Skip to main content

Posts

Showing posts with the label training intensity

Cold Plunges Probably Aren't Doing What You Think

  The cold plunge became the ultimate biohacker flex. The research paints a much more complicated picture — and for lifters, it might actually be counterproductive. Cold water immersion went from a niche recovery tool used by elite athletes to a mainstream wellness trend seemingly overnight. Social media is full of people climbing into ice baths at dawn, filming their gasping reactions, and claiming benefits ranging from reduced inflammation to improved focus to accelerated fat loss. Cold plunge tubs are now a multi-billion dollar market. It made ACSM's trending fitness list in 2025. The appeal is understandable. There's something viscerally satisfying about doing something uncomfortable and believing it makes you better. And cold exposure does have real physiological effects — it triggers a norepinephrine release, vasoconstriction, and an acute stress response that genuinely makes you feel alert and energized. But "it makes you feel good" and "it improves your t...

Zone 2 Training Is Overrated — Here's What the Science Actually Says

It became the most popular training protocol in modern fitness almost overnight. But the evidence behind Zone 2's supposed superiority is thinner than you've been told. If you've spent any time in fitness spaces over the past two years, you've heard about Zone 2. Peter Attia popularized it. Iñigo San Millán gave it scientific credibility. And seemingly overnight, every podcast listener and longevity enthusiast was doing long, slow cardio sessions while monitoring their heart rate with religious devotion. The pitch is simple and appealing — train at a specific low intensity where your body maximizes fat oxidation and builds mitochondrial density without generating excessive lactate. Do this for 45-60 minutes, three to four times per week, and you'll build a metabolic engine that keeps you healthy and lean for decades. It sounds great. And there's a kernel of truth in it. But the way Zone 2 has been adopted by the fitness mainstream involves some significant leaps...

The Gym Is Not a Social Club: A Case for Headphones and Focus

  You're not being rude. You're being effective. Here's why protecting your focus in the gym is one of the best things you can do for your results. There's a moment every regular gym-goer knows. You're two sets into squats, heart rate up, mentally locked in — and someone taps you on the shoulder to ask how many sets you have left. Or worse, they want to chat. About the game last night. About their new program. About absolutely anything except letting you finish your workout. I'm not anti-social. I'm not saying you should never talk to anyone at the gym. But I am saying that the normalization of treating the gym like a hangout spot is quietly killing people's progress — and most of them don't even realize it. Photo by  C D-X  on  Unsplash The Problem With Gym Socializing Let me be blunt. Every minute you spend chatting between sets is a minute your rest period stretches beyond what's useful. And rest period management is not some minor detail — it...