Sport specific training takes practice on the specific sport you are training for. Cross training is great for the rest of the body. I spent six months training for a Half Ironman triathlon this year. I took a couple of weeks off, and then started training for a marathon. I took it easy on my marathon training because of my knee issues that started to scare me on the second to last long run in my marathon training.
Since I had a scare, I started tapering a week early. Since I had all of this extra time on my hands, I went out and did a 90-minute Vinyasa yoga session. I struggled to make it through the session and I was sore for 5 days. All of the pain led to the realization that, I am getting out of shape. I spent most of the year training for endurance with little time spent on strength and speed. I jumped on the scale and saw that I weighed in at 153 pounds. Not fat for a guy who is 5’ 7” tall but certainly not lean.
If you are reading this, you are probably not a couch potato. If you are a couch potato, you are thinking about changing. Here are some thoughts:
- Athletes are in better shape than most people.
- Athletes tend to develop sport specific muscles.
- Sport specific muscle growth causes muscle imbalances.
- Muscle imbalances lead to injuries.
- Being an injured athlete with imbalanced muscles is better than being a couch potato.
I found that I am in a rut. I can see how I got into the rut. Things in life happened and I let things happen. As soon as I realized these things were happening, I set about changing them. I could have easily told myself to wait until after the marathon to change things up. I did not do that. I took charge and started changing things that were in my control.
I looked at my life and told myself that I was in a rut and I had to get out of it. Because of the upcoming marathon, I am not making big changes but I have already changed my routine and started doing light workouts just to break up the routine.
Life is full of people who tell you not to do something or you can’t do something. Those people are followers. We must all lead our own lives. Do not worry about other people. Get out and lead the way.