The Secret to Running with a LOW HEART RATE (Not What You Think!)
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- čas přidán 26. 04. 2021
- How to keep your heart rate low when running. In this video I want to share with you how I control my heart rate while I’m running. I’m currently doing lots of aerobic zone 2 running following a modified version of Dr. Phil Maffetone’s MAF heart rate training method. Lots of runners initially really struggle to keep their heart rate low enough to run in their aerobic training zone, but as your endurance improves, your new aerobic fitness will allow you to run faster at the same heart rate. Today’s video has some tips for how you can control your heart rate when you run, so you can run with a low heart rate.
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ABOUT ME: I'm James Dunne, a runner, sports rehabilitation therapist (similar to physical therapist) and coach based in the UK (Norwich and London).
Since 2007 I've been working with athletes focusing specifically on helping distance runners and triathletes overcome injury and improve performance through developing their individual running technique.
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I rely on my running watch the fr 35 which does not give an accurate heart rate almost every time, what should I do
@James Dunne, have you read Primal Endurance by Mark Sisson? I started implementing low HR training and low carb dieting since January and have seen some good progress. Just curious. One of your videos mentioned nutrition for a moment. Just curious what you thought of it.
Hi! James, quick question ⁉️
Do you drink coffee? And if you do, how often ?
@@imonbora9271 Get the heart rate strap for it (assuming here Garmin Forerunner 35) - you want the HRM-Run
I've been doing this for 18months now and when I started I was having to walk every hill, even on the down hill, now I can keep a 9min mile without going over 135 beats at age 47.... My 5k is now 21.57(was nearly sick) and just completed a half marathon in 1hr45mins....... This really works..... Please belive in the process and stick with it!!! 👍
Hope I get to those times when I'm 47
Hi Daisy, how many times did you go out for a run (on average) during the 18 month period?
Ok that's good to know. I've started using HR for my runs and sometimes it feels like I'm practically walking.
@@dave24973976fr
135 with a 9 minute pace !!!
I’ve been training for 4 months at sub 140BPM HR. 4 months ago I ran 10 miles at 11:30/mile pace and nearly passed out; HR kept shooting to 175. Today I ran at 8:10/mile pace for a half marathon and felt great; HR at 160 average. Loving the results of low hr training. Injury free as well for the first time
Did you only do low HR running? Or also mixed it up with speedwork, HIIT or something else to learn to run more economically at quicker paces for example?
@@rickseubers7754 I run 5 days a week. 3 of those are low HR training, one is intervals (Yasso 800s), and the other is my long run which incorporates low HR and some at race pace. Just ran my first marathon. Maintained 8:20 pace for 20 miles. The last 6… not so great 😝
So l’m barely 3 very inconsistent months into learning how to run correctly. And also trying to MAF method it(140 bpm is also my target hr.) I have yet to see better than a 12:13 minute mile while keeping to the HR limit. The heat in Ga is killing my times/pace. I have noticed if l can make myself get out earlier it’s far easier to get the hr to stay low.
Keep it up!!
@@alexm1841 wow congrats man! As someone who is about to start his Low HR training I hope to be able to run at your numbers!
@@mooseknuckle_4474 Are you using ur watch? Could be inconsistent as well with HR monitoring
As someone who is trying to run with a lower heart rate, this right here is gold.
Great advice! Another thing to add, which another user mentioned, is either making the exhale longer or more aggressive than the inhale. I generally go with aggressive instead of longer because I prioritize oxygen intake speed to keep my system oxygenated, but the aggressive exhale, like you said, has a direct impact on your nervous system and the direct connection between breathing and the brain and heart is absolutely fascinating. I recommend looking into the details of this discussed by Neuroscientist Dr. Andrew Huberman. 🤙
Just yesterday I went for a run and wanted to know how to do this!!!! Thanks so much!!! Every time before I go for a run, I do your pre-run excercises 👍🏼 Greetings from México
I started MAF training last month and found out that shortening my stride lowers my hr. My slow long strides were too vertical and using more energy so i started to run with smaller strides but higher spm on my runs. Breathing is a good tip but my shortening of my strides was the key to lower hr by being more of an economical runner.
