It’s time to explode some “myths” of training, and answer a range of questions I seem to get at regular intervals from a surprising amount of you.
MYTH NO1 “The best sign of a great workout is how exhausted I am, and how sore I am the next couple of days!”
Many people I meet regard a great workout with being totally exhausted and sore.
When people come down the gym for the first time, they assume that because they didn’t feel “sick”, that they weren’t training hard enough!
I always have to put them right on this straight away because “feeling sick and exhausted totally” is the exact opposite of what we are about.
I always tell clients that making them sick all over the car park would be easy.
I am FAR MORE interested in getting them stronger, more flexible, being more agile and balanced, and dramatically increasing their speed and endurance.
Being sick from training is one of the worst things you can do for your body, causing great internal distress that your body takes a long time to get over.
If you’re measuring your training progress on being exhausted, and you are doing a speed and agility session with me, then you’re quickly forgetting why you are doing the session in the first place.
Teaching people to run properly and move in multi-directions requires the individual to use their brain power, their reaction time, as well as physical effort.
Last of all, there isn’t one scientific paper out there that says you have to be dramatically sore after a workout to get maximum gains from it, not one! You may get sore now and again from changing your training around and using different muscles, and who wants to be sore all the time anyway!
Always remember that anyone can get you tired, but it requires a far more professional approach to get you much faster, stronger and much better conditioned for absolutely anything you want to do.
