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Dr. Maffetone's unique training system for champions proves that the kinder, gentler approach actually works the best. This fitness regimen has worked for champions and non-athletes alike- because it's based on Dr. Philip Maffetone's deep understanding of how the body works.Maffetone has used that knowledge to develop The Maffetone method, his successful low-stress fitness program, which can be tailored to any individual. It means "training slower to go faster," says Mike Pigg, world champion triathlete and Maffetone client. The Maffetone Methodincludes: A ten step program to reduce stress and increase overall fitness; Exercise techniques designed for increased results with decreased pain; The real lowdown on some of those fad diets. In short, this is a fitness regimen for champions that everyone can use to reach their own goals whether it be running a marathon or walking around theblock.
Lots of low-intensity aerobic exercise is probably more important to your long, healthy, happy, life and Dr. Phil Maffetone will get you there. The book is easy to follow and this book can benefit anyone and everyone, including performance athletes. I first heard above the Maffetone method—MAF—via Kofuzi. While he's a self-described non-elite runner, he still runs quicker than 8-minute miles. So, I picked up the book thinking I would need to adapt a marathon training system for my slow jogging and slow running style. Nope. It's not a running method, it's an aerobic-training method and it has nothing to do with absolute speed, it has to do with putting and keeping your body into your own personal range for as long as you can after you've generously warmed up your body and prepared your heart and before you spend a lot of time cooling down your heart before stopping. So, in a nutshell, let's say I have an hour to go running. With MAF, I would spend my first 20-minutes walking or slow-jogging to give my body some times to warm up, moving my body from resting heartrate to my personal lower end of my MAF range, 105 bpm, and then spend 30-minutes keeping my heartrate between 105-115 bpm, and then, cool down with active recovery and cooldown for another 10-15 minutes. So, like sleeping, which doesn't include the falling asleep and the waking up part in how many hours you've slept: I go to bed at 9 pm and then get up at 7 am but my Fitbit doesn't tell me I slept for 10 hours, it tells me I slept for 7 or 8 hours. Fitbit doesn't include the going to sleep or the getting up at night or the waking up or the halflight of and halfsleep of waking up. So, too, with MAF: I spent an hour out but I really have only run for 30-minutes, at least, though I will take credit for all 60-minutes on Strave. The thing is, there's no stretching just the warming up and the cooling down, to not shock the heart. That's an important reminder for me. I know the 105-115 bpm aerobic range is pretty low but I explain it here" Maffetone is the perfect addition to Slow Jogging. The focus on sustainability, the focus on remaining for as long as possible within my MAF zone, and the focus on warming up and cooling down was a very important learning for me—and it can be mapped and used with any type of athleticism or training or sport or passtime you can imagine, as long as that thing is aerobic: swimming, walking, biking, rowing, erging, running, the treadmill, and the stationary bike. While it does not encourage power-10s or power pieces, it does suggest that it's much better to walk or slow jog or slow run for three hours than it does kill yourself with fartleks and tempo paces for 15-30-minutes. Plus, there's an easy way to test your progress, though only once-a-week. And, like slow jogging and keeping the Niko Niko pace, you'll not always been slow. It's not about remaining slow, it only means that you should never redline your vehicle. As I train at 105-115 bpm, over months and years, my pace and speed—my ability to take load on my frame, on my engine, and on my drivetrain, and on my intake—will improve. So, I might start at an 18-minute-mile pace at first to keep my heartrate below 115 bpm; however, over time, my same 105-115 bpm range will decrease to 17, 16, 15, 14, 13, 12, 11, 10, 9, and maybe even an 8-minute-mile pace, maintaining the same Niko Niko, easy smile, ability to chat or sing to myself, pace. It's brilliant.