Many people train to the point where they are actually getting weaker. How can this be true? The answer is simple; overtraining.
The Dictionary states:
Overtraining is a common problem in weight training, but it can also be experienced by runners and other athletes. It occurs when the volume and intensity of the exercise exceeds an individual's recovery capacity. They cease making progress, and can even begin to lose strength and fitness.
Since New Years, Jennifer has found her fitness grove. She said her good-byes to her late night TV programs and processed food munching, and hello to a new life. In fact Jennifer has done a complete lifestyle change choosing foods that are in their natural state or in the least amount of packaging possible, in other words, unprocessed.
Standing 5'5" and weighing155 lbs Jennifer has already lost 10lbs. Her mind is focused on reaching her goal weight of 125lb. To help her reach her goal, Jennifer is training two days on and one day off, and is in and out of the gym in about an hour. This training split is allowing plenty of time for her body to rest. Jennifer is feeling great!
Fast forward six months; Jennifer is not feeling so hot. We can pat her on the back for attaining her goal weight of 125lbs, but can she? This past month people have complimented on how fit she is looking but commented that she also appeared tired. "Are you getting enough sleep? You haven't been yourself lately." Her friends are concerned and they have every right to be.
Jennifer's training program has increased to six days week, with Sundays as her jogging only days. Each morning she sets her alarm an hour early to make time for her 60 minute run before work. Once her work days is done she returns to the gym for 60 min of weights and another 60 min of cardio.
Though she is tired and has little interest in spending time with friends, she is making time for her fitness. What fitness means to Jennifer today is much different then three months ago.
Jennifer is overtraining. Along with persistent fatigue and a loss of interest in her friends, she may be also experiencing these symptoms of overtraining.
The Signs:
- Persistent muscle soreness
- Elevated resting heart rate
- Increased susceptibility to infections
- Increased incidence of injuries
- Irritability
- Depression
- Loss of motivation
- Insomnia
- Decreased appetite
- Weight loss
To see improvement in ones strength and fitness they must rest. The rest period following hard training is a magical process which takes at least 36 hours to complete. By skimping on rest, complete regeneration cannot occur. If the amount of training continues to exceed the rest period, the individual's performance will plateau and decline. If Jennifer continues to neglect the rest time her body needs she will in deed get weaker and my experience injuries.
Other physical and psychological stressors can compound the rate at which a person may experience overtraining.
- Jet Leg
- Ongoing Illness
- Overwork
- Menstruation
- Poor Nutrition
Though you may be focused and feeling that you need to maintain the degree at which you are training, depending on your circumstance I urge you to consider applying one or more of these solutions. Your gains will flourish, and your family and friends will be relieved and thankful.
Solutions
1. Taking a break from training to allow time for recovery. In knowing that you may be doing more harm then good at the gym, set aside today and tomorrow a break. Some people allow one week away from fitness to revive their bodies and mind, and then when they return to training, they have more focus and are enjoying themselves again.
2. Reducing the volume and/or the intensity of the training. If you always do five sets for each exercise, why not do just two or three, and lower the weight and focused solely on form. Strengthen your mind and muscle connection by tuning into the exercise at hand.
3. Deep-tissue or sports massage of the affected muscles. A skillfully applied massage, is the most effective therapy for releasing muscle tension and restoring balance to the musculo-skeletal system. Received regularly massages may help athletes prevent injuries, which might otherwise be caused by overuse. A constant build-up of tension in the muscles from regular activity may lead to stresses on joints, ligaments, tendons, as well as the muscles themselves.
4. Self-massage of the affected muscles. Self-massage, with either with your hands or a system such as the Yamunatm Body Rolling (BR) system featuring a specially designed 7" ball will help with pain relief, and can be targeted to hamstrings, calves, knees, quads, shoulder and back; any muscle or joint. People who are stiff and inflexible, and have, or are prone to injury will benefit from BR as it elongates and massages muscles and opens and flexes joints.
5. Temperature contrast therapy. (Ice baths, hot & cold showers etc). This uses the body's reaction to hot and cold stimuli. The nerves carry impulses felt at the skin deeper into the body, where they can stimulate the immune system, improve circulation and digestion, influence the production of stress hormones, encourage blood flow, and lessening pain sensitivity.
