Pacing Ain’t Rocket Science
We’ve all been there. You finish a workout, lie on the floor for a minute, and one of two thoughts usually shows up:
“I could not have gone any harder.”
“I completely blew up.”
Most people don’t struggle with fitness in conditioning workouts, they struggle with pacing.
The Mistake
When the clock starts, adrenaline starts too. Music is loud and everyone moves at once. You sprint the first round, and for a moment, you feel amazing.
Then your breathing spikes and suddenly a workout that was supposed to feel steady becomes survival when rest breaks get longer and reps get sloppy.
The Goal
Pacing is not about going slow. It is choosing a speed you can repeat for the amount of time needed.
A well paced workout should feel almost too easy for the first few minutes. You should be able to breathe through your nose or speak in short sentences. Ideally you finish the first round and feel like you could immediately do another at the same speed.
Done right, the first 3-5 minutes of a 10:00 workout should look boring from the outside.
The Fix
Your first round should be your slowest round. Period.
If this sounds impossible to do, then it needs to be reeeeheeally slow! Make it feel so lazy that other people think you’re weird.
This allows your heart rate to increase very slowly as you get more and more into the workout. It’s better for your health, and your scores!
Halfway through you’ll notice you still feel the same. Your breathing is elevated but controlled, and your reps look similar to round one. You aren’t staring at the barbell between sets wondering how you got there.
The Why
Starting too fast turns workouts into intervals with long rest, instead of a sustained effort. Finding sustained efforts is what improves endurance, recovery between movements, and long-term performance.
Many people think they’re bad at conditioning when really they just run out of energy early and spend the rest of the workout trying to survive.
Done right, this can improve fitness almost immediately.
The Next Time
Keep track of your round times. Get a whiteboard and a marker so you can write down each round.
Round 1 - 1:45
Round 2 - 1:45
Round 3 - 1:30
Round 4 - 1:15
…etc.
It might take a few workouts to find the sweet spot, but down the line you will be happy you took the time.
See you out there!
Hart