I was recently overcoming a hamstring injury and had to shorten my stride and worked on improving my cadence. Initially this will actually increase your heart rate (running slow with higher cadence) but I agree I think in the long-run it does help lower your HR.
Opposite for me. Sure shortening the stride works but increasing the spm for me increases my hr so I have to keep that low as well. Definitive way was the breathing for me. Box breathing look it up.
i must be doing something wrong because shorting my stride feels like it makes the run harder. I sometimes wonder if my main effort maybe doesn't come from my legs, which are relatively strong, but from the secondary movements of my upper body which is relatively weak.
@@cas1652 same for me, I struggle to stay at zone 2 with shorter strides since it doesnt feel comfortable for me, might have to work on my form to hit zone 2 consistently.
Shortening my stride helped as well but higher spm increased my HR is what I found. Everyone is different I guess.
Very new to running and these videos are excellent, really helpful thanks James! A simple technique for practising Diaphragm breathing is to cross your arms hands on shoulders and hunch forwards whilst sitting. It forces you to breathe from the diaphragm and can be practised in all sorts of situations when not running. You can then exhale as long as you can through your teeth saying the letter f or singing a note as long as you can. Increasing the length of those will build up diaphragm control and strength.
I mention this cos it really helped me with breathing while running and helped my endurance and can be done almost anywhere any time. The crossing of the arms becomes unnecessary once you learn how to just breathe from below. Your exhaling length will increase and is easily measurable. It's also the key to singing longer without damaging the voice
Thanks so much for this video. I' m not a marathon runner; but a 66 year old woman who's been running for 15 years ( since the day after I quit smoking). August 30th marked one year since my diagnosis of lung cancer and lobectomy to remove it all ( so far so good). The surgery has had me short of breath when running. Thats gotten better, but my heartrate is zone 4 or 5 even with a slow jog. I was told whatever exercise tolerance I'd regain would happen in the first year post op. I found your video yesterday! It works. I ran farther in shorter time with a much lower heart rate. Even with hills. (I live in the Poconos. Hills!)
This is super useful. I've been doing (trying) zone 2 training the last 6 weeks. Running alongside a buddy who is walking has been the best way to keep my pace and hr down. But I'm going to try this breathing. Thanks.
Sounds like great advice, I'll give it a try. I usually have to run/walk to keep my average heart rate low enough.
James, thanks for all of your advice and videos - extremely helpful!
This is by far the best advice i got for maintaining a low heart rate in my runs. Before i’d be stuck just walking but with this breathing method, im able to pick up the pace and actually run. Thanks for this
This is really good advice. I have been running the last several years...and sometimes when my HR spikes I really try to mentally control it like you described. I have to actively work at it though.
greatly appreciate your videos being so concise
I've always struggled when trying to keep HR low, it's just so random, sometimes high on easy runs & lower when I'm putting in more effort. I'll try your breathing methods out. Thanks James 👍🏃
Keep running!! You are doing really well!! Sending love from Ireland 🇮🇪
The MAF Method is really saving my body right now. My aerobic system is pretty poor, but I'm committed to becoming more healthy. Thanks for the video :)
This is great info! I cannot wait to implement this in my training!
Fun fact you can even do this close to sprinting. The switch from subconscious hyperventilation to conscious slow breathing triggers something in your brain that reinforces the idea that you're in control. This also applies to cold exposure.
Yes! I absolutely struggle with keeping an easy run in zone 2! Thanks for this video! I can’t wait to try this!
Pretty much impossible for me. Wondering if the Garmin underestimates my max HR.
I am so glad I found this video. I have cardiac creep for sure, so I’m going to try to implement your advice. Cheers!
Really helpful exercise with the nose versus mouth breathing! Can’t wait to try this on my next run, I’ve been doing heart rate training, and the alternating run/walk has been absolutely maddening to me!! Thanks!
I’ve stumbled upon this by accident because I do a lot of yoga and meditation. These practices are centered around breath control and quality of breathing. I did it initially for anxiety and mind focus, but noticed I would deep focus breathe during exercise. It’s cool to know more information about the process.
