by Aficionados » Tue Jul 26, 2005 1:54 pm
Just like some of you said, rest is quite important, may be even more important than the work out itself. I have started climbing about 5 months ago, and I have constently tried to work out at least 3 or 4 times a week for about 2 hours and going outside at least once a week : my schedule doesn't allow me for more than that right now.
As a soldier, the physical aspect of my job has a very big importance and I have always put priority on rest, even though sometimes there isn't enough time to rest...
I have pretty much always train for endurance sports : biking, running, skating, all that good stuff. I found out that the more often and the longer you do it, the better your body will increase its capacity to push fatigue back. You always have to watch for injuries of course : overtrain doesn't give anything but demotivation.
As of power, which I have started more often since I joined the military, my experience is that it takes lots more rest for your body, about 1 day off for couple of hours of hard training. A friend of mine is a body builder and he trains for (apparently) 6 hours a day, 6 days a week : his body is of course adapted by now to that kind of training, which isn't the case for everyone.
Like I said earlier, injuries are a big aspect of training and I'm pretty sure it's better to prevent them then to substain one and having the possibility of never recover completly. It happened to me once and it's very unpleasant. When you train at a high level, you must carefully listen to your body and watch out for pain : it's also important to notice the difference between pain from being injured than the pain from being tired : at signs of the first one, better be stopping, but if there is only a bit of lactic acid in your muscles, push a bit more, it won't kill ya.
Finally, stretching is a huge aspect of training, before and after the workout. I use to not stretch at all a couple of years ago because I was too lazy, but since I started to do it regularly, I have notice a huge difference in my performance.
To sum up, don't rest too much if you want to build up endurance/cardio, but take lots of time off when you do power/strength training. Watch for injuries, it sucks. Stretch often. That worked for me and several of my friends. Cheers.
Sorry if there are grammatical mistakes, my language of Shakespeare isn't at its best.
It's better to live one day as a lion, than one hundred as a sheep.