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What do you campaigners do to recover. Stretching, massage etc?
What are parts of your body ache or cause you grief, tension, especially during a massage for example?
cheers campaigners
cheers mate.the two you're missing is eating/sleeping. ESPECIALLY sleeping.
I find if i skimp on my sleep, my energy get really low day by day because I haven't recovered and my next workout is s**t.
If you're focusing massage though, my lower back is ****** a lot of the time. Massaging beats stretching imo, provided your practitioner knows what they're doing.
cheers mate.
A lot of questions about sleep and diet re recovery are in other threads, hence why I didn't ask. I also made a thread on sleep, it's huge. Obviously what you eat and when you eat it, is too.
More interested in what people do as in stretching, massage and sore body parts.
Myofacial stretching, get a foam roller, use it (while swearing). Find it's quite effective for some areas (esp. upper glute/hip and calves).
I just drink a protein shake and go about my day. I don’t warm down or stretch post-exercise. I’m good to go again the next day. I also sleep 6 hours - if that.
I’m also 24. Let’s see how this holds up when I’m 42
If you maintain your current routine you’re unlikely to be better or worse than anyone else here in 20 years time.
What about when I'm 72?
I’m a remedial massage therapist (Until I finish uni) and even I don’t advocate massage as a recovery tool lol.
Post-workout stretching gets your muscle length back to normal earlier than no stretching but has no effect on DOMS.
Massage post-exercise is almost equally as useless.
Cryotherapy has shown to have benefits for short term performance recovery but not DOMS, icing singular body parts/muscles doesn’t do anything good.
Ultimately sleep, nutrition, mental state and your readiness to perform the activity/workout will dictate how well you recover.
https://www.painscience.com/articles/delayed-onset-muscle-soreness.php
Is there anything wrong with DOMS though?
I would say it is a sign that you were unprepared for the workout/activity.
Do that on a constant basis and you’re bound for injuries, particularly in the activity is very similar (think shin splits, carpal tunnel, tendinopathies).
What kind of workout are we talking about? if you're doing weight/strength training DOMS are just part and parcel... And if you don't get DOMS you aren't working hard enough.
Any workout or activity.
imo DOMS is a pretty poor indicator of how effective a workout is.
I think you’ll find most advanced trainees rarely, if ever, get DOMS due to the periodisation they use.
Here’s a good start for the discussion
https://journals.lww.com/nsca-scj/F...cise_Muscle_Soreness_a_Valid_Indicator.2.aspx
Anecdotally, many bodybuilders claim that certain muscles are more prone to soreness than others. They report that some muscles almost never experience DOMS, whereas other muscles almost always experience DOMS after training.
Start stretchingI have loads of issues with my hips and shoulders.
I don't really stretch, I will do certain exercises though for my hips and warm up before a leg session.
I also don't take supplements, I used to think I needed to gulp down a protein shake straight after my gym session but haven't done so in a couple of years and it hasn't affected recovery. I try get all my protein through food.
Brilliantly said.to be honest, most of us campaigners need to stretch not to counter exercise tightness, but more to counter the s**t we do every ******* day. sitting for extending periods, typing on PCs, looking at digital devices, poor posture generally. upper and lower cross syndromes don't occur because of exercise, they occur because of the other s**t we're doing 16-20hrs a day (when we're not sleeping).
adding exercise to the above is where injuries will generally happen, not necessarily because of the exercise itself. adding load to dysfunction is a recipe for trouble.
to be honest, most of us campaigners need to stretch not to counter exercise tightness, but more to counter the s**t we do every ******* day. sitting for extending periods, typing on PCs, looking at digital devices, poor posture generally. upper and lower cross syndromes don't occur because of exercise, they occur because of the other s**t we're doing 16-20hrs a day (when we're not sleeping).
I’m a remedial massage therapist (Until I finish uni) and even I don’t advocate massage as a recovery tool lol.
Post-workout stretching gets your muscle length back to normal earlier than no stretching but has no effect on DOMS.
Massage post-exercise is almost equally as useless.
Cryotherapy has shown to have benefits for short term performance recovery but not DOMS, icing singular body parts/muscles doesn’t do anything good.
Ultimately sleep, nutrition, mental state and your readiness to perform the activity/workout will dictate how well you recover.
https://www.painscience.com/articles/delayed-onset-muscle-soreness.php
My hip flexor is tight as, pain through the front of my hip and lower back on the R side. What do you reckon in terms of massage to release some of the muscles there? Dry needling I've been considering too.