A couple articles ago I wrote about the benefits of a fit body. I followed that up last week with an article about keeping your mind “fit” as well. This week I’m going to be talking about what is quite possibly the largest obstacle you, as a motivated gym-goer will have to overcome if you really want to achieve your goals — BURNOUT.
What is burnout? Burnout catches up to us just when we think we’re getting somewhere. We start off a new program really psyched and feel that burn for the first time in a long time (or the first time ever), and can’t wait to get back in there tomorrow and shed some more poundage, right? You end up working out hardcore almost every day the first couple weeks before starting the downfall of your motivation. In plain, you throw too much at your body all at once and it turns around and tells you, “No more.” You stop losing weight and/or gaining muscle and hit a plateau.
Really, what it comes down to is patience. People get really motivated and just think they can go crazy in the gym for a few weeks, lose 10 pounds, and keep it off. If you can accept the fact that you simply CAN NOT lose and, most importantly, keep off the weight with a gnarly butt-busting workout routine that you kill yourself with for 2 weeks non-stop because you think you can pack it all into that amount of time, THEN you’re heading in the right direction. Now that I’ve created the longest run-on sentence ever, let’s move on.
Starting new routines need to begin slowly and increase intensity with time. Don’t flip through a magazine to find a bunch of exercises you think look awesome, and go do them all at once. You should start off with the most basic of basic exercises like pushups, crunches, jumping jacks, squats, lunges, etc. After a couple weeks of waking up those muscles you forgot you had you can start throwing in exercises that require a little more balance, stability, and technique. Never do the same routine for more than 4 weeks at a time. Your body adapts from doing those same exercises over and over before what’s called plateau-ing — basically hitting a point where your body stops progressing. I prefer no more than 2 weeks of the same routine to keep things interesting and never come close to plateau-ing, but generally your body takes about 4 weeks to hit that point.
So, take things slow. Keep it interesting. Substitute a day in the gym for playing a basketball game with your friends or a hike in the mountains every once in a while. Be patient. I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again… Rome wasn’t built in a day.
-Patrick McCandless, ISSA-CFT, EMT-P
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