Great video!! I like the explanation of the sympathetic and parasympathetic systems, which I think it is very important. I teach about to sympathetic and parasympathetic symptoms with my patients with chronic pain and it seems to help and I can see how that would lower your heart rate with running.
Thank you so much, I struggle with this all the time, I am going to try these tips 💛 thank you 🙏
I used this on my recovery run today. There are some pretty horrible hills on my route, and this worked amazingly for me.
Congratulations James, you just learned the Chi-Breathing technique with your own naturally. 👏👏👏
I'm looking forward your progress and share your findings during running next time. Good job 👍👍👍
Came across this video last night and tried it during my run today. Worked like a champ and was far better than reducing speed to something uncomfortably slow.
Great to see someone actually doing the training at the same time as talking about them. Excellent advice
Thanks, Colin! I appreciate you saying that :)
@@JamesDunne I’m able to maintain a zone 2 max hr of 135 with easy pace (15 min/mile) but my cadence has to be low. If I try same pace but say 90spm cadence, I go up to 142-144. What’s your advice?
@@scs075 just keep slowing down and worry about the HR not the time. When I first started doing MAF, I needed 10 min/km. After a month, I was comfortably at 8 min/km and got to 7:30/km by the second month. The problem of being focussed on the time is that it's very easy to get demoralised because it feels much slower than your normal runs, but when you start seeing keeping under the target HR as the goal and celebrate it when you only go over e.g. 10 times in 5km, then 5 times in 5km, then once or twice per run, that in itself feels more like an achievement than the actual time.
@@ranulfdoswell thank you for the inspiration. I’m holding my practice 😀. But my question was more on cadence. I can maintain my zone 2 hr under say 83 spm. If I try to increase my cadence and get near say 88( same pace) the hr exceeds
@@ranulfdoswell thank you so much for the explanation
Well done! Not that MAF doesn't work but outside factors such as hydration, outside stress levels, wind, sleep, heat, cold, elevation, altitude, electrolyte intake, etc can affect HR during runs. These outside influences need to be taken into account as well as breathing/pace. HR control can be tricky but so rewarding.
This video really demonstrates how important and overlooked breathing technique is while running, so much emphasis is put on form but seems like breathing "form" is often overlooked, I'm happy I put alott of focus on breathing technique and control when I was first starting out as it has definitely payed dividends.
Great video thanks for the techniques to try on my next run!
Well done as always. Just used this method 3 days ago to hit a sub 88 min half marathon. Great advice for everyone, James.
88 min? Slow.
Thank you for the information sir! This will help my running work out!
The trick for me was to run at a pace that I could initially do in zone 2 for a few kilometers. When the heart rate spiked, I just kept steady at that same pace and tried to focus on form and cadence.
Honestly, form and cadence were my weak points. I got up onto the mid foot, which hurt the calves a lot for 3 months. In tandem, I aimed to increase my cadence from the 160's to 180. Now six months on and no more ecessive calf soreness and average cadence between 176-179. I can now maintain zone 2 albeit at a very, very slow pace for two hours and a bit.
Agreed on the breathing focus. If you can run with your mouth closed and still be completely relaxed, you're probably in zone 2.
I can't wait to try this.
I used your "T-rex elbow position" as well as "leaning forward from the ankles up" this past weekend and I had the run of my life!! I'm only running 10kms at this stage but I ran a 12km slightly faster than my best 10!
7 months, how’s the progress?!
Great video, been trying MAF running for a bit. When started I was only able to do brisk walk before the heart rate would creep up, now atleast I am able to do a light jog in the zone, hopefully I can get to your pace someday with that low heart rate. Looking forward to more videos on this. Subscribed..
This is exactly what I was struggling with, thank you James!
That was a very useful video for me. I started running March of 2020 when lockdown hit the Philippines. I am on the MAF 180 training since middle of 2021. I laways notice that my HR spikes after minimal effort so I walk when it happens and slow down my breathe. I will try this tomorrow on my next run.
