No pain, lots of gain
Categories: Fitness, Celebs & Entertainment
I don't buy into the whole no pain, no gain mentality. The way I see it, the less pain I experience, the more I have to gain. For a while, running gave me pain up and down my shins. The pain stopped me in my tracks and forced me to rest and recuperate. Had I not taken a break, had I kept on running in spite of the pain, I would have surely gained very little. Well, I may have gained a severe injury and maybe a trip to a medical clinic but physically and mentally, my gains would have been nonexistent.
I'm not alone in my thoughts about pain and gain. Author and celebrity trainer Harley Pasternak is right with me on this one.
According to Pasternak, many people think if their muscles don't hurt, they're not having a quality workout. This is simply not true, he says. While some training can be intense and can produce some level of discomfort, pain is never a requirement for a successful workout. Don't forget, he says, that pain can be a warning sign of an exhausted muscle or a torn ligament.
If you're a no pain, no gain advocate, you'd do best to toss that myth right out the window -- before you get hurt.
I'm not alone in my thoughts about pain and gain. Author and celebrity trainer Harley Pasternak is right with me on this one.
According to Pasternak, many people think if their muscles don't hurt, they're not having a quality workout. This is simply not true, he says. While some training can be intense and can produce some level of discomfort, pain is never a requirement for a successful workout. Don't forget, he says, that pain can be a warning sign of an exhausted muscle or a torn ligament.
If you're a no pain, no gain advocate, you'd do best to toss that myth right out the window -- before you get hurt.
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Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Tim UF 11-13-2007 @ 11:28AM
Its important to distinguish between delayed onset muscle soreness (DOMS), and joint/connective tissue pains.
If you are trying to build muscle mass, DOMS are near inevitable, if you aren't getting it, it means you didn't challenge the muscle enough to encourage your body to build it.
In endurance training, where bulk is not the goal, you are right. There should be minimal pain. In this type of training, pain usually equals injury, like Jacki's shin splints, or my posterior tibialis injuries.
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Vishaal 11-13-2007 @ 11:49AM
In my opinion, there should be some level of feeling 'tighter' or more 'stretched out' the day after a work out. I don't think pain is a good thing. You should feel like you had a workout though. Take for example, yesterday, I did 45 minutes cardio, yoga, and pilates, so today I feel a tightness and limberness all over my body, but no pain.
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Jacki 11-13-2007 @ 11:54AM
Thanks, Tim & Vishaal, for your wise comments. I do like feeling some tightness after working out -- makes me think what I did really worked -- but pain, no thanks!
Jacki
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