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🎯 A key thought as we wrap up our discussion on cardiovascular fitness:

Cardiovascular fitness doesn’t make you a better rider by itself, but it does help protect and strengthen the skills you’re working so hard to build.

If we are not training for cardiovascular fitness we may find that we feel exhausted, tense, or mentally fried late in our ride or on a competition day. Fatigue shows up as loss of balance, uncoordinated aids, delayed reactions, or difficulty staying focused — even when we try to "power" through.

In this episode of Mane Brain, I unpack what fatigue really is, why it’s not just tired muscules, and how cardiovascular training, breathing, and nervous system regulation interact to shape rider endurance.

This episode completes the cardiovascular training series by explaining why endurance fails — and what riders can do differently.

🧠 What You’ll Learn in This Episode

Why fatigue is not just physical
Fatigue is a complex interaction between:

Riders often experience brain-based fatigue before their muscles are truly “done.”

In riding, brain-based fatigue can often show up first — affecting balance, coordination, timing, and decision-making.

As cardiovascular demand increases, your brain continuously evaluates its performance against overall safety. If you lack cardiovascular fitness or have poor breathing rhythm, this can lead to an increase in perceived effort. The result? The brain may down-regulate its motor performance to protect overall health. It's not a flaw; it's a protective signal we should respect. 

It helps to explain why riders can feel “fried” even during relatively short rides.

Perception of effort and riding performance
Research shows that perceived effort — not just physical output — determines endurance.

In riding, we often experience:

all these lead to an increase in perceived effort - accelerating fatigue.

Fatigue is not failure.
It’s information.

Understanding fatigue helps riders:

đź”— As we complete this series on cardiovascular performance, think of how improving your endurance out of the tack delays fatigue and protects your performance. It ties in the concepts we've discussed on:

Mane Brain Podcast is part of Anchored Seat's mission to bring neuroscience to the saddle! Learn more about training programs and clinic opportunities at www.anchoredseat.com.