Great video and definitely experienced the same gain in pace after about a month of low HR. The breathing technique described is the same I used, although it was discovered by trial and error during my runs. Also important to try to really relax and sometimes this means not looking at your HR monitor and rely on your own intuition.
Relax and breathe like it’s not that hard. Believe it’s easy and then when it gets hard, gut it out
Thanks for the video! Currently doing low HR training due to a nagging injury. Tried this breathing technique and didn’t have to look at my watch as I stayed under my aerobic HR
I’ve been at this for almost a month now. I’ve been trying different breathing techniques to control heart rate. Thanks for sharing this!
Did u see any improvement in pulse ?
Breathing out through the nose as well is even better and breathe out one or two counts longer than in. It induces abdominal pressure that improves core stability and efficiency. Counting breaths/strides sharpens your focus and Mindfulness. Try it
thanks very much for your sharing, would have a try tonight.
Totally. A higher than desired HR on slow runs is a consistent problem even though I'm healthy.
If you are going your slowest, ignore the HR number. Just use the current number as your baseline. It will improve. If you are exhausted on the slow run you need to dial it back until you are fit enough. See a medical professional if you can't run slowly as there may be another underlying condition. Diabetes, weight, etc.
This came at such a good time. I'm 52, have a resting HR of ca. 56-57, and am in pretty good shape. I've done 50 km this week at MAF HR 130 bpm but most days I'm walking at some point or points, because I find my HR shooting up for the same pace exactly as you say in your video. Very frustrating, especially as my split times are getting worse - they are just morale sappingly poor, but its only been a week. So thank you and will try this. Also I have the added bonus of running in the heat, its between 35 and 40 deg C when I run, so I'm almost certain thats adding an additional 5-10+bpm onto my HR. Thank you again James, great videos.
Nice video I'll try some of these out on my next run!
Thanks James, I will try this out during my next run!
Thanks for the info! I’m going to try it on my next run
I modified your suggestion and have been using this breathing for last year. Slight twist, while running I inhale over 3-5 steps, hold 3-4 steps(fewer if slower pace, more if quicker pace), exhale 3-4 steps. This is not box breathing because I inhale when lungs are empty. This helps me keep my HR down. It also feels like it has helped my CO2 tolerance. Thanks for the video. 👍
Yep it works thanks for explaining why it works been doing that type of breathing to drop my HR but now i know why it dose Cheers for that. Your pace is looking good on Strava. I've got the same goal to run sub 3 but age is before 50. 48 this year.
If I could conquer my heart rate, my runs would be so much easier! I’m going to try this on my next run.
You have no idea how useful this video was. I developed a rare illness after covid pneumonia. It’s called POTs. Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome. Your understanding of the sympathetic and parasympathetic parts of the autonomic nervous system and your explanation and application to breathing and hr control were better than some I’ve heard from doctors. I’ve managed to make improvements (against all odds) and I actually think your breathing exercise could help me the rest of the way. You might want to add a relevant hashtag as I suspect others would find this useful. Great video, really friendly presentation. Thank you for making this video and really helping me.
I'm a huge proponent of this deliberate deep breathing technique while running to lower my heart rate. It's become a welcomed focused distraction during a longer run. It's amazing how well it works! Additionally, deep belly breathing relaxes and reduces stress in my upper body shoulder area.
Currently working on my aerobic fitness. Started base training in February, could not run a minute without my pulse going way up. Two months on I manage to run at least 30 minutes at a lower heart rate. Will try the breathing tomorrow and see if it works. Thanks for the great videos!
I started as a complete beginner today... can't run 500mtrs without HR shooting 190 😥... Any tipd
@@mayanksharma7985did you keep on going? 😄
How is it now? 😃
Just wanted to thank you. I am a newbie jogger and have used your warm ups and listened to your advice which have really helped.
Thanks great vid. Will learn!
Yep totally.. I’ve been trying to fix my base, fitness, and running to aerobic zone.. but it’s been difficult keeping it all so slow. I’ve noticed because Im running slow and relaxed, my breathing is too, which can drive my heart rate a few bpm over in to threshold. Now, before I drop to a fast walk, I check my breathing is deep and regular enough. Walking up hills is still hard to get used to. Finding routes with a long gentle decline also helps me give my legs a gentle push whilst keeping the heart low too. 😬
Just need to work on getting the regular, consistent part of the training back too now.
