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Exercise Overindulgence: Are You Pushing Too Hard?

There is a thin margin between over-training and under stimulating a muscle for growth. While sweating it out in the gym one loves to reap the benefit of their labour. What happens, if your body stops responding in a positive way. How do you know if you’re guilty of exercise overindulgence?

Check if  any of these symptoms apply to you:

In addition, the psychological benefits that come with exercise disappear when you over-train, so you might feel depressed and apathetic, have difficulty concentrating, or even have reduced self-esteem.

If you’ve been working out too hard and you feel any of these symptoms, it’s time for you to cut back a little or take a break.

How to avoid Over-training?
Moderation is the key.

If you find yourself exercising beyond the point of exhaustion, while injured, or to the exclusion of other aspects of your life, then it is definitely time to take a break. If cycling begins to drain rather than revitalize you, consider slowing the pace a little, or even stopping altogether for a short while.

Lighten the load

If you don’t want to stop altogether, then just try lighter workouts for a while. Also, remember that taking a few days off is okay. If you need to take a longer mini-break from exercising, reduce your meal portions so you won’t have to worry about putting on weight. Your body doesn’t need as much food when you’re not exercising.

Muscle won’t turn into fat if you stop exercising. Muscle and fat are two separate things. It’s like saying your car will turn into a bicycle if you don’t drive it.

Take up, The Pre – Exhaust Training Principle: involves performing isolation exercises which fatigue a target muscle, followed immediately by compound (multi-joint) exercise where this muscle is the prime mover.

According to a 1996 study in which subjects that used the principle gained significantly more muscle mass than those who trained as usual.  Muscle growth is largely attributed to volume of training. To begin with, establish which muscle groups you are going to target with your workout. Perform your isolation exercise, then jump directly into the compound exercise as 1 set. For example, with a chest workout where your pectorals are the prime movers, fatigue them with a set of cable crossovers before jumping into a bench press set. Not only will the pecs be overloaded sufficiently, their conditioning will not be inhibited by stabilizing muscles (triceps, front delts) that give out early. Use it for 1 full set within every workout for a few weeks for each major body part and see the results!

To seek results from your workout, try changing two to four variables each week:

Remember, for your body to keep changing, your program has to keep changing.

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