Fitness culture rewards intensity. Heart rate maxed, weights heavy, intervals brutal. The marketing favors it because it photographs well and feels like effort. Meanwhile, the boring foundation of long-term cardiovascular health, easy aerobic work most people can sustain for an hour without distress, gets treated as a warmup. The data does not support that hierarchy.
Easy effort is not a lesser version of training. It is a different category of training, and skipping it is a common mistake.
What “low intensity” actually means
The technical term is zone 2: roughly 60 to 70 percent of max heart rate, the pace at which you can hold a conversation but not sing. For most adults that is a brisk walk uphill, an easy bike ride, a slow jog, or rowing at a relaxed pace. Physiologically, this zone trains mitochondrial density and fat oxidation, the cellular machinery that determines how efficiently your body produces energy at rest and during longer efforts. Cardiologists like Peter Attia and exercise physiologists like Iรฑigo San Millรกn have spent years arguing that this base of capacity is the single most important fitness adaptation for healthspan, and the research on VO2 max, all-cause mortality, and metabolic flexibility largely supports them. The work is unspectacular by design. That is why it works.
The dose that matters
The accepted minimum effective dose is around 150 minutes per week of moderate aerobic activity, which is the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services baseline. The interesting finding is that benefits keep compounding well beyond that. Studies tracking step counts have found mortality reductions out to roughly 8,000 to 10,000 steps a day, with diminishing but real returns above that. A meta-analysis in The Lancet on physical activity volume found the steepest health gains in the move from sedentary to lightly active, larger than any subsequent jump up the intensity ladder. This is the underrated part: the biggest single improvement available to most adults is not adding harder workouts. It is adding more easy movement, more often, ideally outside of structured exercise time entirely.
Why intensity-only training plateaus
People who only train hard tend to hit a ceiling. The high-intensity sessions that drive top-end fitness are systemically expensive, you can do two or three quality ones a week, and they require a deep aerobic base to recover from. Without that base, the body never fully clears the fatigue, and adaptation stalls. Endurance coaches have known this for decades, which is why elite marathoners do roughly 80 percent of their training easy and 20 percent hard. The recreational world has the ratio flipped, and most stalled progress traces back to that inversion. The fix is not more lactate threshold work. It is more time in zone 2, on easier days, accumulating quietly.
The takeaway
Low-intensity exercise is the dietary fiber of fitness: unsexy, unglamorous, and quietly responsible for most of what you actually want from training. Walking more is not a lesser solution. For most adults, it is the highest-leverage move available.
Leave a Reply