Thank you for the advice! I'm 37 and I've never run more than 12 km. I'm still struggling to lower my HR when I run. Will try this tip the next time I hit the road again.
Consistency is the key. This builds up your tolerance and causes adaption. You are exercising your heart just as you are your legs. They both get more tolerant and need less enrgy to perform their functions. Hence a lower HR.
This is great channel. Going to be tough to do any productive be training now the the summer is coming here in Dubai. I'm also looking to complete a 3hr marathon by the end of 2022
I watched this video a couple days ago and have since read one of Dr. Maffeltone’s books. I haven’t run in years but am now SLOWLY jogging at 133 bpm. Holy cow it’s slow! But I’m having a blast. Did about 5 miles two days ago. Easiest miles ever.
I started out similarly. Proper HR meant 11:30-13:00 minute miles. After some months I was at 9:00 with the same
What do you mean "after some months"? 3, 4, more?
@@alexm1841 yes, how many months did it take you 😂 I started this a couple weeks ago and am curious when I can hope to pick up the pace and keep hr low on easy runs
Thank you so much!!! i am going to try this today!!!
Hi James I tried the deep breaths and HR came down by 4 beats immediately , Great tip Thank You
Nasal breathing has been a huge focus of my training since I started working with a running coach. I use it all the time to help keep my HR in check now on those easy runs. Great advice!
Exhale thru nose too. Mouth breathing is trash
Good comment. If I could ask. What happens with mouth breathing why is it bad?
@@johnthouin7080 Dumb comment
@@CmaganaL it’s not bad at all. Breathing through the nose only means you need to work harder and run slower. It’s good if you want to learn to breathe that way but will never work for races.
@@CmaganaL read up on the breathe studies that are going on and why it’s better to inhale through the nose…
What a great video. I gonna break this down in a video! ❤
I was taught to to use nose & mouth with chest & stomach breathing at different points of the run 40 years ago to help & its good advice that im re learning as I start again in my 50's
Thank you.. really helpful coach
Another thing that can cause HR to creep higher is getting too warm while running due to wearing too much clothing. What feels OK at the start of a run might be too much when you're properly warmed up.
Heat, dehydration, overuse/overtraining, bad sleep the night before, bad diet, caffeine, etc all cause HR to rise.
This works. While cycling, when the burn sets in, i started breathing this way, and it would help me kind of put the brakes on my heart rate, and give me time to adjust my output.
I started to notice that when the burn was setting in, it was mainly because I wasnt regulating my breathing. Once I started breathing deep through my nose, my hr would even out.
Try holding you breath for a few steps, then doing a deep long breath. You will feel like you are starting to drown, but then you will feel the oxygen enter your blood, and its energizing. Keep breathing!
thanks bro, this helped me a lot
Thanks for that tip. Will try. Im on the same journey, we're same age same weight same time started.
Great to see this - Thanks James. Trying 80/20 method while rehabilitating painfully tendons. Failed miserably last week, but managed 5k with average heart rate 130 last night - but it was soooo weird and felt painfully SLOW. My garmin told me I was training unproductive and knocked 2 points off my VO2 Max!!!! Anyone else experienced this?
Yeah, my Garmin gets told where to go on a regular basis since I started MAF.
Unproductive indeed...
@@paultopham8626 glad its not just me! Its like a poke in the eye!!! 😆
I hate my Garmin, and I think it hates me too. I rest, I sleep, I’m not stressed, I’m cutting back on caffeine and alcohol, I’m varying my runs and workouts, but I’m still unproductive 🤷♂️
Great video! Just remember everyone, genetics say we’re all built differently and therefor some have naturally higher heart rates and can make MAF difficult. If that sounds like you then maybe find a more accurate way to find your easy zone with thresholds tests and max HR tests. MAF does work for many but it’s something to consider if your heart goes high at slow pace whilst you are ‘fit’.
