HIIT workouts help burn fat, gain strength, boost brain power, and improve physical performance.
With benefits ranging from your appearance to your performance, HIIT (High-Intensity Interval Training) has been proven to give you the most results in the least amount of time. Since there are plenty of different HIIT workouts available to you, HIIT can always keep you from losing interest in working out. If you don’t like to do the same thing every day, this type of exercise is great for you.
Of course, you can stick to the same HIIT workouts for great results, too, if you want. The best part? It’s good for all levels because everyone is required to perform at full intensity for a brief period of time.
HIIT workouts are great for your body to:
- Burn Fat
- Gain Strength
- Boost Brain Function
- Improve Physical Performance
What is a HIIT Workout?
After one particular combat conditioning training session, my teammates and I sat on the ground covered in sweat. I looked around to see how the rest of the people in the class were doing. Exhausted, breathing heavily, and drenched in sweat.
Struggling to catch our breath, everyone seemed to agree that it was the hardest workout of the week. The craziest thing? This workout only took 25 minutes and consisted of eight different workout stations!
It was definitely shorter than our normal training sessions, and yet we felt more exhausted than if we had our normal hour and a half training. HIIT workouts are naturally short but still physically demanding.
So, how does it work? In a HIIT workout, you perform an exercise at full intensity for a certain period of time and follow it up with a brief rest phase. If you’re doing it right, the rest phase doesn’t feel like enough to fully recover (but is still essential).
These workouts tend to feel so intense that there really is no need to make a long training session out of them. That’s why my team was struggling to catch their breath after only 25 minutes.
High-Intensity Interval Training or HIIT gives you some serious bang for your buck. You’ll burn fat, gain strength, boost brain function, and improve your physical performance with a short workout. Of course, just because it’s short doesn’t mean that it’s easy! These workouts will feel very strenuous while you’re doing them.
Since full intensity varies from person to person, each person is still guaranteed full exertion in a HIIT workout, even if they’re doing it at the same time. This is one of the reasons why it’s so popular in CrossFit as well as strength and conditioning programs regardless of sport.
There are plenty of ways to get started with HIIT. First, it’s very useful if you get a timer specifically for HIIT. There are plenty of phone apps for this. If you’re already on a workout program, you certainly don’t have to abandon your current workouts either. You can finish off your workouts with a HIIT session that only lasts a few minutes!
To see a few examples of HIIT workouts and to learn more about eating before and after the workout, see this article:
HIIT Workouts with Tim McComsey
Now that you’ve found workouts that barely take any time, being “too busy” to train isn’t a valid excuse anymore (especially since it improves your brain function). Are you getting your exercise in?