Music helps you exercise. People who listen to their favourite music while exercising may push themselves further and feel as if they are exerting themselves less than people who prefer a tuneless workout, according to new research.Get psyched up! I like Metallica and Van Halen; Pantera on leg day; action movie soundtracks. Try lifting to Armageddon or Rocky IV. It adds a special twist to my workout when I imagine training for the day I get to save all life on the planet from destruction. :) It helps me tune out my surroundings and focus on lifting. I've noticed that when I don't have music, I tend to look around more and sit for longer periods.
As a study, I could go to the gym and observe who is sitting and resting for 5-10 minutes between sets and who is busting their ass and loving it. Then I could note whether they're listening to their own music or if they're listening to "Ghostbusters" and "Margaritaville" playing on the PA speakers in the background. I can tell you what my prediction is but you likely know already.
Personally, I don't understand how I used to lift without music. I have a little flash MP3 player that I wear strapped to my arm. They're getting cheaper by the day. The full-size iPod or an MP3 player with a hard drive is not a good idea for use with exercise. Try that link above at Newegg.com instead of Best Bye or Circus City where you would have to pay full MSRP. But I'm sure I don't need to tell you how to shop.Keeping the Pace:
The right music can help pace your workout. Keep these beats:
Running: 120 to 160 beats per minute (bpm), or about the speed of "Run Like Hell" by Pink Floyd
Boxing: 122 to 140 bpm, or about the speed of anything from the Rocky soundtrack
Cycling: 130 to 170 bpm, or about the speed of "Panama" by Van Halen
Lifting: 140 to 170 bpm, or about the speed of "Black Dog" by Led Zeppelin (one repetition for every four beats)
Warm-up/Cool down: 90 to 110 bpm, or about the speed of "Black Magic Woman" by Santana
If I get to the gym and my rechargeable battery is dead, I'll leave and go get batteries. I don't lift without music anymore. My workouts seem half-assed when I don't have my own music. Lifting without music is like a movie without a soundtrack. Crickets chirping in the background and stuff. The power of it: it is a big distraction that directs ones attention away from inadvertantly focusing on the "pain."
1 comment:
can't i just listen to the music and skip all that hard exercise itself? like the soundtrack, hate the effort... ;)
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