Boost your performance
Apply training strategies that elite athletes use to avoid fitness ruts
Diet and fitness videos |
How fatty are your Thanksgiving favorites? Nov. 25: TODAY diet and nutrition editor Madelyn Fernstrom quizzes Hoda and Kathie Lee on the calories and fat in some favorite Thanksgiving foods. |
Smart Fitness — By Jacqueline Stenson |
This holiday, take your diet advice and stuff it Should you do anything when your unfit family is stuffing themselves at Thanksgiving? Smart Fitness answers your queries. |
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Q: I exercise several times a week but I'm not seeing the gains that I used to. Basically, I think I'm in a rut. Any advice?
A: If you're doing the same activities week in and week out — say cycling for 20 minutes at a certain pace and then hitting your usual weight-machine circuit — you're bound to eventually hit what fitness experts call a plateau.
Essentially, your body adapts to the type and frequency of physical activity that you're doing, so the exercise isn't as challenging as it used to be. And while you won't see major declines in your physical fitness, you won't see improvements either because you're not subjecting your body to enough stimulus for change.
So if your goal is to boost performance, you are, as you noted, in a rut.
Even people who are happy with their current fitness levels can suffer from a static exercise routine. Repeatedly working the same body parts in the same way can actually lead to overtraining injuries.
Another big risk: boredom.
"If your workout is stale, you get frustrated and you develop a negative attitude," says personal trainer Todd Durkin, owner of Durkin's Athlete Performance Center in San Diego and a spokesperson for the American Council on Exercise. That makes you less likely to just do it.
Lessons from the pros
So how do you avoid hitting a plateau or break free of a rut if you're already in one?
Take some lessons from elite athletes. Sure, they're in top physical shape. But they don't stay that way by doing the same activities over and over like so many gym-goers do, emphasizes Durkin.
He works with many elite athletes but says his message is the same for all of his clients, whether they're training at the professional or recreational level: "Your body needs change."
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On the cardio side, if you like to bike, for example, you can set the stationary cycle for varying intensities. And you might also pick a day or two a week to take a spinning class or bike outdoors on different types of terrain. Another good idea: mix in other activities like yoga, swimming or jogging.
In addition to cardio and strengthening exercises, don't overlook other areas of fitness like flexibility, balance, agility and coordination. These can boost overall performance and also play an important role in keeping people functioning independently as they enter into old age.
Speaking of age, it's no surprise that our performance declines as we get older. But there's a lot you can do to fight back. "Regardless of age, you will see improvements in health with physical exercise," Durkin says.
Keep in mind though, that if you're performing at the same level in your 40s as your 20s, you haven't necessarily hit a plateau, not in the negative sense anyway. In fact, you're probably doing quite well considering your body isn't the same machine it once was.
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