Hello runner friends!
Welcome back to the Bass Pro Fitness Series
MIDWEEK MđTIVATIđN blog!
Now let's get started by talking about the perks of intentionally taking time off from running every once in a while. First off, let me come clean though. If you know me, you know that I absolutely love running and have never intentionally taken a break from it. However, I have been forced to take many breaks over the last few years due to injuries of some sort but am happy to say that I have always reaped some type of benefit from it, like increased patience, a newfound appreciation for the sport, and a stronger mind and body (due to cross-training). This was on my heart as I returned to running last week after taking off four weeks to allow the tendinitis in my right Achilles to heal. I am happy to report that my form was better, my mind was more focused, my legs were full of energy, and I had a huge smile on my face. This time off definitely worked in my favor. And while I won't be taking off weeks at a time, I will be taking more days off to spend in the gym or to do aqua running confident that I will come out a better runner for doing so.
But hey, if you don't believe me, check out what some top runners had to say about it in this article titled, "Why Smart Runners Occasionally Step Away From Running."
âIâm already planning not to run for a month post-Project Eclipse,â she told Runnerâs World before the New York City Marathon, the final of six races she ran in 42 days. âItâll be a forced regeneration of my body. Iâm obviously asking a lot of it, and Iâm not hurt or anything, but, since running is no longer my job, I do want to appreciate my ability to say Iâm going to rest now and do something different with my body. â
Flanaganâs not the only athlete preaching the benefits of an extended break from running. This summer, former Boston Marathon champion and Olympian Des Linden posted on Twitter that she hadnât run a step for a full month.
It wasnât Linden's first extended break either; she had done the same in August 2017, after coming in second at the 2016 U.S. Olympic Trials, seventh at the 2016 Rio Olympic marathon, and fourth in 2017 Boston Marathon. That time away from the sport did her good: When she returned to the Boston Marathon in 2018 (a particularly grueling year), she won the damn thing.
Molly Huddleâwho recently announced a break from running due to pregnancyâ took three weeks off during the fall of 2017 before she started training again. âSometimes you catastrophize taking time off, but my vacation launched the best year of training of my life. It was a really good lesson to stop gripping things so tightly so I could reset, recover, and mentally rejuvenate,â she told Runnerâs World in 2021. Four months later, she set the American record in the half marathon.
Back in 2016, Molly Seidel skipped the U.S. Olympic Trials to check into treatment for obsessive-compulsive disorder, depression, anxiety and disordered eating. She came back to running stronger and better for it: After making the Olympic marathon team in her first race of that distance during the 2020 U.S. Olympic Trials, she won bronze in 2020 Tokyo Olympicsâthe first American woman to medal in 17 years.
Just like your body needs recovery after a single hard workout, it needs recovery from extended effortsâwhether thatâs a marathon training cycle or a track season. When you put your body under stress from exercise, it breaks down your muscle fibers; during the recovery phase, your body works to repair those microtears. But that takes time. And the more prolonged that stress, the bigger of a break youâll need.
Your brain benefits from that time off, too. âOur brains regenerate just like our muscles do,â says Detling. âTaking a break has a really positive impact on our thoughts, moods, emotions, even the structure of our brains. In terms of mental health, that rest from stress is necessary so we can come back stronger.â
Thatâs especially important considering stress isnât just physical. Yes, stress from exercise will affect your body and brain (i.e. youâre sore and tired after a workout), but stress from work, family drama, or any kind of life change will stack physiological and psychological effects on top of that (i.e. exercise feels harder because stress about a big presentation or say, a global pandemic, is zapping your energy). Itâs a vicious cycle.
âOur bodies and brains, you canât separate the twoâtheyâre constantly giving each other messages as to whatâs going on,â says Detling. âAnd even if we donât read those messages correctlyâfor example, your body says you need a break and your brain says no, weâre going to keep goingâeventually, one of them is going to overcome the other one and force you to take a break.â
Not listening to those cues can lead to physical injury and mental burnoutâboth of which can be debilitating. Itâs pretty obvious how physical injury can sideline your running, but donât discount how the state of your brain affects running.
When youâre mentally fatigued, your overall performance in endurance workouts and high-performance sessions is negatively impacted, a 2017 review of 11 studies published in the journal Sports Medicine found. And that can translate into physical injury as well.
âIf you donât have the energy, then you wonât produce anything that youâre excited about. And if you push your body too hard, you wonât be able to reap the rewards of the work,â says Flanagan. âI've learned the hard way, and Iâm finally embracing rest. Some of my best performances have come after a forced time out. Choosing to take time off takes a lot of self-control. I love to run, but if I want to run until Iâm at least 70, which is the hope, I know taking that time off will be to my benefit in the long game.â
So how do you know when it's time to take a break from running apart from having an injury?
Unfortunately, thereâs no one-size-fits-all formula here. But one of the biggest signs, says Detling, is that you arenât enjoying running anymore. âI donât care how much you love what you do, there are days you donât feel like doing it. Thatâs normal,â she explains. âBut understand what your baseline is. If that happens to you once or twice a month or is weather-dependent, okay. When that frequency starts to increaseâfrom a couple times a month to four, six, or even more timesâthatâs a sign to step back and ask yourself whatâs going on.â
Maybe thereâs a logical explanation, and sometimes it is okay to push through runs where youâre not feeling super motivated. But if that frequency is increasing along with other signs of overtrainingâelevated resting heart rate, sleep disturbances, higher perceived effort for the same workout sessions, frequent colds and low-level virusesâthatâs your body waving a big olâ red flag at you, and itâs up to you to heed that sign.
When your body feels refreshedâwhen you feel strong and fitâitâs easy to fall in love with running.
How long you step back is just as dependent on your personal situation, says Detlingâsometimes itâs a week, sometimes a month, sometimes even longer. âThe most important thing to be aware of is why you feel like you need a break,â she explains. âThe answer to that question of why can help you determine the appropriate length.â
So there you have it friends. Taking those occasional rest days will not only benefit you physically but mentally as well. Be proactive in scheduling them in. And like always, at the first sight of burnout, overtraining, or injury, take a few days off (or more if necessary). Your mind, body, and spirit will thank you for it by healing and coming back stronger than ever.
Happy Running!
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