The question is - am I doing enough exercise?
I intend to provide a worked example for you to work alongside with your own calculations and decide if you should increase or decrease your exercise.
The benefits of physical activity are various and this calculation can be done for one or all of them; some of them include:
- longevity of life
- current physical health (ability to enrich your current life with physical activity)
- happiness (overall improved mood)
- weight loss
- feeling like you have more energy
- better sleep
- better sex
- fun while exercising
- reduce stress
- improve confidence
- prevent cognitive decline
- alleviate anxiety
- sharpen memory
- improves oxygen supply to all your cells

- 3 years for the first 15 minutes a day and a further 4% reduction in mortality for every 15minutes after that
- every minute of exercise returns 8 minutes of life
- being normal weight and active conveys 7.2 years of extra life expectancy
- 75mins/week of brisk activity = 1.8years of greater life expectancy with more activity giving upwards to 4.5years of longevity
That's no theory of why endurance exercise increases reserve capacity in most people. It's jut an observation that this frequently happens. It not even good enough to tell you the optimum duration of your exercise.
I also don't happen to be an believer in the idea that VO2max is the best possible value that one could come up with, when it comes to issues like surviving illnesses.
It took it quite a while to figure out that keeping medical ventilators at a static pressure level is a pretty bad idea. A static pressure level is really straightforward. With better research I think it's likely we find a more complex variable that does a much better job than VO2max.