how do I prevent myself from getting super sore after trainings?
michelleeshiet
Posts: 7 Member
Hello lovely people. I need some help. What do I do to prevent myself from getting so sore after my workouts? Like right now im so sore I can barely walk or sit on the toilet. Help please.
Also ADD me I can use the help and motivation.
Also ADD me I can use the help and motivation.
0
Replies
-
Take a long walk before bed. Make sure you move on your off days. Stay hydrated. Be consistent and your body will adjust quickly.
I find l-glutamine helps speed recovery if I truly overdo it. (Not everyone subscribes to this)
0 -
@rtp_slg52181 thank u. Yeah I think one of my biggest problems is that I dont drink enough water. I think I drink like a water bottle a day0
-
Water is the way the body moves needed supplies throughout the body. If you are dehydrated you are choosing to recover slower. Drink your liquid!0
-
I'm on a program through the daily burn website that is called tactical body weight training. We do about 10 mins of stretching before the workout and about 10mins of yoga after the workout. The yoga really seems to help with my muscle soreness. Another thing I use is tylenol precise cream, rub it in nice and hard on a sore muscle and it heats things up and helps keep them loose. Walking and stretching every hour or so the next day also helps keep you limber.0
-
michelleeshiet wrote: »Like right now im so sore I can barely walk or sit on the toilet.
If you're in that much pain, you're probably too much too soon, or you're working each muscle group too infrequently.
If you need more help, list the details of your workouts (exercises, sets, reps, weight).0 -
Dial it back down and work consistently . You shouldn't be so sore you can't walk.
But the only way to NOT be that sore is to continue to work out- takes a few weeks to get up to a place where you aren't incapacitated- but keep it up- it goes away eventually.0 -
I second yoga. I do half an hour of yoga after every run and it really helps. Water, too, is important. If you have a bit of cash, invest in The Stick on Amazon and massage the muscle aches away. Google DOMs. There's a lot of information (and remedies) out there.0
-
In my personal experience, the soreness should reduce as you get into better shape. Leg day always leads to the worst soreness if you haven't done it in awhile.
You could also try some of these methods, but I can't personally vouch for them:
http://www.poliquingroup.com/ArticlesMultimedia/Articles/Article/1079/Nine_Amazing_Ways_To_Reduce_Post-Workout_Muscle_So.aspx0 -
My post-workout go-to's: stretching, walking, Epsom salt soaking, foam rolling, lacrosse ball massaging. None of these will eliminate soreness, but they all reduce soreness to some degree.0
-
Stay hydrated. So important and I agree stretch it out.0
-
I have found that Bioplasma (all 12 basic cell salts) greatly reduces muscle soreness.0
-
Definitely stretch after your work outs, and dial it back a touch if you're still ending up that sore.0
-
Really the only long term solution is to stay consist with your workouts. Your body gets use to it. It gets better but you will always feel a little sore.0
-
Thank you everyone for the tips!0
-
I'll echo what others have said that post-workout stretches saves me a world of pain. I hardly hurt at all any more.0
-
the more you workout , the better shape you get the less you will be sore.0
-
Using a foam roller for large muscle groups and a lacrosse ball for small areas helps me. It keeps the muscles from tightening up too much.0
-
the more you workout , the better shape you get the less you will be sore.
Well said. I find if I take any time off and do a hard workout, I'm really sore the next day. The more you workout regularly, the less sore you will be. I run 4 days a week and box two days a week. If I miss a boxing workout even once, I end up being sore the next day.0 -
-
I have been lifting for a few years and i still get the level of soreness you're talking about after a particularly hard leg day. I've also had t-rex arms a few times.
What helps me?
Drink enough water.
Staying active the day after with low impact steady state cardio.
keeping and staying warm.
drinking BCAAs.
Supplementing with creatine.
foam rolling/myofascial release0 -
0
-
Use a foam roller and increase your protein intake after your workout. This will work wonders for you!
Here are some ideas on using a foam roller after your workout too.
http://www.sportsnutritionminute.com/foam-roller-benefits-after-your-workout-or-run/0 -
I've been strength training for 2.5 years now. Being sore is part of it. I for one love that feeling. You know it worked!!!0
This discussion has been closed.
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.6K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.3K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.5K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 431 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.6K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.8K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions