Have you started to
dread working out? Not the normal, "I don't feel like it today," but
a deeper, "I can't do it" signal coming from your muscles themselves?
While most would blame it on laziness, you may be pushing yourself too far; it
happens more than one might think. So often, in fact, that it actually has a
name: overtraining. "Exercise is like taking two steps forward, and rest
is one step back," says C.C. Cunningham, owner of PerformENHANCE Sport and
Adventure Athlete Training in Chicago and a spokesperson for the American
Council on Exercise. "In order to take the next step forward, you need to
take one step back with rest. If you overtrain, you never get past step one and
your workouts become hard."
The irony of exercise is that while it's so good for your
body it actually causes damage to the muscles. Not damage in the conventional
negative sense but a "good" kind of damage that the body adapts to,
overcomes, and gets stronger because of. Namely, when weight training, you
cause small tears—known as microtears—in the muscle, which stimulate muscles to
adapt both in size and chemistry. During aerobic exercise, another kind of
damage occurs, because the muscles utilize oxygen to make energy from fuels
like glucose and glycogen. When you're exercising extra hard or for a long
time, the body goes into anaerobic cell metabolism, where the muscles use only
glucose for energy and produce lactic acid. This buildup of lactic acid causes
your muscles to feel fatigued. Between workouts, your muscles clear out the
lactic acid and rebuild themselves and their glucose and glycogen stores. The
effects of overtraining manifest themselves when you don't give your body
enough R and R between workouts. The next time you exercise, your muscles'
energy levels won't be refurbished and your body won't be ready to handle the
"good" damage. The more run-down your body becomes, the less you'll
gain from your training activity. Workouts that were once easy become hard,
because your body simply lacks the energy to perform.
As for the exact cause of overtraining, some researchers
attribute it to a low energy supply to the muscles, which forces the body to
discourage more exercise until stores can be replenished. Others blame free
radicals—groups of atoms that build up during endurance training and damage
muscle cells. When you start accumulating a lot of free radicals, you may start
damaging tissue faster than you can repair it—thus your power, speed, and
endurance may decline.
So, how much is too much? While there is no specific
quantity of exercise that will induce overtraining, "It would be just as
normal for a marathoner who usually runs ten miles a day to overtrain on
fifteen miles as it would for a sprinter to overtrain after running straight
through for an hour," says Cunningham. Overtraining is much more common,
she notes, in athletes who train six to seven days per week than those working
out only three to four times per week. "The condition is common among
fitness enthusiasts who work out more than once a day and those who do
high-impact exercises, like running," notes Declan Connolly, Ph.D.,
director of the University of Vermont's Human Performance Laboratory.
Cunningham adds, "We see it in a lot of people who are exercising to lose
weight and who may train one hour a day, seven days a week."
To anyone who works out on a regular basis, the effects of
overtraining are quickly noticeable. "Overtraining makes you unable to
exercise at your customary level," explains Michael Kellman, Ph.D.,
assistant professor in the Department of Sports Science, University of Potsdam,
Germany, and author of Optimal Recovery: Preventing Underperformance in
Athletes. The physical symptoms include impaired performance, vulnerability to
injuries, loss of appetite, weight-loss, disturbed sleep, an increased
susceptibility to illness, an elevated resting heart rate and possibly hormonal
changes. "Rather than feeling like you want to slow down or take a few
days off," Connolly says, "you'll feel like you want to quit
altogether."
The most obvious remedy is downtime. "As soon as you
start to feel symptoms, take at least one week off," advises Cunningham.
"Gradually go back to what you were doing before, but start with lighter,
shorter workouts and slowly work your way back." Taking a day or two of rest
between workouts won't set you back either, says Connolly. In fact, it will
improve your performance. "Alternate your workouts between low and high
intensity," Connolly advises, "or do something you wouldn't normally
do—take a swim or go for a slow bike ride." Make lifestyle changes by
concentrating on getting a good amount of rest and eating a balanced diet.
"The repair process requires protein to rebuild tissue, and carbohydrates
and fat to fuel it," says Cunninghan.
How to avoid it? Listen to your body. "If a workout
feels bad or if you just don't have the energy, then go home," urges
Cunningham. Or try a workout that stresses a different muscle group or that
incorporates cross-training into your fitness program. "Cross-training
develops better all-around fitness," says Connolly. "It addresses
aerobic fitness, anaerobic fitness, and strength while at the same time helping
you maintain better functionality of movement." Cross-training also helps
to balance muscle strength, making it less likely that you'll reach an
overtrained state. The bonus, says Connolly: "It really prevents
boredom."