Can a Cardio Junkie Learn to Love Strength Training?

  • Post author:
  • Post category:TB
April 05, 2022 at 07:55PM

As someone who has always gravitated towards cardio, from dance as a kid to a runner and spin enthusiast as an adult, Iā€™ve forever found strength training boring, often slacking off with my reps and using the lightest weights available (and I have the weak upper body and core to show for it).

So when I was given the chance to try out the Peloton Guide, I was eager to find out whether this new gadget could turn me into a strength-training devotee, the kind who never misses leg day and whoā€™s got a do-you-even-lift-bro attitude. After all, the Peloton Bike+ got the world (myself included) addicted to spinning at home, and the fitness companyā€™s sales skyrocketed through the pandemic as a result (up to, well, *that* moment on the Sex and the City reboot). But can its newest launch attract the same hype?

Guide, which launches today, is Pelotonā€™s connected strength training that works with an AI camera system you connect to your TV. Using machine learning, Guideā€™s camera tracks your movement and progress in pre-recorded strength classes (with live classes soon to come). While Peloton has long had strength-training classes on its platform, Guide-specific classes feature a Movement Tracker that monitors you as you complete your reps.

Peloton Guide
Photography courtesy of Peloton

When Peloton came out with Bike+ and Tread, I jumped on the bandwagon. I turned into a daily spin fanatic and it intensified my passion for heart-pumping workouts. I hoped for similar results with Guide, and made a commitment to do at least one strength workout daily.

A few minutes in, Iā€™m reminded immediately of what Iā€™ve never enjoyed about strength work: itā€™s slow and a bit dull to me, and even using 10 pound weights as my heavy option makes my arms feel like noodles ā€” especially when 15 pounds is what the instructor is using as their light option. The next dayā€™s push-ups and planks are a struggle, too.

But one thing I didnā€™t expect was for the Guide to tap into my competitive nature. Watching the Movement Trackerā€™s sweat meter increase with each rep does make the workouts feel more like a game. Plus, by being able to view my form on screen alongside the instructor with Self Mode, Iā€™m able to make the necessary adjustments ā€” although I do find myself wishing the Guide could provide real-time feedback on improving my form.

As a beginner, seeing my progress on the Movement Tracker has nudged me to complete each set to my best ability. Iā€™ve come to think of Guide as a product that is most beneficial to strength training newbies like me, and Peloton instructor Matty Maggiacomo agrees. ā€œItā€™s a really great tool for folks that are entry level because I remember when I first started, I didnā€™t even know the difference between a squat and a lunge and a deadlift!ā€ he says, adding that Guideā€™s workouts will appeal to people who gravitate towards Peloton because they donā€™t have the confidence to do strength workouts in a gym ā€” and I feel seen.

A week of workouts complete, Iā€™m certainly not hooked on strength training yet, and I canā€™t say Iā€™m eager to do a Guide strength class in the same way I was running and spinning with Pelotonā€™s other products. But Iā€™m starting to see the appeal. While itā€™s obviously too early to see or feel any real results, that slight soreness I notice in my shoulders and biceps as I move throughout my day and the awareness of the muscles in my quads after completing all of the squats in a lower-body class are both sweet reminders of the work Iā€™m putting in to get stronger. And those seven completed strength classes? Thatā€™s more than Iā€™ve done in years.

ADVERTISEMENT

The post Can a Cardio Junkie Learn to Love Strength Training? appeared first on FASHION Magazine.

Read More Fashion News
Author Karen Kwan | Fashion Magazine
Selected by CWC