How to optimise your workout to boost your mood
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox
Physical activity can brighten your outlook and calm your nerves - if you do it strategically.
ILLUSTRATION: NYTIMES
Follow topic:
UNITED STATES – You have encountered that person who comes back from the gym or a run seemingly high on life.
In fact, scientists say even a single bout of exercise can alter your neurochemistry in ways that create feelings of hope, calm, connection and a generally better mood.
But for others, a workout just leaves them feeling worn out.
“It’s normal not to find exercise rewarding,” said Dr Daniel Lieberman, an evolutionary biologist at Harvard University. “There’s nothing wrong with you.”
While some people are simply more genetically or psychologically inclined to enjoy exercise, recent discoveries have helped experts understand why it can be such a high. And, they say, by making a few changes to your workout, you can train your body and mind to find exercise more pleasurable.
Scientists once thought the rush people felt from exercise came exclusively from endorphins, which act like natural opioids in the brain by relieving pain.
But in recent decades, researchers have discovered a more complex cocktail of other key “feel-good” chemicals produced during movement.
Each ingredient plays a distinct but complementary role, said assistant professor Julia Basso at Virginia Tech, who runs a laboratory studying the effects of exercise on the brain. “These neurochemicals are really working in tandem.”
The most potent players appear to be endocannabinoids, which share similar molecular structure with THC, and bind to the same receptors in the brain – giving you that buzzy feeling that all is right in the world.
Exercise also triggers dopamine, a much-debated neurotransmitter that creates a feeling of reward, and conditions you to pursue that reward. It is one reason people get hooked on exercise: “to come back for that hit”, Prof Basso said.
Physical activity also spurs the release of serotonin, which helps you to feel focused and calm. And, most recently, scientists have discovered another chemical at play: oxytocin, a hormone that helps you bond with other people and feel a sense of social connection.
Dr Lieberman theorises the body evolved to respond to physical activity in this way partly to help early humans endure hours of gathering and hunting food for their survival. But, he points out, people’s prehistoric ancestors did not exercise for its own sake.
So how can you get the biggest mood boost from exercise?
Get your heart rate up for at least 30 minutes
It is normal for the first 20 to 30 minutes of exercise to feel like a slog, whether you are new to it or an elite athlete, according to experts.
That is because it seems to take at least 20 minutes of moderate aerobic activity for the endocannabinoid system to kick in and start to lift your mood.
Health psychologist Kelly McGonigal calls this response to staying the course the “persistence high”.
The longer you are able to sustain an aerobic workout at a moderate level of intensity – one in which you could carry on a conversation without becoming winded – the more your endocannabinoids will be flowing, and the higher your boost will be.
Give yourself at least three weeks
Just as your muscles require time to build, your brain takes time to develop a robust dopamine reward system for exercising. And the less physically active you are, the less responsive this dopamine system will be.
Research suggests that, if you have not been active in a while, it takes about three weeks of consistent exercise before it starts to feel rewarding – and for most people to want to come back for more, Prof Basso said.
That said, depending on your individual fitness level and neurochemistry, it could take shorter or longer. So, if you do not feel a kind of magical pull towards exercise after a month, do not despair and keep going.
Make it social
When you exercise with friends or in groups, you will set yourself up to get twice the oxytocin boost, first from the physical activity itself, then from the social interaction.
The flood of oxytocin may be responsible for the powerful social connection that some people experience when moving in unison with others. The brain can be tricked into a feeling of personal boundaries dissolving, Prof Basso said. This effect is especially apparent when people dance.
Mix things up
While moderately to vigorously intense aerobic workouts seem to be most effective at triggering a natural high, nearly every type of exercise benefits mood, said Dr Ben Singh, an exercise physiologist and research fellow at the University of South Australia who, in 2023, published a large review of exercise and mental health studies.
Different types of workouts – aerobic, resistance and mindfulness practices such as yoga – release different combinations of mood-enhancing chemicals and, collectively, prime the brain to reap greater rewards.
To set yourself up for success, shop around until you find activities you find fun or rewarding – or at least do not hate, said clinical professor of psychology Cassandra Vieten and director of the Center for Mindfulness at the University of California, San Diego.
“Track your mood and how much you like something,” she said, “and see if you can rotate different types of exercise until you find the one you love.” NYTIMES

