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Are you over-training?
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Exercise can be fun, but don't overdo it
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It is pretty easy for enthusiasm in the gym to edge into over-training territory. The symptoms are often ignored. The more you train, the better you are supposed to feel. And if you feel weak, you attribute it to an inadequate diet or wrong technique.
But over-training is a common problem. If your regular workout feels more difficult than usual, if fatigue sets in early during workouts, if you achieve your target heart rate with less effort than usual, if you feel less coordinated in your actions, and if you've demonstrated decreased strength, endurance or speed during a physical test, you just might be over-training.
Overtraining occurs when the body does not recuperate in between workouts. Insomnia, irritation or anger, depression, and an easily stressed temperament are enemies of muscles and ligaments and not just of the mind.
Over-trained muscles feel sore after every workout and long after, they ache for no apparent reason; they also get injured easily. Such injuries are frequently serious requiring long periods of recuperation (a ruptured biceps tendon or Achilles tendon), or they may manifest as persistent niggles that refuse to heal. Loss of appetite is common and an inadequate diet exacerbates the syndrome. The body is prey to frequent illnesses.
The treatment for over-training is rest. Preventing overtraining requires incorporating enough rest and time for recuperation in your schedule. This is why most bodybuilders train only 4-5 days a week. And this is why sprinters have an off-season. If you are serious about your time in your gym or your athletic career, have a trained sports physiologist analyse your schedule.
RAJIV M.
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