Recently started jogging 30 minutes twice a week. When does it stop feeling like I'm dying?

https://sh.itjust.works/post/58196432

Recently started jogging 30 minutes twice a week. When does it stop feeling like I'm dying? - sh.itjust.works

Lemmy

If you went from nothing to 30 minute jogs, likely a little while. What’s your history? Solid couch potato with a potato shaped body or worse? You’re looking at a couple hard months. Formerly fit/fit-ish, maybe some high school sports or something? Maybe an unpleasant month or so. You’d be better off easing into it a little slower. Can you do a brisk walk for 30+ minutes? Jog for 10-15? Build up to a full 30 minute jog. They have things like C25K (Couch to 5K) programs that give you good pacing.
I work in the trades, constantly pushing 400lbs crates on wheels, I’m not unfit, but I wouldn’t say I’m running fit. It’s like a whole new part of my feet and legs just gives out while other parts can keep going
Imo the muscle pain from a lite run will go away fast. Especially if your body is used to work, like you have.
It’s worse if I skipped a run one week

Everyone’s body is different but try lighter and more frequent. 3x 20 minutes. You can always push faster, more frequent once you get past “it always feels like I’m dying”, but at this point you’re trying to convince your body, “this will be a regular thing, I need to be able to do this”.

Do 3x 20 and add in walks on off days. Anything to overall make your body raise its “floor” for cardio.

Taking days off is when your body immediately tells your lungs and heart “see I knew he was kidding!”

You can go from marathon shape to having running be a struggle at old levels with 4 weeks of inactivity. Most people go faaaat longer than that

Our bodies want to save energy and not waste it burning calories to keep you in shape, so regularity Trump’s all. Go light, go often, and slowly increase pace, duration, frequency as it feels good. Your body will respond in time.

That’s the SAID (specific adaptation to imposed demand) principle at work. You’ve gotten used the movements you do every day and your muscles can perform them more efficiently. The same will eventually happen with running, once you’ve been doing it long enough for it to not feel like a new movement. Keep at it.