Feeling like you had stagnant in your progress? |
49km total for 29 and 30 September. |
Walking the dog is most of the time, a barefoot affair. Dogs don't wear shoes, right? |
Here is how to spot overtraining
1. Elevated Resting Heartrate
Easiest tell tale sign is the "higher than normal" resting HR. You have to be conscientious to ensure you take your resting heart rate the first thing in the morning for more accurate measurement. A typical 10 beats or more than the usual resting rate denotes that your body has not recovered from a recent training. As I happened to have surprisingly low resting (by my standard), i peg it at 10% or more increment as a general guideline.
Good example or indication. September 29 before i started the experiment was 38bpm. Morning of October 1, 43bpm. An increment of 13% more than usual. |
Due to the activities i put into both the days, I had a total of 8hours sleep for both days. It was only 3hours for me on September 30 before i set out to Marshall the race. Both days were ended with a run with yesterday's 6km completed at 9pm. With elevated heart rate and still sweating as the body finds equilibrium, sleeping was a task. You are tired, but your body just refuse to rest.
3. Changes in eating habit
You either lose appetite or you have a hearty appetite that is more than normal. For myself, i could not eat after an intense workout or a long workout. As evident in some of my longer races (like Ironman), i was not hungry despite no solid food for the whole day. Danger comes immediately the next day when the body starts to send signal to be fed every other hour. In short, your regular eating pattern changes, leading to possible weight gain (due to overcompensating of food) or not eating, thus discouraging the body from repairing itself.
But I will say yes to this bowl of Taiwan Beef Sirloin noodle - i think |
Big quantity/volume training with inadequate rest will deprive the body from repairing itself, making it vulnerable to simple sickness such as flu or cold. The compromised immune system will take longer to cure and you will find yourself not feeling up to mark and this will then lead to withdrawal of working out, and ultimately causes mood swings. Sound all too familiar? (by the way, a friend is going through this, big time now)
5. Workout gets tougher despite it to be same distance/weight/frequency
This is when you feel despite whatever you are doing, you are not improving. To make matter worse, you slide further down on the performance scale despite putting in the same effort level and intensity. Your typical 5:00 pace suddenly become a slow 7:30 despite how hard you tried. You felt like a failure and aim to push yourself harder - only to get your body deeper into the overtraining mode.
Varies your training distance and intensity to avoid overtraining. Smiling help too |
The typical burn and lactic acid build up giving the signature "muscle soreness" is synonym to a good workout burn. However, a soreness that lingers for a while and perhaps an injury sustained such as sprained ankles that takes long to recover could be the body failing to repair and recover itself. Thank goodness for my homemade foam roller.
7. But I used to run faster!
Race performance deteriorate and you can't hack the same similar timing - and you know it is NOT due to not training when you are hammering in the hours and mileages twice a day, everyday. On Sunday, my 6km recovery run was a level 3 effort as i feel the tireness creeping in.
8. Changes to other physiological activities
Due to all the changes above, one would find it easier to get irritated, short tempered, constant headache, lack of motivation, wanting to give up, lowered sex drive and worse of all, being in denial and continuing the training intensity ending up with injuries that will take years to heal - and that is if you are lucky to heal, that is.
Next: Breaching The Plateau
Nice article!@@@@@......
ReplyDeletethanks!!
DeleteGreat write up. Keep up the good work and sharing. Hope to ride with you one of these days.
ReplyDeleteOne day we will ride together sir! Thanks for the compliment!
DeleteThat's very true. Being able to monitor when you are overworking/overtraining yourself is a good thing. I had a friend who always pushed himself too hard and practically on a daily basis. Thankfully he hasn't hurt himself yet, but I am worried he will. I will pass this article on to him for sure.
ReplyDelete