I do an hour every other day, but you could split it up as 30 everyday.
30 minutes of running in place. I live in a city and getting to a nice spot to run would be the distance of my run anyway. Started stationary running in my apartment. 30 minutes is 3.5 miles for me.
30 minutes of body weight training. 5 minute yoga stretch routine, then 10 burpees, 30 squats, 15 push-ups, 10 chair dips, 10 pull-ups, 10 lunges.
I just wake up, and do it all barefoot in my sleep clothes, when I’m done I shower and go on with my day.
Edit: I should note that this is my 30m routine now, when first starting or if I take a few weeks or months long break, either those numbers go down or the time goes up
When I first started my burpees were much more loose and casual, I’d pop up and drop slowly and do knee pushups, over time of consistent routine they tightened and sped up
Listen to your body and just keep at it, in time you’ll reach your goals
Both when I run “regularly” and when I run “in place“ I try to spend as much time on the balls of my feet.
It allows me to control the impact like a spring.
Running heel first, which feels more natural when running distance, leaves my knees hurting.
Running on the balls of your feet can tire your calves out quickly if you’re new to it, and can leave you too sore for the next day, so start slow.
Do 10m for a week or two until you feel your recovery has caught up, then 15m then 20m then 30m.
If I want to up the amount of energy I am expelling I will bring my knees up higher for as many strides as I can.
You will want to force yourself to keep a good running form when stationary because you can easily “fake it” and fall back on bad form of “kicking out” or “wobbling” which can impact your joints negatively.
Keep your feet pointing forward, raise your knees, and swing your arms just like you would when running distance.
Do it in a way that feels comfortable to you rather than in a way that feels weird and performative.
All in all the important thing is to get your heart rate up, and sweating is usually a sign that you’re getting some good cardio done.
The biggest thing for me was I wanted to get it done in 30m, but when running distance it took me 15m to prep myself for the run (get water and music ready, find my clothes and shoes, get dressed, ..). But with running in place my run is literally 30m of my time, every time.
Which made the most important part: just keeping a regular routine where you move your body; so much easier.
There are as many ways of "running in place" as there are runners. One day my SO was exercising - as she said, "running in place". It didn't look right to me b/c rather than push off upward with her toes (and consequently a little hop), she was bending her knees and, only then, pushing with the toe. The result was a very low-energy "running in place" where the hips rotate to follow the knees. This puts almost no stress on the ankles and is easy on the calves.
OTOH at least she was trying, so I kept my mouth shut!
30 minutes of running in place. I live in a city and getting to a nice spot to run would be the distance of my run anyway. Started stationary running in my apartment. 30 minutes is 3.5 miles for me.
30 minutes of body weight training. 5 minute yoga stretch routine, then 10 burpees, 30 squats, 15 push-ups, 10 chair dips, 10 pull-ups, 10 lunges.
I just wake up, and do it all barefoot in my sleep clothes, when I’m done I shower and go on with my day.
Edit: I should note that this is my 30m routine now, when first starting or if I take a few weeks or months long break, either those numbers go down or the time goes up
When I first started my burpees were much more loose and casual, I’d pop up and drop slowly and do knee pushups, over time of consistent routine they tightened and sped up
Listen to your body and just keep at it, in time you’ll reach your goals