I’m one of these people. My heart is super reactive, but I know when I’m having an easy enough time of it and it’s about 5bpm above the recommended HR in MAF. Anything below that is basically impossible for me to maintain, so I’ve gone with my gut.
Thanks, I thought the same about the breathing. It only took me a year of trying MAF
Great advice
Thanks James, this is interesting and I'll be trying it. I've been running for years and recently decided to try to do something about my heart rate. If I run comfortably, like 9.30 min/mile pace my average heartrate will be around 180. It doesn't feel like hard work, I can hold a conversation, but I know its much higher than most people. If I push I peak at around 210. The MAF formula for me produces an almost impossible result, I'd never actually be running. At the moment I'm just trying to stay below 160, and that's a painfully slow run with regular walking for me. On dead flat ground. It's so boring! I'll be interested to see if this breathing technique can help at least with getting rid of the walking bits. Following your progress with interest.
This breathing works though - today I was able to average 156bpm over 4.5 miles. Still painfully slow but I hardly had to walk at all, so it felt like progress. Many thanks for the tip!
Great video! Can we have one about running hills? Thanks!
Great timing on this video! I was on the treadmill this morning and trying to figure out how to keep the HR low.
Do you find it easier on a treadmill? I have a varied pace outside and wonder if being forced to a pace would help.
@@drewsonofmorris9147 personally I find it much harder on the treadmill for some reason to keep my HR lower. I’m going to try the breathing that James spoke about in the video.
@@drewsonofmorris9147 I find keeping in Z2 way much easier on the treadmill than outdoors.
Hi James, this is really what I needed. I had a nasty ankle pain and I stopped running for a month as even after shorter runs my ankle pain started to creep back. Started MAF runs a month ago and no pain 😉. My only concern is whether the 180-age still works for older people. For me being 54, it gives a heart rate well in my zone1 (warm up) HR. I know it's early days after 4 weeks into it, but there isn't much effect yet, I'm running the exact same speed as 4 weeks ago with MAF heart rate. What do you think?
I’ve noticed how I have what I call the my super runners empath ability. When in a calm meditative run I seem to absorb everyone else’s energy as we pass each other or run together. Emotions and thoughts seem to exchange a lot more when running. as I run by like I’m a wide open sensor.
Laugh all you want but this is a real phenomenon most people never understand. But try learning to meditate and feel into your body as different people run by. Learning to transmute tired thoughts and emotions of others is very important. Obviously in busy areas the trails have lots of embedded energy and more traffic on them.
I love meditation and running it helped save my life while in prison and finally helped me get off all those damn opioids. ❤😊
Definitely have breathing problems, sometimes it’s a “sync” problem where my breathing seems out of sequence with my running, it doesn’t always happen, but supper tiring when it does. The other thing I find is I have a kind of peak, ie I breath and it doesn’t seem to fill my lungs fully, but when I do, it feels like I have crossed a peak! Will definitely try the nasal breathing. Great video, keep up the training,
Muy buenos consejos de respiración…gracias 🤙🏾
I’ve been run/walking trying to do MAF the past few weeks and really needed this! I hate walking. It’s just not why I’m out there in the first place.
I used this method and my highest heart rate today’s run was 7BPM lower than my max just yesterday! I have a naturally high heart rate so this was helpful and I’m happy with my progress. Thank you
Thank you, James. The information you share through the videos helps a lot.
I decided to start low HR training in Nov 2022. Frankly speaking, I am struggling to keep my HR at 143 bpm (My MAF value). Also, my zone 2 (as per Garmin) is 110 - 127 bpm which happens only when I brisk walk. Hence, I cannot train in zone 2 as well. Pleas guide me. Thank you.
Training for my first half marathon and I have trouble keeping my heart rate below 70% unless I’m going downhill. Gonne try these breathing techniques, thanks!
I have trouble keeping my heart rate below 160 when running, never mind 135! Was expecting the advice to just be slow down, so was glad to hear another approach, I find that when I slow beyond a certain point my run starts to feel more like a shuffle and doesn't feel good. I'll try the breathing approach suggested.
