Generic good advice: do intense exercise often

By Robert_Wiblin @ 2014-12-14T17:21 (+9)

Earlier this year I wrote a brain-dump of everything I thought I knew about exercise, and it proved quite popular on Facebook. This has allowed me to get feedback and gradually improve it.

As far as I know, doing intense exercise regularly is one of the best things you can do to improve your physical and mental health, as well as work productivity. This advice is obviously good for anyone, but it bears regular reminders as people tend to fall in and out of the habit. There is also good evidence that "brief opportunistic interventions" - that is, just periodically reminding people that they should e.g. exercise, or stop smoking, or cut down on alcohol - work quite well. 

Feel free to leave comments on the document if you want me to edit it, or here.

Here's how I open: 

"Why bother?

If your life isn’t going so great, there are a few valuable questions to ask:

Here we’ll just discuss the first.

Exercise is awesome for:

What exercises should I do?

Keep reading...


undefined @ 2014-12-14T17:54 (+5)

Beeminder got me exercising. I recommend it if you have a tendency to put things off.

undefined @ 2014-12-14T19:27 (+1)

Beeminder has helped other EAs, too.

undefined @ 2014-12-15T04:49 (+2)

A growing body of evidence seems to suggest that aerobic exercise is best for improving cognitive fitness.

See:

http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/09/16/what-sort-of-exercise-can-make-you-smarter/?_r=0

http://scholar.google.com/scholar?q=aerobic+exercise+cognition&hl=en&as_sdt=0&as_vis=1&oi=scholart&sa=X&ei=o2eOVOS6CtLyoASd3YFo&ved=0CBsQgQMwAA

etc

undefined @ 2014-12-15T07:55 (+1)

Thanks!

undefined @ 2014-12-16T21:56 (+1)

I strongly endorse what Rob said. Intense regular exercise is by far the best productivity and general well-being hack I've ever adopted. In my experience, once you get into it, it's the opposite of a chore.

Second-best hack (for focus): Pomodoro Technique (use Tadam as your timer (Mac only))

Third-best hack (for reducing stress): regular mindfulness meditation (about 10 minutes / day, use Headspace to learn the basics).

undefined @ 2014-12-15T04:35 (+1)

Does anyone have firm research on the relationship between exercise and cognitive performance? Specifically on this dimension, what's the optimal weekly exercise duration?

undefined @ 2014-12-15T03:27 (+1)

I've found climbing is a really good way to keep in shape, it combines strength, endurance/cardio and balance while still being interesting and challenging enough to be enjoyable. Pretty cheap too, especially if you go outside.