week for 20-30 minutes and
that's it. Extreme "hard gainer" ectomorphs (skinny, small jointed body
types) should do even less - more like 3 days per week for 15-20 minutes (if
any).
On the mass gaining program, split up your cardio and weights if
possible, and space them out a good eight hours or so (lift in morning,
cardio at night, for example). Eat plentifully after each workout session.
If you must, simply hit your short cardio workout immediately after your
weight training workout.
By the way, the twice a day schedule isn't practical for most people with 9
to 5 jobs, families, etc, etc, but if you can swing it, it has several
potential benefits:
1) It allows you to get a meal immediately after your weights, which
maximizes recovery and muscle growth (extremely important if muscle mass is
one of your goals).
2) It gives you a double boost in metabolism instead of a single post
exercise metabolic increase (like spinning a top twice within a certain time
period to keep the rpm's going faster instead of spinning it only once and
letting the rpm's slow down before spinning it again).
3) For fat loss programs, it allows you to get the benefits of fasted
morning cardio.
4) It gives you more energy for each individual session, instead of one
long, energy-draining session. When you do weights and cardio together,
whichever you do last tends to suffer because your energy levels start to
decline (just try some high intensity interval training after your 20 rep
squat routine!!!).
5) It maximizes hormonal response to exercise for maximal fat loss and
muscle growth.
6) It minimizes the possibility of overtraining.
If two sessions a day doesn't fit into your schedule, then doing your cardio
immediately after your weight training is also effective. The only drawback
to doing weights and cardio in the same session is that the workouts can
become very long and tiring; sometimes 75-90 minutes (for example, 45
minutes of weight training, followed by 30-45 minutes of cardio).
Some people are terrified about the possibility of losing muscle when doing
long training sessions of weights and cardio together. Ironically, the
worrying probably causes more muscle loss than anything! Worry and stress
are highly catabolic. Instead of worrying, simply measure your body fat,
chart your progress and keep a close eye on lean body mass.
As long as you're not restricting calories too severely, you'll probably
discover that you maintain your LBM just fine. If LBM drops, then think
about changing your workout timing.
There's probably some truth to the assertion that each individual has a
certain natural biorhythm which dictates their personal best time to train
(morning people vs. night people). There may also be some truth to the
theory that metabolic rates and hormone levels at certain times of the day
or night make for better results if you train in harmony with these ebbs and
tides.
I am an early riser, but I am NOT a "morning person." I experimented one
season with eating meal one, then lifting at 5:30 am and my workouts
suffered terribly - really, it was awful - and I gave it a fair trial for
three months straight without missing. I was not mentally or physically
primed to train at that time.
The logical, theoretical, left-brained types can go ahead and pooh-pooh the
"instinctive training" principle all they want, but I don't care what
scientific study comes out saying that training at 6:00 A.M builds more
mass, I KNOW early morning lifting isn't for me. When I'm training for
contests, I prefer doing cardio at 5:30 or 6:00 am, then meal one, then meal
two, then hitting the weights at around 10:00 am or 11:00 am. This works
great for me because I work 12 or 1 pm to 11:00 pm. If you've discovered a
certain time that "feels" good to you, go with the flow and don't fight it.
Let me re-emphasize again, I think the importance of this topic is blown way
out of proportion. In fact, sometimes I'm sorry I wrote that morning cardio
article because it stirred up tons of controversy. Judging by the number of
times I've heard questions about morning cardio and workout timing, people
are very concerned about doing it wrong.
My advice: Just get your butt in the gym whenever it's convenient for
you, get on a regular schedule and train hard, hard, hard. Then go home and
eat, eat, eat your lean proteins and complex carbs from natural, whole
foods. Getting lean and muscular takes effort, but the process is really not
that complicated...honest!
Read other
articles by Tom Venuto
About the Author
Tom Venuto is an NSCA-certified personal trainer, lifetime natural
bodybuilder, certified strength & conditioning specialist (CSCS), and author of
the #1 best selling diet e-book, "Burn The Fat, Feed The Muscle." Tom has
written hundreds of articles and has been featured in IRONMAN, Natural
Bodybuilding, Muscular Development, Exercise for Men and Men's Exercise. To
contact Tom or get information on his e-book, visit
www.BurnTheFat.com