Tag Archives: resting heart rate

Running in Zone 2

I have been running for 3 years now, but after my most recent race, I started thinking. When I see others run, why does it look so much more effortless compared to how I feel (struggling & out of breath)? That’s when I found out about running in zone 2.

What I thought I was doing wrong

Having never been trained formally, I assumed that running at a faster pace always produced better results. So I was basically running the hardest I could, in every run, every week. As you can see from a typical run below, most of my runs were in Zones 4 and 5.

As I found out with some research, running in zones 4 & 5 is sub-optimal for training purposes, because of the below reasons:

  1. Aerobic stagnation: High intensity relies on glycogen and limits mitochondrial and capillary growth. Endurance stops improving.
  2. Excess fatigue: Elevated cortisol and sympathetic tone increase resting heart rate and slow recovery.
  3. Overtraining risk: Sleep disruption, low motivation, and injury risk rise.
  4. Reduced efficiency: You burn glycogen rapidly, so you gas out sooner at any pace.
  5. Cardiac strain: Constant high heart rate thickens heart walls instead of enlarging chamber volume—less efficient pumping long term.

Also, my running performance had more or less plateaued. It was time for a change.

Running in Zone 2

In the beginning, I found it incredibly difficult to keep my runs in Zone 2. I would consciously run slower, but as soon as I stopped paying attention, I would go back to running faster. For the first few days, I would even struggle to decide how my feet hit the ground.

Zone 2 running on Apple Watch
Zone 2 running on Apple Watch

Zone tracking on the watch helped a lot. But what helped me the most was consciously limiting myself to breathing only through my nose and not opening my mouth at all while running.

Within a few days, running started to feel so much more easier, I increased my daily runs from 4.8k to 6k.

DayDistanceTarget HR ZoneDistanceTarget HR Zone
Tuesday4.8kZone 4-56kZone 2
Thursday4.8kZone 4-56kZone 4-5
Saturday4.8kZone 4-56kZone 2
Sunday4.8kZone 4-510kFree
Before19.2kAfter28k
Running Speed over a month
Running Speed over a month

I kept Thursdays for hard running, like before, so as not to lose my VO2 max and lactate threshold and to provide the necessary stimulus for speed and strength.

I changed my Sunday runs to a 10k, every week with no HR zone constraints; instead maintained a pace that is most “fun”.

Changes I noticed

Below are the changes I noticed after 1 month running with my new schedule, both short-term and mid-term.

Short-Term changes

  • I was enjoying my runs much more compared to before. I could look around, smile at dogs instead of just struggling to complete my laps. I looked forward to my runs much more
  • I felt like I have unlimited range now. The amount of fatigue didn’t build up appreciably with each lap and I felt more or less the same at the end of the run, just more sweaty.
  • After the run, I felt like I didn’t run hard enough, the satisfaction went down by a huge margin.
  • I was more conscious of my running gait.
  • Instead of being dependant on familiar landmarks for my intervals, I could track my heart rate instead, so I could take new/unfamiliar routes now.

Mid-Term changes (4 weeks)

Let’s track some metrics over 4 weeks.

There was absolutely no change to my Heart Rate Recovery.

Heart Rate Recovery with Zone 2 running over a month
Heart Rate Recovery with Zone 2 running over a month

No change to my Heart Rate Variability, either.

Heart Rate Variability with Zone 2 running over a month
Heart Rate Variability with Zone 2 running over a month

I was especially disappointed that my Resting Heart Rate didn’t change at all.

Resting Heart Rate with Zone 2 running over a month
Resting Heart Rate with Zone 2 running over a month

What broke the camel’s back was that my VO2 max absolutely tanked in these 4 weeks. 6 months of progress erased in a month, after being so close to hitting 60.

VO2 max with Zone 2 running over a month
VO2 max with Zone 2 running over a month

I couldn’t take it & decided to go back to my old running schedule. As expected, my VO2 max started to recover.

VO2 Max recovering slowly after going back to Zone 4-5 runs
VO2 Max recovering slowly after going back to Zone 4-5 runs

Never again!

The Lockdown finally got me running

The first few weeks of the lockdown felt awesome. No need to go to work & lot of time freed up from the daily commute. I spent most of this time drinking and lying around. However, eventually the lying around became quite tiring physically.

Things were so bad, I went through most days with less than 200 steps. The less I moved, the more tired I felt. Eventually, I was always tired and even getting out of the bed seemed a huge challenge. I knew I needed some exercise. I tried Darebee’s daily workout for a few days, but I didn’t find it motivating and couldn’t sustain it long enough. What I needed was to go out and run, but with the lockdown, that was out of the question.

By the end of the lockdown, I was so eager to go out and run that when we were allowed to go out, I started running immediately and fortunately, was able to maintain the habit over many months.

My energy levels came back up, I felt much better after the workouts, I could focus more at work and I slept better. I also started watching my diet and limiting what I eat on weekdays.

Some other quantifiable gains over these 3 months of daily running

  • Weight came down from 70.4kgs to 64.5kgs
  • Body fat % came down from 14.5 to 11.7
  • VO2 Max went up from 39.3 to 46.8
  • Resting heart rate went down from 65 to 55

It’s not that I am fanatic about running. Since I can spare only 15-20 minutes daily between meetings, I run only 2km each time. But I do this with consistent pace and do it regularly without skipping days. Whenever I feel like skipping a day, I think about how lucky I am to be able to go out at all.

Schedule

I hope I am able to keep up the cadence, at least till the air quality here goes to shit, like it does each year and going out becomes impossible.