It is the final week of a 4-6 week progressive training phase in both our semi-private and boot camp programs. The groups have worked consistently hard in the trenches motivating,inspiring and pushing each other to take on the challenges of their tough, results driven workouts. They are all very different people, yet they share a common goal ...To be better than they were just 4-6 weeks earlier. It is an awesome experience for us as fitness coaches to create the environment and deliver an exercise experience that helps so many become better. It is an experience that juices up our DNA ... and drives us to be better and share more of what is our life's passion.
One of the great challenges that trainers encounter during the end of such a tough phase of training and the upcoming scheduled week off for rest and recovery is how we should respond to the few clients who want to know what they should do during their week off. This query used to bother me until one day I realized why they were asking the question. The reasons I found that some people were reluctant to accept the week off were: "If I don't train I will gain weight." Another concern was that "If I take a week off I will lose everything I worked so hard for." These are reasonable concerns for sure. As a former national bodybuilding champion I understand why some may have such a difficult time wrapping their head around the concept that they need time off from training. I remember that I would rarely take time off from training and was convinced that "more training meant better results". Most bodybuilders thought the same way. Maybe the onus of more is better in the exercise world should lie on the shoulders of the bodybuilding community as they are notorious for their seemingly"heroic" and incessant training schedules that would be commonly formulated out of thin air into a six day per week, dumbell heaving, 2 hour long training marathon. (Two thirds of those hours are usually sitting at the edge of a flat bench holding court about someone elses workout routine). Modern bodybuilders have a rather defiant attitude in acknowledging the need to take any time off from training and somehow that idea has transcended into and hard wired the minds of fitness enthusiasts across the spectrum.
Rest & recovery should not be considered an option, but rather an integral and necessary component to any successful strength and conditioning or fitness program. To understand this concept from a different mind set, we have to go back to a time when man's exercise was not so much with the goal to look and feel great but simply a fundamental practice in survival.
Early man... caveman, paleo man, our ancestors... lived in a very hostile environment. Their mere need for survival would cast them into scenarios where they would have to track and hunt down wild game such as a wildebeest or zebra to exhaustion; kill it on site; skin and separate the animal into manageable sections (sorry about the grizzly description) so that it could be carried back to camp with the help of other hunter tribe members. Hunting for our most earliest ancestors was an incredibly gruelling , dangerous and often times a deadly reality. These expeditions would sometimes take weeks and it would make sense that they would not want to be in these situations of having to hunt very often. They would make sure the hunt (their intense training) was worth while and would enjoy the fact that they would not have to 'train' that hard again for a period of time. They would instead stay active in gathering the necessary brush to provide the comforts of bedding, top cover and warmth (fire) at their camp site as well as procure the valuable sustenance of eggs, grasses, flowers, fruits and vegetables that would be nourishing sources found more conveniently near camp. Our ancestral tribes would walk in groups and dance at camp for enjoyment and fun. These activities also assisted digestion. All of this stuff, the lifestyle, was just a simple existence that expressed a perfect ratio of exercise (hunt):rest & recovery(activity) that would most certainly ensure their readiness for their next hunt (our workout phase).
I know the idea of this hunter/gatherer stuff sounds strange and maybe even a bit disconnected to us. But, we need to understand that our society as we know it, has established conditions that are mismatched between the world we live in today and the DNA that we still truely share with our earliest ancestors. We evolved to eat different diets, to 'exercise' differently and live differently from the ways we do today. If we take a minute and look around us we have to be in agreement that most people today do sit too much; don't stay active enough;eat way too much; and try like hell to "out train" some poor lifestyle choices. This viscious cycle very often causes the reality of chronic injuries that keep so many from the ultimate goal...To be better! We all desire to live optimally...with strength and vigor in how we think and perform. We can't do this by just playing catch up with intense bouts of exercise and negating the power of rest and recovery. When it comes right down to it...it is proper training, solid nutrition and sufficient rest and recovery that are the pillars that support a healthy and vigorous lifestyle. Take any one of these pillars out and that lifestyle crashes...
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)

No comments:
Post a Comment