6. Ensuring calorie intake matches (or possibly exceeds) expenditure. When over training, the body may be depleted in various nutrients. To assist in the process of recovery, it's important to ensure that a diet high in carbohydrates, lean proteins and healthy fats such as omega 3 oils is met. Carbohydrates will provide the brain with fuel, the oils help relieve depression and proteins will rebuild over trained muscles.
7. Addressing vitamin deficiencies with nutritional supplements. It is essential to get vitamins from food however when overtraining is a concern, supplementation is beneficial. Supplements should be taken in addition to meals and with meals for their essential and proper absorption.
Common vitamin deficiencies include: Vitamin A (Beta-Carotene), Vitamin B Complex, Vitamin B12, Vitamin C, Vitamin D, Vitamin E, Vitamin K, and Folic Acid.
Common Mineral Deficiencies include: Calcium*, Chromium (GTF), Copper, Iodine, Iron, Magnesium*, Phosphorus*, Potassium*, Sodium*, Sulfur, and Zinc. * One of the essentials in maintaining electrolyte balance.
8. Splitting the training program so that different sets of muscles are worked on different days. Once you have rested enough for your body to recover from overtraining, be smart and plan your training split ahead of time. This will help to prevent over training from occurring again. Allow at least 4 days between training a certain body part again, and always have at least one day of rest from training each week.
Training towards a goal can be very rewarding, and when seeing the results form, it's hard to believe that one may ever go back to their old habits. Allow yourself to take a break from time to time and listen to your body. It's when we rest that the body has time to recover, rebuild and come back stronger then before!
Kris created ShapeFit.com to provide quality health and fitness information to people from all over the world. He has an extensive background in strength training, nutrition and wellness planning. ShapeFit.com currently provides over 2,000 pages of free health and fitness content to over 300,000 visitors every month. ShapeFit.com provides numerous diet and exercise articles on building lean muscle, burning body fat, increasing energy levels and living a healthy lifestyle. Some of the fitness tools include weight loss diets, muscle building workouts, and weight loss advice. Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Kris_Bierek |
it is really important and essential to have magnesium to be in top form of health
ReplyDeleteMagnesium: Why You Need It
ReplyDeleteBy Daniel Heller, ND
Magnesium (Mg) may be the most overlooked mineral. No one has yet popularized a simple way to remember it, in the way that we usually associate potassium with bananas, calcium with bone health, and sodium with blood pressure. But magnesium is an incredibly versatile and important nutrient that many doctors, nutritionists, and researchers believe is the single most important nutrient for human health.
It is essential for over 300 different chemical reactions in the body, including maintaining your energy level, helping you relax, and sustaining the health of your heart and blood vessels. Unfortunately, in most of the developed world, magnesium deficiency is probably the most common nutritional deficiency. Because it has so many crucial functions, and because it appears to protect us from serious conditions that are most prevalent in the developed world, magnesium really is the “miracle mineral.”
What is magnesium good for?
One of its most common uses is for alleviating constipation; you may recognize it as the active ingredient in well-known over-the-counter laxative medicines. It is also a natural calcium-channel blocker – many integrative medicine practitioners have used magnesium supplements to help lower blood pressure and maintain healthy blood pressure.
While we often hear about the importance of calcium for bones, magnesium is the other key mineral for healthy bones. And because so many people take calcium pills without magnesium, there may actually be a greater need for magnesium than for calcium in people who are most vulnerable to osteoporosis.
Magnesium is probably the most important nutrient for that energy powerhouse, the human heart; it helps the heart muscle itself function better. Magnesium also helps protect blood vessels, which is where most of what we call heart disease actually happens. Magnesium is also a natural blood thinner, much like aspirin, so many doctors and researchers believe that it may help prevent heart attacks and strokes.
Perhaps the area where magnesium could have the biggest impact is in the prevention of diabetes: Scientists have proven that magnesium levels are low in people with diabetes; people with higher magnesium levels do not develop diabetes; and that supplementing with magnesium appears to help reverse pre-diabetes.
As with all minerals in foods, the mineral has to be present in the soil where the food is grown. The best food sources of magnesium are beans, especially soy; whole grains, including bran; nuts like almonds and brazil nuts; and seeds, including flaxseed, sesame, and sunflower. Dry cocoa powder, and thus dark chocolate, is also a great (and incredibly tasty!) source.
Source: http://www.doctoroz.com/blog/daniel-heller-nd/magnesium-miracle-mineral