”I don't criticize weight training - as long as it is not a substitute for aerobic training.”
Kenneth H. Cooper
The fitness industry today is filled with myth and fallacies of performance training and optimization. One of the more prominent fallacies pertaining to cardio-vascular exercise is that if your heart rate is high and you are breathing heavy, it provides the necessary stimulus for it to be termed “cardio”. This fallacy is often taken advantage of by trainers promoting high intensity weight training with limited rest periods and a fast lifting tempo as cardio-vascular exercise. However, the physiological mechanisms of the heart and circulatory system of the body respond quite differently during typical resistance training, and this response ultimately limits the adaptations cardio-vascular training is supposed to stimulate.
The physiology of the human body is far from simple. There is always a cardio-vascular response during any type of activity, but in order for an activity to qualify as “cardio-vascular,” it has to stimulate appropriate adaptations to the heart and circulatory system, and not all physical activities do this equally. These factors are what have motivated me to write this book. As an exercise physiologist with a specialty in weight training and cardio-vascular exercise, as well as being a performance consultant and educator of fitness professionals, I feel there is a need to provide physiologically correct information so that myths and fallacies can be eliminated from the fitness industry. This book is about providing truthful information so trainers and athletes can make the best possible choice in their training. If you, as a fitness instructor, personal trainer, or coach deliver accurate information founded in the scientific literature, you will not only create the best results, but your credibility as a professional will also skyrocket. If you want to change your physical appearance and performance level, or you help other people in doing so, having correct knowledge about the human body, and how it responds to exercise, will lead to the fastest and most sustainable results.
In this book, I set out to answer one primary question:
What constitutes real cardio-vascular training?
Answering this question takes of-set in the physiology of the human body and digs into the research that cements the fallacy of current beliefs about “cardio”. The book should be viewed as an introductory “light-weight” textbook to cardio-vascular training, how it is done correctly, and the effects on the body it imposes. By going over the current scientific literature, distilling it, and putting it together with established physiological knowledge, I have tried to provide a framework from which you can test, design, optimize, and plan real cardio-vascular training and get all the benefits of increased heart health, longevity, and vitality in conjunction with all the performance benefits of increased power-endurance, recovery ability, stamina, fat burning capability, and insulin sensitivity. Whether you are a recreational athlete, a high level sports performer, a stay-at-home mom, or a keyboard athlete, there are tremendous benefits of exercising your heart, but you have to do it correctly! This book will show you how.
Your heart is the most important muscle in your entire body. Give it the attention it deserves.
I was one of the first people my good friend Kenneth ever sold a Kettlebell to in Denmark, must have been 15-20 years ago, back when Kenneth Trained elite swimmers and held RKC workshops.
Back then we both trained elite athletes (I have been out of that game for 10+ years, and embarished to say I haven’t trained myself for 7 years) for about a decade we had weekly debates about training.
In 2021 I want to get into better shape (my shape had become horrible), so what would be more natural than to start with Kenneth’s book.
This book is the best on cardiovascular training there is, but it’s a tiny bit to cardiovascular biased for my taste personally... it’s still an absolute must read for any cardiovascular athlete though.
If you want to further condence it: - Aerobic/Cardio training is needed for everybody - Strength training is no replacement for Aerobic/Cardio training - The best excercises for Aerobic/Cardio training are Running, Cycling XC skiing, rowing etc (strength circuits are inferior)
Big part of the book was abstracts of scientific studies and then the authors interpretation (saying the same with other or similar words) or his critisism.
For this kind of training (distance running especially) the best book is still: Daniels' Running Formula by Jack Daniels