Scheduling time to recover can help you avoid injury and enhance performance
Keeping fit requires consistency, motivation and discipline — establishing a routine and sticking with it. But building fitness also involves regularly breaking that routine and getting enough rest. In fact, choosing when not to work out can be as important as the exercise itself. Recovery is part of the process. Neglecting rest is just as bad as skipping out on a month’s worth of training.
Getting fit is a cycle of fatigue and repair. And as we adapt, our bodies become stronger, faster and more powerful. For the average gym-goer, it can be difficult to know exactly how much rest is right. What constitutes a proper rest day? Are you resting too little, or too much?
Why you need rest
Exercise causes microscopic tears in our muscle fibers, and as we rest, those fibers are repaired, adapting to become bigger and stronger. This process of adaptation, called supercompensation, is what allows us to run faster, jump higher or lift more weight. It’s during the fatigue phase, as the body recovers, that we adapt to the training. Without adequate rest, the muscles don’t have time to adapt, stalling progress and preventing improvement. But not all fatigue is the same, and neither is all recovery. For aerobic exercise, like running or jumping rope, the adaptations are relatively rapid, and could happen overnight. After a light jog, your body will probably be ready for another run the following morning.
For more powerful or explosive power training, the process of recovery is longer, and may require a day or two. Generally speaking, you wouldn’t want to do consecutive days of strength training. That said, you don’t need to wait until you’re 100 percent recovered to work out again, especially if you are training toward a goal, like running a marathon. Some smartwatches and wearables, like the Apple Watch and Whoop, that track the quality of your sleep can score your readiness level, though accuracy varies. If you’re just exercising to keep up with the kids or age gracefully, he recommended staying at what feels like 80 percent — where you might feel your previous workout a little, but it doesn’t affect performance. If you’re training for a race or to climb a mountain, he recommended working through some soreness to push your body to improve more quickly. If you want to, say, run a faster 10K, shorter recovery times are better.
How to build rest into your routine
If you are exercising three or fewer times per week, you likely don’t need more rest days — you may actually need to work out more often. Try to implement other forms of physical activity into your routine, whether that’s playing a game of Frisbee or taking a brisk hike. If you want to get better at something, you need to be getting four or five days in. Your rest days should not be completely sedentary. Recovery doesn’t mean doing absolutely nothing. Active recovery, which includes low-impact cardio, like a light jog, long walk or a game like pickleball, has been shown to be very effective at promoting recovery. The recipe is three days on, one day off, followed by two days on, one day off (then repeat). On his days off, he goes for long walks or does light cardio. Resting less can to overtraining and to injury. Another way to tell if you need more rest days is your overall disposition. Mood seems to be the most reliable marker of overtraining.
If you wake up feeling irritable or cranky, or if you suddenly find yourself reluctant to do a form of exercise you ordinarily love, it’s probably time for a day off.
If you don’t want rest, take it anyway
For people who love working out, it can be tough to take a break. Rest can be really hard for some people. It can be hard to feel like you’re doing enough. It takes a lot of patience.
Forcing yourself to take a rest day is critical to sustaining a long-term exercise habit. If you don’t take a rest day, your body will force you to take one. Lastly, it’s important to get to bed early enough before and after training. Sleep is probably the most powerful tool in our recovery tool kit.
Adapted from: NY Times
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