Oh, and also, you don't have to work out for 2 hours a day to be in shape.
Hence, I give you the 30-minute gym workout. That doesn't include a major warm-up, cool-down, or any stretching, but you'll definitely be out of that gym in under 45 minutes. And it's an awesome workout because it involves my favorite...interval training! The whole time, it's all intervals!
Part 1: 15 minutes on the elliptical
First, scope out an elliptical with arms. That is, you will work your upper body at the same time as your lower body. Doing cardio with your upper body (exercises such as swimming, rowing, and ellipti-cising??) gets your heart rate up much more quickly than a lower-body focused workout (running, stair-climbing, biking, elliptical without arms) because for most people, the muscles in your upper body aren't conditioned for this kind of hard work. Even if you're quite conditioned, using upper body for cardio is still a lot of work and can really ramp up the intensity level (read, calorie burn) in your workout.
So here's how the elliptical interval workout goes, minute by minute. By the way, if you can program your elliptical switch between intensity levels during your workout, this will be much easier. The elliptical machines at my gym don't have this feature, so I just have to pay attention to the time and do everything manually.
0:00-2:59. Warm up, easy/moderate pace. Play around with the intensity/resistance level on the machine to see how much you can handle. My elliptical goes to 25, and my warm-up is usually between 8-12.
3:00-4:59. Time to get intense. Turn up the resistance so much that you can barely handle it. For me, this is at a 17. Go, go, go. 2 minutes of hard work!
5:00-5:59. Recovery. Easy pace. Can be the same as your warm-up. I set the machine between 8-10 normally for this. Also during this time, switch the direction which your pedaling.
6:00-7:59. Ramp up that resistance to what you were doing before. Try your best to go the entire 2 minutes without lowering the resistance. Also try and maintain your same speed (speed, on an elliptical, can be measured by the RPM's on the display). Go, go, go! Use your arms too!
8:00-8:59. Recovery. And switch the direction you're pedaling. You've probably noticed by now that it's easier for you to pedal in one direction than the other. Avoid doing the "easy" one for the remainder of the workout.
9:00-10:59. Up with the resistance! You're close to being done with this workout. Maintain the speed you've been doing, or try to go a little bit faster. If you must lower the resistance slightly during any of the high-intensity intervals only do so after you're sure you cannot go any further, and even then, maintain your speed. Don't reduce your resistance and your pace!
11:00-11:59. Recover. Switch direction of pedaling. You're almost done.
12:00-13:59. Final intense interval! Absolutely try to push yourself in these last 2 tough minutes. Arms, legs, breathe, speed...all of it!
14:00-15:00. Recover/cool down. I know, it's only one minute, not much of a cool down. But that's okay. The workout is halfway over, and your body will be warm for the remainder of it.
Don't take too long of a break. Grab some water, catch your breath, and head on over to an open space or open group exercise studio. If there's no class going on, you can usually go ahead into an empty studio and use it to work out on your own.
Part 2: 15 minutes in the Studio
Or slightly open area/floor space that your gym offers.
Equipment needed: Jump rope, 2 hand weights (5-10 lbs each), 6-12" step (like the kind they use in step classes), mat.
If you don't have these pieces of equipment, do not throw a fit and give up on me. I'll give equipment-free alternatives.
How it works:
There are 5 exercises. Start each on a 1-minute interval cycle. You might finish the exercise before the minute is up, so that time is meant just for a little recovery. If you don't think you want to spend all those seconds recovering and catching your breath, you can start the next exercise earlier, hence, finishing this part of the workout in under 15 minutes. Repeat this 5-exercise cycle 3 times.
- 1 minute. Jump rope.
- 30 seconds. Crossover mountain climbers (like a regular mountain climber, but when your knees come up, cross them over towards the shoulder on the opposite side of your body. If this doesn't make sense to you, just do regular mountain climbers.)
- Bicycle crunches, very slow pace, 16 reps (so 8 per side)
- 45 seconds. Lateral (that's side-to-side) hops over the top of the step. Go fast, reach for the floor when you land on either side.
- Plank rows. You're in push-up position with a weight under each hand. Row your arms, one at a time, leading with your elbow. Slowly lower the weight back down and alternate sides. Do 12 reps (6 per side).
Alternative, no-equipment option:
- 1 minute. Jumping jacks.
- 30 seconds. Crossover mountain climbers. Thought you were getting out of that one, did you??
- 50 second plank. It would be nice to have a mat for this. At the very least, maybe a little towel under your forearms.
- 45 seconds speed skater jumps. There are some variations of this exercise. Do the one that feels very difficult for you to complete in 45 seconds.
- 15 push-ups.
For a cool down, you can walk/light jog on the treadmill for 5 minutes or pedal lightly on a stationary bike for this amount of time. If you live super close to your gym, like I do, you can just jog to and from the place and your warm-up and cool-down are taken care of. On that note, if you do warm-up before you even get to the gym or if you do so on a piece of equipment other than the elliptical, then you can just jump right into the elliptical intervals instead of spending the first 3 minutes warming up on there.
I'd recommend stretching when your're done as well. This workout is very core-focused but works shoulders, quads, hamstrings, glutes, abs, back, and triceps, so focus on those for stretching. And gulp some ounces of water too.
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