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Yesterday, I linked to a study showing that the beneficial effects of high levels of cardiorespiratory fitness—the kind you build with cardio/endurance training, HIIT, and sprints—have no upper limit. At first glance, this study appears to bust the “myth” of chronic cardio and the U-shaped curve of endurance training and prove that the more you train, the longer you’ll live. This appears to run counter to some of my central claims—that too much mid-to-high intensity endurance exercise leads to burnout, health issues, and diminishing returns.

A commenter wrote a great comment that got me wondering:

As far as “the more exercise the better” study I wonder if folks who had to drop out of long distance cardio training due to injuries or cortisol driven exhaustion are considered in the equation? In other words, if you can tolerate chronic cardio you may live longer, otherwise it might break you down. Everyone has a sweet spot for exercising is my gut feeling and you have to “listen to your body”. I still like the primal mantra along the lines of (if I may be so presumptuous as to paraphrase Mark) “walk a lot, do sprints once a week, lift heavy things once or twice a week, spend time outdoors, take part in sports or recreational activities that are fun for you”.

What do I think is going on? How do the results of this paper jibe with my take on Chronic Cardio?

First off, we have to acknowledge the basic structure of the study.

This study didn’t actually measure “hours spent training.” They gave subjects treadmill tests (stress tests) to determine their cardiovascular fitness, then divided everyone into different tiers of fitness based on the results. In fact, the authors of the study criticized the shortcomings of previous studies which used self-reported training data instead of objective measurements of cardiorespiratory fitness like the treadmill test. This makes the study far more accurate and useful. It also means you can’t make any ironclad proclamations about the connections between hours spent training and longevity. You can certainly make inferences—people who had better cardio fitness probably spent more time training to get it—but there are other interpretations. All you can say for certain is that higher levels of cardio fitness predict greater longevity.

I don’t see how anyone could argue with that. Of course being fitter is better.

But my criticism of chronic cardio isn’t a criticism of cardiovascular fitness. It’s a criticism of how most people go around obtaining that fitness—by destroying their bodies.

That doesn’t have to happen anymore. Tons of top guys these days are finally figuring out that you don’t have to log as many laps/miles/etc as possible to maximize your performance, but that wasn’t always the case. I grew up convinced that the more miles I ran, the healthier I’d be. That’s how I did it back in my marathon and triathlon days, and it almost destroyed me and an entire generation of my peers.

You can train twice as much as the next guy yet have worse fitness, either because you’re not training intelligently, you’re overtraining and hampering the adaptive process, or you’re not sleeping. That’s chronic cardio. You can train less and get better results, if you’re optimizing your recovery, nutrition, and sleep. That’s Primal Endurance.

As for these subjects, there is some serious genetic confounding occurring. Those dudes with elite fitness levels well into their 70s are often a different breed. They’re hard to kill. They’re tough. They can withstand the discomfort of grueling mile after mile. What other types of discomfort can they bear and even grow from? They’re just more robust than the average 70-year-old. It may not be the elite training itself that’s making them resist death. It’s just as likely they have the genetic capacity to excel in endurance training, and even if they didn’t exercise they’d still live longer than average.

There’s also the healthy user bias. The kind of lifestyle regular exercisers follow emphasizes sleep, plenty of rest and recuperation, smart supplementation and nutrition, and all sorts of other things that are also linked to longer, better health.

This paper makes a strong case for using something like Primal Endurance to build great cardiorespiratory fitness without risking chronic cardio territory.

Thanks for writing and reading, folks. Take care!

The post Dear Mark: Is There No Upper Limit to Endurance Training? appeared first on Mark’s Daily Apple.

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Sur La Table is offering 25 percent off a single item through Monday, October 22, when you use code SAVE25 (some exclusions apply). This is a great deal, but a little tricky — you don’t want to waste it on something so inexpensive that you don’t really notice the discount. So the trick is finding something to buy that’s pricey and even a bit indulgent, but still useful.

A few normally pricy specialty kitchen items caught our attention for their unique features, so we’re sharing them here so you can take advantage of this sale before it ends!

As a bonus, shipping costs will be waived if you spend over $59 using code SHIPFREE.

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When it comes to my favorite holiday traditions, building a gingerbread house with my two kiddos is chief among them. But as they get older and our schedules get busier, I find making time to bake and decorate a cookie house at Christmas to be harder and harder.

The idea of spreading holiday traditions out over the rest of the year means this year, my family will be building a haunted cookie house for Halloween instead of waiting until December to build a gingerbread one — and we’re loving every spooky second of it.

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I’m a grazer — it’s probably one of my biggest diet downfalls. I’d rather pick on a couple of little things every few hours than down a heavy meal. (I blame it partially on the fact that I haven’t had a job that actually encouraged taking a lunch hour in more than a decade.) Which brings me to a recent road trip I took. I obviously needed car snacks! And Trader Joe’s was clearly the place to go for such provisions.

Related: Kitchn Editors Share Their Favorite Trader Joe’s Finds for Snacking on the Go

I had grabbed my usual plantain chips (the bag with the monkeys on it; not the sweet ones) and a bottle of sparkling water when this gray bag of Organic Turkey Apple Bites caught my eye. A new and seasonal-sounding find? I had to try it! Spoiler alert: It hit the spot. (Because protein and apples!)

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Kitchn’s Delicious Links column highlights recipes we’re excited about from the bloggers we love. Follow along every weekday as we post our favorites.

We’re not supposed to judge books by their covers, but recipe titles are a fairly reliable rubric. If a recipe starts with the words “creamy” and “Italian,” I know there’s about an 85-percent chance that I’m going to like it, and a 100-percent chance my kid will like it. And if you add the words “slow cooker,” my Instant Pot-obsessed heart will sing.

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Mashed potatoes are a family favorite, but this decadent casserole takes the classic to a whole new level. The flavors of a fully loaded baked potato are baked until gooey and bubbling, making this dish impossible to resist. It’s holiday-worthy for sure, but don’t wait for a special occasion. Add this comfort food to your list of fall favorites — and oh yeah, don’t forget to share!

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You can get all you need from a vegan diet, but if you spend the extra time and money to add what’s missing, you have a better chance of success.

Is it possible that we can have it all? Attain mastery, reach the ultimate limits of our potential, save the planet, and fix the problem of animal welfare at the same time?

 

It’s a controversial topic and one I think we’ll never fully agree on as a species.

 

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You have those around you who will suck the meaning out of you, pull you away from your goals but you can’t let that happen. Not this month.

Every year, someone or something takes pop culture by storm and inevitably becomes the must-wear Halloween costume of the season. Last year, it was Wonder Woman. In 2016, Eleven from the Netflix hit “Stranger Things” took the top spot. In 2015, it was Harley Quinn from “Suicide Squad,” complete with a baseball bat, and in 2014 it was Elsa from “Frozen.” Traumatized parents everywhere suffer from PTSD due to “Let It Go” being played on a 24-hour loop.

 

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In Rochester, New York, Wolf Brigade Gym is implementing a program to make sure that everyone has access to good training wherever they are, whenever, and with any means.

Aimee Jacot of Feral Strength and Conditioning in Humboldt, California

 

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The best way to tackle dinner before trick-or-treating with your little ones on Halloween is to lean on your slow cooker. Since you don’t have much time to spend in the kitchen, stick with recipes that can cook all day or even in advance, so there’s little to do before chowing down. Here are 12 slow cooker recipes for a wholesome dinner before you head out for trick-or-treating.

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