Rest day - do you really rest?
Rest day - do you really rest?
I've been trying out the Pete Plan as it fits my schedule and I like the variety of workouts. Pete recommends (as do others ) a rest day every week.
The trouble is I feel like I want to do something exercise-related during that day, but I don't want whatever I do to impact my 'training.'
What do you do during your rest day?
The trouble is I feel like I want to do something exercise-related during that day, but I don't want whatever I do to impact my 'training.'
What do you do during your rest day?
Now listen to me, all of you. You are all condemned men. We keep you alive to serve this ship. So row well, and live.
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Re: Rest day - do you really rest?
Er, I REST! As in, doing nothing, sitting on my arse. No biking, no rowing, nowt, nothing, nada, zip.nycbone wrote:What do you do during your rest day?
I did my first hard half marathon yesterday (87:06.2) and it really took it out of me. Today was definitely a rest day! However, the Holiday Challenge requires I row or I'll be doing another half to catch back up , so I did two 5K pieces at around a 2:20 pace , one this morning, one this evening. I doubt my heart rate even hit 120. "Active" rest, if you will. If I didn't have to keep my mileage up, I'd be sitting on my arse, like Citroen!
Mark Underwood. Rower first, cyclist too.
I always like to have a day off every week, even if physically I feel I can row/run/cycle well, I think it is important mentally to take some time off the erg.
"A lot of people run a race to see who is fastest. I run to see who has the most guts, who can punish himself into exhausting pace, and then at the end, punish himself even more."
Steve Prefontaine
Steve Prefontaine
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I wouldn't worry as long as you are not pushing yourself too hard and as long as you are not rowing. Almost anything else you do, exercise related, will be using somewhat different sets of muscles so you probably will not overwork yourself. If you start to see a decline in your rowing times over time ( a thing the Pete Plan reveals quite nicely), you are not getting enough rest or you are training too hard in your workouts. Listen to your body.nycbone wrote:The trouble is I feel like I want to do something exercise-related during that day, but I don't want whatever I do to impact my 'training.'
A long bike ride, light run, or long walk all seem to me to be appropriate for alleviating boredom or anxiety.
On the other hand, sitting on the "arse", as Citroen put it, is quite nice once you really get the hang of it. Beer helps.
Thanks for the input. I'll see how it feels week to week and take a fast walk or something on my rest day.
We're having a major snow storm in the NE this weekend, so my X-country skis are out and ready to go. Yes, I may be skiing on my erg rest day. Oh well... Someone's gotta do it.
We're having a major snow storm in the NE this weekend, so my X-country skis are out and ready to go. Yes, I may be skiing on my erg rest day. Oh well... Someone's gotta do it.
Now listen to me, all of you. You are all condemned men. We keep you alive to serve this ship. So row well, and live.
I years ago asked myself this and my response, which I've done ever since, was to do nothing but abdominals on the rest day. Lots and lots of sit-ups, crunches, etc. It doesn't stress the muscles that need rest, it doesn't take an inordinate amount of time and, when you're done, it's enough that you feel like you've accomplished something.rshort wrote:For me it is the most difficult day, it's hard to do.
But, improves comes following some type recovery.
Cross training helps the mind and body. Easy cycling
is an excellent recovery activity.
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No matter how hard I train I always have one rest day each week.
I consider the rest day an insurance against overtraining. I hope that I am able to recover daily from my training but just in case there is a build up of training stress from which I haven't recovered...
On this day I rest. Completely. Barely get out of bed. I do not even think about training.
Every ying needs a yang.
I consider the rest day an insurance against overtraining. I hope that I am able to recover daily from my training but just in case there is a build up of training stress from which I haven't recovered...
On this day I rest. Completely. Barely get out of bed. I do not even think about training.
Every ying needs a yang.