Gym Song
Music and workout go hand in hand. The
right music can energize you to work harder and burn more. It also diverts your
mind from the pain that you feel. It keeps your energetic and motivates you as
well. It helps you to keep your pace and distracts you from the tiredness. This
helps you push your body and build more endurance. This is why the right music
is essential for your regime.
Research
clearly establishes that regular exercise is one of the best things you can do
to avoid serious illness and lengthen your life. But for many people, the
question is how to get started and stick with an exercise routine.
There are
all sorts of habits and tricks that are proven to help people establish
consistent exercise routines. For starters, we know that a strong social support
network helps people sustain their fitness practice. Another body of evidence
shows that being able to make individual choices about physical fitness and
feeling self-motivated lead people to start and maintain exercise programs. And
there’s another line of research that shows music leads to higher-quality
workouts.
A systematic
review including 32 studies and published in the International Review of Sport
and Exercise Psychology demonstrates that listening to music before and during
exercise yields significant benefits.
Researchers
found that listening to music before exercise helps people get pumped up to do
their best, visualize what they want to accomplish, and improve motor skills.
Listening to music during exercise offered even greater benefits.
During
endurance activities, such as running or cycling, listening to music helped to
improve participants’ moods and efficiency, increase their stamina, and work
harder. People who listened to music during endurance activities reported lower
levels of perceived exertion – meaning they didn’t realize they were working as
hard as they were – even though their effort levels remained consistent or even
increased.
During
high-intensity exercise sessions such as sprint intervals or weightlifting,
music improved participants’ stamina and again reduced their levels of
perceived exertion.
The review
included a few caveats. Listening to music yielded the greatest benefits when
participants chose the music themselves or believed that the music was selected
to accommodate their personal taste. The music was also more effective when the
participant was working at his or her own pace. And music yielded larger gains
for recreational athletes compared to athletes who were highly-trained or
participating in serious competitive sports.
The
take-home message is that listening to music – especially motivational music
that you choose yourself – is a reliable way to help increase the intensity and
quality of your workouts.
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