Hello All and 2012!
So, hopefully we're all rested fully? And if not, why not? There's a whole year ahead to make yourselves awesome, and being recharged for this is going to nothing but of benefit to you. This leads on nicely to our first article of 2012 from our resident nutritionist Chris Chapman...
What doesn’t kill you...
This is a follow-up to my earlier article about my experiences of, and continuing recovery from, overtraining. One of the things I vowed to do once I started training again was to listen to my body, and learn when to back off from training. So, 7 weeks into my new programme, I started to feel some twinges in joints, and a little bit of overall fatigue. In the past, this is exactly the kind of thing I would have ignored, and either continued to train regardless, or carried on training and just not used the body part(s) where the twinge was. After all, if I had a shoulder twinge, I was programming smartly by sticking to running and leg-centric lifts, right? This time, I figured it was time for an experiment: have a week of reduced load before I felt burnt out, and see how it affected my subsequent training, and how I dealt with it psychologically.
My plan was simple. Since my training plan consisted of 2 days of strength work (a mix of barbell lifts and gymnastic exercises), and one day of sprints, my back-off week would look similar: 2 days of reduced-load bodyweight exercises, and one day of sprint technique work. The first strength day came along, and involved nothing more than some static gymnastic holds, and a few rounds of Cindy (5 pullups, 10 pushups, 15 squats). Nothing too strenuous, just enough to work out some kinks really. The following day came a blessing-in-disguise – I got a cold. This led to a big decision, namely to forget the back-off week, and turn it into a week off so I could get rid of the cold. Again, beforehand this idea would have horrified me, as I found a way to train around my illness. This time I did nothing more strenuous than walking the dog, and at no point did I feel guilty for not training. Typically I would beat myself up over not training, convincing myself that I was losing metcon ability and body composition all the while. However this time, whenever I felt the (admittedly faint) urge to train, I just kept reminding myself that you don’t get stronger when you are training, only when you are resting.
At the end of the week, I was fully recovered, cold-free, and bursting to continue training. The next Monday’s workout involved back squats, and gymnastic upper body work. And guess what? The squats flew up, with me practically leaving the ground at the top of each rep, while the gymnastic exercises felt like I was moving a body considerably lighter than my own! So not only did I hit that workout with the enthusiasm of someone who hadn’t trained in a while, I also hit it with the capacity of someone who was fully rested! Despite not having trained for over a week, I had clearly become stronger. The week off had been a complete success, one I had never previously allowed myself to experience.
While on paper all this seems obvious, it is also the first time I have actually tried it out. I know I am not the only one to get carried away with the great linear progression you get from Crossfit, the constant metcon PBs and increased weights shifted. This becomes a real driver as you push and push to get more and more gains, and you start to ignore little niggles and signs of fatigue in favour of more volume/weight/frequency in your training. After all, if exercise is good for you, then more is better for you, right? Wrong! What this has shown me is that “rest” is not a four-letter word. It’s only the most-ignored, and least-sexy aspect of training. And it shouldn’t be – in fact, it’s probably the most important aspect, and the hardest lesson to learn