Everyone's different and James said he is 37 which would mean MAF at 143bpm. He's obviously made further deductions based on other factors set out by Maffetone based on illness and injury etc. If you haven't suffered illness or injury you can actually increase your MAF HR...
@@krruns4165 agree, my MAF heart rate would actually be pretty similar to James based on age and medication.
P.S. MAF in my opinion is just a way of trying to get some consistency in training. Like you I used to struggle with keeping HR below high 150s. It does suggest a poor aerobic fitness level. You do just have to be very patient and stick at it. Critically avoid illness and injury. To give an idea. In 2014 I used to run 8min miles averaging say 158bpm. Now I average around 130-135bpm. I still think I could further improve that but that is the challenge! Good luck
I have been focussing on breathing for some time now - I have managed to reduce my resting hr significantly from 60-46 through doing so I do this always when running not just to reduce my HR when it exceeds z1 (in a 3 zone system) even during interval work and when mouth breathing is necessary to access enough oxygen. I can gain up to 8% increase in available bpm like this. It helped to practice during day to day life too so my breathing and hr are just slower and more controlled naturally. This also reduces stress and enables focus.
I've been doing this training for about a year and seen massive gains. You might need to make some adjustments to get the best gains. My advice is -
1. Wear a hr monitor during your dynamic stretching. When it drops considerably you are properly warmed up. Or if you can't be bothered to warm up just start jogging slowly and discount the hr for the first 10minutes of your run. It will be high.
2. If your MAF limit is 140 don't worry if you go to 145, it's not a big deal.
3. Mix it in with speed work sessions during the week.
4. Do all your slow runs off HR not pace. If you feel terrible one day, your body will let you know to train slower via HR. Sometimes my HR will be 4:50 per km on a good slow day, but 5:30 on a bad one where maybe I haven't fully recovered from a previous day.
It does, but it's pretty amazing how quickly the body reconditions itself with the work..
Very interesting, thank you. Will give it a go! :-)
I find that no matter how slow I run, if my legs are tired, my heart rate is going to creep up. Also I find drinking coffee before a run is going to mess with my heart rate.
Hi James. I have always noticed my heart rate creeping up, usually because I get carried away with the run and just want to run faster. The way I get my heart rate down is to relax, focus on my form and, without going any faster, just increase my cadence slightly. I find the increased cadence puts less load on my body and the heart rate drops around 5bpm.
What is increase cadence? Isn't that speed too?
@@castle_novelist Increased cadence means increasing your number of steps per minute, so Glenn is saying that they are running the same pace but with more, shorter steps
Will try this today, as back to the MAF method (tried it successfully in ‘21). When out the other day, for the first 2k the HR just crept up to about 150. It was very cold, but I was slowing in the end to a walking pace to get it under control. Thanks.
folling for some time now, your tips have been really helpful starting out.
how and when should one bump training volume? when to start running more vs walking etc.?
You will get an even greater effect if you breath out for a few seconds longer then you breath in. This further encourages the activity of the parasympatic nervous system via the vagus nerve.
Good addition, I like to refer to the techniques emphasized by Dr Andrew Huberman. 🤙
Hi James, really enjoying your content. I've just started running and loving it. Just finished week 8 of couch to 5k. I'm running every other day, I want to run more but scared I'm going to do myself an injury. Could I run min 20-30 mins a day do you think?
I’m definitely not James, but have you considering strength training on days between running instead? It’ll keep you active and help guard against injuries, as well as increasing your performance when you do run. At least it has for me.
Also, don’t forget recovery! Yoga, stretching and rest are all super important factors in performance.
I found my natural stride had a similar heart rate ( a little faster than what I was trying to do at first) as my slower pace running. After 10 minutes, my breathing and stride would sync. When I ran slower, my heart rate wasn't that different. I do a double nose breath (breathe two times in a row with the second breath deeper) and mouth breath.
Thanks James 👍
Hello. Love your work. It took me a while but I can now run in zone 2 with relative ease but i still really struggle in the first few km. even a gentle jog takes me into zone 4. Any tips/advice? Thanks