Exercising While Sore
flrancho
Posts: 271 Member
I just started a 5x5 strength training (I've cream fitness) last Monday. I'm pretty sore muscle-wise today. Going by the plan, I should go back to the gym tomorrow.
Should I continue with this plan, or skip the day if I'm still sore tomorrow afternoon?
Should I continue with this plan, or skip the day if I'm still sore tomorrow afternoon?
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Replies
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Soreness is expected. Working through it helps alleviate it. Injury on the other hand should not be continued on. Injury is typically described as sharp, shooting, or pulsing pains that progress over days. Delayed onset muscle soreness is a dull to moderate ache that may happen right after a workout or a day or so after. But it quickly dissipates after a day or so.0
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I cant remember a day that i haven't trained sore in the last few years.
Always hobbling from squats and weights.
Then into the muay thai that night
Really feel it at night/ in the morning
Dead lifts the next day never too fun.
Can barely squeeze out a #2 without my abs hurting from all the sit ups and indirect ab work too
You'll get used it it
Not only that but 5 min into warm up cant feel a thing0 -
I cant remember a day that i haven't trained sore in the last few years.
Always hobbling from squats and weights.
Then into the muay thai that night
Really feel it at night/ in the morning
Dead lifts the next day never too fun.
Can barely squeeze out a #2 without my abs hurting from all the sit ups and indirect ab work too
You'll get used it it
Not only that but 5 min into warm up cant feel a thing
I have no idea what he just said, but to answer your question if you have delayed onset muscle soreness (dull soreness and very common the day after starting lifting) then yes go ahead and go on as normal tomorrow.0 -
Sydking, I don't think I would like to exercise so much I couldn't enjoy a good poo.
Cheers, h.0 -
Soreness is expected. Working through it helps alleviate it. Injury on the other hand should not be continued on. Injury is typically described as sharp, shooting, or pulsing pains that progress over days. Delayed onset muscle soreness is a dull to moderate ache that may happen right after a workout or a day or so after. But it quickly dissipates after a day or so.
I almost always have DOMs somewhere. It's important to differentiate between injury and soreness. I find I often feel better after I warm up. I have to have pretty severe DOMs before I opt out of a session and then I'd usually do light cardio or yoga.0 -
Important......STREACHING. .....before and after training0
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Being sore is good - weakness leaving the body and all that. Pain is another issue and you should heal first. It takes ~48 hours for your muscles to heal up and be in a state where you can work them out again for resistance training. Make sure you stretch, use hot/cold water, massage, etc. to get past the soreness.0
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I don't agree with strictly following the timeline of the plan. I do 5x5, and always wait till I feel fully recovered before doing another session. There is no one-size-fits-all weights programme, you have to experiment and find what works for you. If I tried sydkings programme I would definitely suffer overtraining syndrome.
By all means try and do the session tomorrow, but if you find you're struggling give yourself another day to recover next time.0 -
Soreness abates much faster if you do your next workout. Usually by the end of a warm up, any DOMS I have is diminished to the point that I don't even notice it anymore and my lifts are not affected negatively. Conversely, waiting an extra day or so just makes the pain much worse.
If it's particularly bad DOMS (not an injury) and you don't feel capable of the workout, then do some active recovery. Walking, yoga, something that engages the muscles. Then, do the next schedule workout the following day.0 -
Soreness abates much faster if you do your next workout. Usually by the end of a warm up, any DOMS I have is diminished to the point that I don't even notice it anymore and my lifts are not affected negatively. Conversely, waiting an extra day or so just makes the pain much worse.
If it's particularly bad DOMS (not an injury) and you don't feel capable of the workout, then do some active recovery. Walking, yoga, something that engages the muscles. Then, do the next schedule workout the following day.
If, after a full warm-up, you are still so sore that you CAN'T work out, lighten your load, and use an active recovery (lighter weghts, walking etc.). You should find that a nice warm-up aleviates your DOMS.0 -
If after a warm-up and active recovery you still have a specific pain, you might have suffered an injury which should be checked out.0
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Soreness that is more than just tightness is an indication of a good workout, you caused the micro-tears needed for the body to repair stronger.
You really want to kill that repair process by working the same muscles and trying to put another load on them?
Means you just wasted to some degree that prior workout if you kill the repair work the body is attempting to do.
The workout doesn't make you stronger, the workout does the damage, tears the body down.
The rest for recovery and repair is what actually makes you stronger, if diet allows.
Besides, what usually ends up happening is the attempt to have another equally good workout with damaged muscles turns out to not be as good. Keep repeating that and while it may feel like giving it your all, with unrecovered muscles it's not really a good workout anymore that requires repair - just constantly elevated stress on them.
If you do it right at the start, the soreness stops lasting that long, your body can repair and recover in the 36-48 hrs before the next workout, and then the next workout can be equally as strong.0 -
You just started, so you are likely not over-trained, just adapting. In 3 months you'll know your body better but for now if it is a reputable program just follow it.0
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Same question here. I did a total fit class with all sorts of squats, push ups, weights, body weight, ab stuff, stairs, and whatever the instructor said to do. It was a Great workout, but this morning I sure did feel it. think I'll apt for some light cardio today. I'm trying to build my mental tolerance for strength training cuz i'm a cardio person at the gym. Don't want to overdo it and never want to do it again... I know there's a ton of benefits with strength training so I'm hoping to get to the point where I am as comfortable with strength training as I am with cardio.0
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Is it not good practice to lift every other day to ensure muscle repair and growth ?0
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I'm often sore when lifting, sometimes not. The only reason I wouldn't lift is if you are in pain. Also, as you continue to do it, the soreness will be shorter. I lifted Monday and I feel fine today.0
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Sometimes I have doms, sometimes I don't. Either way my next scheduled lifting session will happen.
If I do have doms, they are mostly gone once the warm up session is finished.0
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