Health & Fitness
Cardiovascular Exercise Program For You
A cardiovascular exercise program is needed when you are planning to compete in a marathon, sporting event or even if you just want to get yourself in better condition than your current fitness level for personal and health reasons.
When developing a cardiovascular exercise program, you first need to test your current cardiovascular fitness levels, and then you need to devise a plan to slowly increase the intensity and duration of your cardio workouts to increase your fitness performance.
To create your our cardiovascular exercise program, first you will need to test your current level of cardiovascular fitness, there are a few exercise tests that you can perform to calculate this with. It helps if you have a treadmill to use, most gyms will have a treadmill.
If you don’t have a treadmill, go to a track found around football or soccer fields, many schools will have a 1/4 mile track to run around on the weekend. Time how long it takes you to run one mile, take a notebook so you can record your times and progress during your cardiovascular exercise program.
The purpose for keeping track of your times in a cardiovascular exercise program notebook is because as you become more fit you will get faster, and you will be able to run longer distances with less effort.
As you keep track of your workouts you will be able to run a mile in less time and take less rest meaning you are increasing results and performance. You will look back in your notebook and visually see your progress from when you started, it feels good to see.
Now that you know where you stand when it comes to your personal cardiovascular fitness level, you have something to work with. Fitness and performance are based on mathematics and science. This means that mathematically it is possible for anyone to improve his or her cardiovascular exercise fitness wheather you are a beginner or an advanced professional athlete.
You will always increase your results as you lower the amount of rest you get or you increase the amount of reps, weight lifted or distance you ran in a specific amount of time, or you do both, you will always keep progressing. But if you ignore your notebook and progress reports you will have trouble ever improving and you will stop improving in your cardiovascular exercise program.
You should plan to workout at least 3 times a week for 45 minutes to one hour for 4-6 weeks to see good results in your cardiovascular exercise program. Test your current level of fitness and keep track of your progress in a notebook.
Over time reduce the amount of rest you need and increase the amount of work you do in a specific time to increase your results. Mathematically you will always be able to increase you fitness, so go for it.
Kyle Oxenham
http://www.articlesbase.com/fitness-articles/cardiovascular-exercise-program-for-you-56808.html
October 29, 2009 - 4:17 am
Would a person kindly explain to me how to set up an exercise program?
My gym teacher gave us a project, and one component involves designing an exercise program for ourselves, including cardio-vascular, flexibility, and strength. However, I don’t know the names of any stretches, cardiovascular exercises, or anything under strength, or what to do after that. Any help would be appreciated. Thanks!
October 29, 2009 - 9:19 am
youtube.com
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October 29, 2009 - 9:21 am
When I went to my gym the first time they made me one which suited me…not that I follow it.
Go to a gym and see if they’ll do the same thing…
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October 29, 2009 - 9:23 am
Talk to your ymca
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October 29, 2009 - 9:25 am
sounds like something i did in phys. ed.
you should check out the school’s gym for various workout machines and work around there. test each one of them out to see how many you can do per set…
also, think of other ways to *exercise*, don’t be bound to a machine…try running laps or jumping rope…just to get your body moving and see how many you can do….time yourself
importance of this program is to see how many you can do, within a time, and with hard work—also see your own improvement. it can be really helpful if you apply this to real life.
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October 29, 2009 - 9:27 am
Strength:
-push ups (triceps/chest)
-bench pressesest)
-squats (legs)
-deadlift (legs/lowerback)
-leg raises (abs)
-dumbell curls (biceps)
-pull ups (upper back/biceps/shoulders)
-row (back)
Cardio
-HIIT (High intensity interval training…haha its very painful but very effective for cutting fat. Jog for 2 minutes, sprint for 1, jog for one, sprint for one, and just repeating until you cant take it anymore)
-skipping is always painful cardio
If your gym teacher tells you that doesn’t work … well you can tell him/her that they are wrong b/c it does and its a routine that many people follow.
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October 29, 2009 - 9:29 am
This is what mine would look like:
Monday: Stretch for 5, Jog for 15 minutes, Stretch
Tuesday: Stretch for 5, Push ups, Stomach Crunches, Stretch
Wednesday: Stretch for 5, Jog for 15 minutes, Stretch
Thursday: Stretch for 5, Push ups, Stomach Crunches, Stretch
Friday: Stretch for 5, Jog for 15 minutes, Stretch
Sat: Stretch for 5, Jump rope for 15, Stretch
Sunday: Day off
*You should always stretch before and after any exercise.
*Jogging will strengthen your legs, and is good cardie exercise
*Push ups is strength exercise for chest, arms and back.
*crunches is strength exercise for your abs, stomach and lower back.
*Jump rope is amazing cardie as well as overall body exercise.
This plan would cover everything cardio, strength, and every time you stretch it improves your flexibility. you just gotta figure out how long you want to do each exercise. Make sure you have days in between strength training because it takes some times for muscles to rebuild.
Hope this helped.
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October 29, 2009 - 9:31 am
this site should be helpful – http://www.webmd.com/fitness-exercise/creating-personalized-fitness-program
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