Our bodies need rest in order to function properly. Does your car engine  get stronger if you never turn it off? We get stronger, not during the  workout, but when we rest and recover…
Growth hormone is produced  when we sleep deeply and at no other time. So being horizontal is when  you get to rebuild everything that training is working hard to stress  and “tear down”
Bill Bowerman took a technique from Arthur Lydiard  and coined the term “tough-easy” for every day that you work hard you  need an easy workout to follow-up with. Easy is PE 3-4 and hard is a  very long run or anything in the PE 5 & above category. Recall the  post on pace and running form talks about PE, perceived effort and where  your tachometer should be most of the time.
Masters runners  & folks who are no longer acting like they are 20 years old often  find they need a day off between workouts. This allows a more full  recovery between workouts & thus you get quality workouts every time  you go big. Once you are older than 20 you realize it is mostly about  quality, isn’t it?
I’ll be referring you to a copy of a great article by Bridget Clark, titled Training Error – Overuse or Under-recovery? from the April 2010 issue of Ultrarunning.  Her graphs are worth a thousand words as she explains the body’s  response to training stimulus and how many of us will induce another  stimulus (running) before we can rebuild, leading to overwhelming our  systems and inching closer to the “injury threshold” in the process.
She  goes a step further and talks about the idea that cross training,  especially strength training, provides a stimulus that is different than  running and is also non-load bearing so that the tissues build capacity  and recovers better without undue stress.
Does it sound  confusing that I would encourage you to exercise and then ask you to  take it easy while doing it? Reframe the idea in terms of the law of  diminishing returns you already know from the office. When you do not  get a vacation from work or a weekend off, you become dull and less fun.  Further, if you do not have adequate time to process the challenges at  work (rebuild) then you begin to see diminishing returns as well – we  push the pace and things begin to get dropped on your plate. Let me  quote Bridget Clark, from her Training Error article, “we now have a  wealth of research in sports science covering the past 30 years. With  the rate of running injuries so prevalent, potential causes have been  studied up and down.” She summarizes this body of research by saying,  “training error is the only factor that consistently displays a direct  cause and effect relationship with running injuries”. She has the  doctorate in Physical Therapy, and her argument makes sense intuitively.  Sometimes we will suffer what she refers to as a traumatic injury – one  example would be me hitting my head on a low limb during a run and  causing a goose-egg style welt to appear. The second and much more  common injury is overuse, with two studies cited, ten years apart, each  showing 70% of runners see these overuse injuries. We simply do not  allow enough time for the body to recover and rebuild as stronger before  we load it up again. Slow or abrupt degenerative damage results as we  spiral toward what Bridget Clark calls injury threshold.
Remember how we talked about the injury cycle? There are 4 distinct phases - all easy to remember and each gets worse.
One: I sprain/tweak my ankle and so it hurts a bit after the run.
Two:  I run on it for two weeks as I normally would, without slowing down or  doing any “rehab” of the injury and now it hurts during and after the  run.
Three: A week after that it hurts before, during and after the run.
Four:  Finally it hurts too much to run, and hurts all the time – is this my  ankles fault? Am I now meant to run? If you are in my class I think you  can answer this question pretty well…
The good news is that you  can apply this sports injury model to your overall sense of well being  and thus guard against over training. The FIRST program, Dr. Maffetone, and Dr. Tim Noakes  in his book all talk about a runner getting progressively more tired,  feeling that performance plateaus and then drops, notices that immune  system function begins to decline and may even see mood changes or  swings in much the same way that extreme stress has been shown to affect  people. We should be alert for trends over time and look out for a  common acronym in prehospital care called DIC head syndrome.  Disoriented, Irritable and Combative. A number of things can cause this  and some could be acute problems such as; you could have low blood  sugar, could be suffering from the heat, or maybe something more chronic  could be overtraining syndrome. Everybody has different physiological  set point for this (you are an experiment of one) and it varies  depending upon what else is going on in your life as well. It is a fine  line for some and gets easier to discern as your “aches and pains”  database expands and as you learn more about your training process as  journey of minor stressors and growing stronger from each stressor.  Tired is natural, while tired with lingering effects and inability to  refresh may need intervention. As you might guess, this is much easier  to spot in others, outside yourself. Your training log will help you  here as well as your running buddies.
