Dear John
,
Finally,
the old theories of aerobic training are crumbling under the weight of
new evidence. At the center of the breakthrough is lactic
acid. You've probably heard of it, especially if you've
ever had a coach or a trainer. Conventional wisdom said you had to
avoid lactic acid because its build up in your muscles caused pain,
fatigue and the soreness you feel after "over doing it".
We were
told to exercise aerobically and not cross the dreaded lactic
threshold. To do so would mean an-aerobic (without
oxygen) exercise, which created the damaging lactic acid. That sparked
the aerobics craze that reached its peak in the 1980's.
But this
theory never jived with my real world experience of the benefits of
exceeding your aerobic threshold (which would build lots of the
dreaded lactic acid.) It turns out lactic acid is not only not
your enemy. To the contrary, it's fuel for your muscles.
Dr.
George Brooks from the University of California at Berkeley recently
found that lactic acid is taken up and burned for energy by your
mitochondria – the energy factories in your muscle cells.1 What's more, it can not
create the after workout soreness because it is rapidly removed as you
burn it for fuel. In other words, it's long gone before you get sore.
A
high output, anaerobic workout is exactly what your body needs to
increase your lungpower, build reserve capacity in your heart and melt
away your fat stores.
To move
your workout into the anaerobic range, the key feature I use is this:
Create an "oxygen debt." Simply exercise at a pace you can't
sustain as in a short sprint. Ask your lungs for more oxygen than they
can provide. The difference between the oxygen you need and the oxygen
you get is your oxygen debt. This will cause you to pant and continue
to breathe hard even after you've stopped the sprint until you replace
the oxygen you're lacking.
Let's say
you pedal as fast as you can on a bike for 15 seconds. When you stop,
you continue to pant. This is the kind of high-output challenge I'm
talking about. You have reached a supra-aerobic
zone. This is very different from doing an aerobic
workout for 45 minutes.
Aerobic
exercise is low to medium output held for an extended period.
Anaerobic or supra-aerobic exercise is high output, but short in
duration. Why is this important? For one thing, it restores an element
of your native environment. Our ancestors lived in a world where our
food fought back. Predators attacked without notice. They had to run
or fight – fast and hard. These short bursts of high-output
activity fine tuned our ancient ancestors and kept them fit. We still
have the same physiology.
This is
the basis for my PACE® program. I began using most of this program
25 years ago. I'm delighted to see University-based science catching
up to the idea. More recently, I added progressivity to
increase the benefits.
By making
small changes in the same direction, your workouts can produce
remarkable results. And you only need 12 minutes to achieve the
desired effect.
In a
matter of weeks, you can:
- Lose pounds of belly fat
- Build functional new muscle
- Reverse heart disease
- Build energy reserves
available on demand
- Strengthen your immune system
- Reverse many of the changes of
aging.
To Your
Good Health,

Al Sears, MD
1 Kolata G. Lactic Acid is Not Muscle's Foe,
It's Fuel. The New York Times. May 16, 2006
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and click on Past Issues.
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