By NATALIA HAWK
The 4 Minute Workout. That’s the headline that caught my eye on the New York Times website a little while ago.
I almost broke my computer in my scramble to scroll down and find out if it was legit. Can we really cut our workouts down to just FOUR MINUTES A DAY? Four minutes is nothing. That’s less than the amount of time it takes me to shower/put my make-up on/get dressed/get a hot chocolate from the cafe/do just about anything. So much more achievable than say, the half an hour I usually spend running, or the hour-long Zumba classes I do, or the entire days I’ve spent sailing…
The NYT article was based on a study from the Norwegian University of Science and Technology. Essentially – researchers from that university decided to find the absolute minimum amount of exercise required to actually get any benefits to endurance and/or health.
It’s all based on the idea of interval training – that whole thing when you alternate a really intense workout with a not-so-intense workout. So, for example, sprinting for 100m and walking for 300.
The study itself was based on a rather long-winded experiment in which a bunch of men ran really fast on treadmills for only four minutes, while another bunch of men did interval training for about 30 minutes. The difference between the two, after 10 weeks? None. Well, nothing significant, anyway.
The ultimate conclusion? Exercising really hard for four minutes, three times a week, can actually adequately improve your health. That’s pretty excellent news for those of you who haven’t managed to get to the gym this week and are feeling seriously guilty about it.
But – and yes, of course there has to be a but – the four minute workout is limited to high-intensity cardio – so if you want to, say, get a good yoga workout, I’d hazard a guess that four minutes will probably not do it for you.
Top Comments
Is this the TABATA workouts? I have done a few off YouTube, they get the heart pumping for sure. I try to do them of a morning when i don't have much time and do regular exercise 3evenings a week. Not sure if they help though...lol
Just to clarify, that is 4 minutes of SUPRAMAXIMAL exercise. Not even the fittest of the fit can exercise for 4 minutes to that intensity so saying 4 minutes of exercise is a bit missleading. To get an idea of what they are talking about the '4 minute workout would idealy be'
-5 minute warm up
-15 seconds as hard and fast as physically possible
-45 seconds to recover
-repeate step 2 and 3 another 15 times!
-5 minute cool down
So as you can see that is a 26 minute workout but you are only working really hard for 4 minutes.