Remember when we talked at  the beginning about your running log? How you should examine your  workouts and they will tell you a great deal about where you and how far  you have come? This document can become an important window into how  you are doing if you are without a coach or a regular running buddy who  can spot your holistic well being. Author Tim Noakes gives a number of  suggestions that you may wish to record in your running logbook that  extend beyond the idea of mileage, route, shoes worn and time elapsed.
1)  How did the run go? We all have a growing “aches and pains database”  and this plays a role but on the trend side you want things to get  gradually better.
2) What was  your effort rating (or PE, perceived effort): If easy workouts feel  hard this week, I ask the question “what has changed?”
3)  Did you enjoy it – or any part of it? Nearly every run has both good a  bad spots and if they do not pass easily out of the bad, I ask the same  question as above, or if things clicked – what helped is good  information too.
4) You  waking pulse rate: I asked you to take a baseline pulse as homework  because we want to see improvements and look for spikes in this rate, or  a new creep upward, as a sign we must heed.
5)  Early morning body weight: This is the best time to get a reading  (after the gastrocolic reflex occurs) and this number will fluctuate but  we hope that there is not a continued drop over time – a loss of  appetite or persistent loss is considered an overtraining sign.
6) Number of hours slept: You know where this is going – get to bed!
7)  Heart rate during the workout: This can also tell us about what you are  feeling, are you pushing too hard or is it taking more effort to do  what was easier to execute two weeks ago? Over time the same route  should get a bit faster or easier without increasing heart rate above  your regular workout numbers. See the previous lesson about pace to get a  Dr. Maffetone recommended pulse rate for your steady state runs.
This  kind of data will allow insight toward overtraining trends or on the  bright side – when you can bump things up a notch. Many starting out  will say “I do not want to bump anything, right now – I am stressed  enough!” and that may be true, however 3-4 weeks without changes toward  the positive side of the ledger, and no deleterious effects either means  that you have hit your plateau at this exertion level and it is time to  vary the workload or increase intensity for a new phase. This gradually  makes you better at what you are pursuing.
If something hurts  for two or more days then take 2 or more days off – simple. During that  time stretch, RICE and examine what has changed that would cause the  injury – but don’t assume running through it as normal, will be the  cure. You will have to use active rest and modify your expectations  while learning about the root cause of injury. Here is a great thought,  “healing, is not a science, but the intuitive art of wooing nature." - W.H. Auden
If  you are sick from the neck up – go ahead and run (it may even help) If  you are sick from the neck down – consider sitting this one out.
Expect  that you’ll need to take better care of yourself and wash your hands  more frequently when your mileage drops. Your immune system is cranking  at peak capacity when you are running & when mileage drops sometimes  the immune system takes a vacation too.
When you are getting  strong running performances each week, you can gain 90% of all possible  fitness developments with 4 days/week of running. You may get that extra  10% with 5 or more days each week but what you’ll find is that the  number of injuries you see in the runner is appreciably higher.
Trouble signs of overtraining
Injury –  muscles not allowed to recover well between workouts suffer from stress  injury. Failing running form in the tired athlete leads to excessive  pounding, favoring something compounds imbalances. Do not become a sport  limper or it will get worse somewhere else on your machine!
Sickness  – While running stimulates the immune system, too much too soon - or  inadequate rest – allows the body to be susceptible to illness or  infection – once you are ground down to nothing, illness sets up shop.
Slump –  remember that loss or impairment of higher brain function is one way  that the body shows early sign of problems. Irritability, restlessness,  trouble sleeping, depression and malaise indicate that you need a rest  week (decrease in training volume, additional rest days, 8+ hours of  sleep nightly)
How much rest? For starters we stay within the 10%  rule, so that we rarely increase training load by more than 10% in any  week. We also seek to vary the training cycle and get you some rest  every four weeks as a means for you to absorb your training. Within that  parameter you’ll also need at least one extra minute per night for each  mile you train that week. EG: If you run 15 miles in a week, you’ll  need 15 extra minutes each night that week. Closer to race time - seek  to allow an extra hour of sleep each evening. Olympic Marathoner Ryan Hall is in bed at 9:30pm every night. You do not spend 12 hours a day there, but you get what you need to charge up for your event.
One  last resting tip is feet up - allowing time for fluid exchange  (assisted by gravity) not only feels great but really speeds recovery.  Racers are now using pressure stockings to gain the same benefit while  sitting at their desks. Blood return and elevation are great things for  tired feet and lower legs.
 
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