Exhaustion From Training
It’s not uncommon to lack the motivation to exercise when energy levels are at their lowest and moving your body becomes a struggle. Exercising consistently is what it takes to deliver excellent results in the long run, but sometimes your body isn’t willing to cooperate. In other words, you’re flat out exhausted.
Overtraining is a decline in performance that can persist for months or longer without obvious symptoms. It’s usually detected by the performance effort during a workout session and/or the overall mood of your mind during your training routine.
For some in the bodybuilding community, the debate has been whether overtraining is really a myth. What has always resounded during this argument is that overtraining is all relative. A high volume of exercises may be too much for one individual, while it may be a very light set for another. It can vary.
Regardless of how you define overtraining, the importance of rest and recovery cannot be overstated. Rest is key for muscle and connective tissue repair, as well as for relieving the burdens of mental stress from training the body.
When rest and recovery are ignored or neglected for a period of time, negative symptoms begin to show. Even intermediate/advanced trainees can get caught in this period of stagnation and underdevelopment.

What Are The Signs of Overtraining
The typical bodybuilder is extremely ambitious in their efforts to build muscle and minimize fat during training. In most fitness influencer channels, you notice a lot of planning throughout the day, with the gym being the main focus of their life.
Preworkout meals, eating prepped food from the nights before, 1-2 hour sessions in the gym, extra cardio training, nighttime bed routines, and even more. These are the daily habits that are part of the normal bodybuilder lifestyle.
Whenever a person gets accustomed to a certain lifestyle or regular routine, it’s hard to deviate from those habits and go off course. This could be a suggestion to take a week or more off heavy training to give the body time to heal and recover (See When to Start Deload Weeks In Your Routine).
On paper, it seems like a simple step to just add a week off from heavy training, but your mind will always put up some resistance. ‘Why take time off from lifting when you’re making progress each week?’ ‘If I stop now, I’ll end up plateauing, or I might lose strength that I’ve worked so hard to gain.’
These thoughts dwell on your mind because of the fear of missing out (FOMO) or having to take a break from something that you find rewarding in doing so often. You can rationalize how much exercise is good for you, but the truth is that too much of anything can be bad for you in the long run.
What should determine the amount of training that’s necessary is how you spend your time outside of training. It will be more challenging for individuals with sedentary jobs (mostly sitting) to overtrain than for someone who works on their feet most of the day (construction, waiters, doctors, firemen, police officers, etc.).
A person with a very active lifestyle wouldn’t necessarily need to add more sets/repetitions to their exercise routine; they would just focus more on rest and recovery (see How Rest and Recovery Can Help You Develop More Strength). This would also include nutrition, as greater workloads during exercise require a higher caloric intake to maintain lean muscle for growth (see How Much Protein Is Needed For Training).
Without proper diet and rest, an individual can experience symptoms such as poor-quality sleep, lingering joint aches and pains, low energy and motivation, low libido, chills, and mood fluctuations. These symptoms tend to linger for months and go unnoticed until the desire to work out completely goes away. This is what many would call ‘burnout’.
Proper Recovery
To achieve proper recovery from a continuous training regimen, you have to be mindful of your overall energy in the gym. Do you need stimulants on a regular basis to motivate yourself to work out that day? Are you constantly hitting walls when trying to find the energy to finish those last sets?
Be honest with yourself and find out what’s working and what’s not working. If none of your exercises are progressing more in weights/repetitions/sets, it may be time for a rest period. Resting periods can vary from an entire week off or just easing up on the sets/weights being used.
When resting at night, establish an effective nighttime routine to help you get ready for bed. If it’s room lighting, electronic devices, eating schedules, or temperature settings, adjust what you have to help you fall asleep and get the rest you need. If you’re still experiencing symptoms of overtraining, check your blood work with your doctor to ensure your hormone levels are balanced.
The Wrap Up
Overtraining is subtle and hard to notice because its definition can vary widely. What may be overtraining to a beginner just starting to work out could be a regular routine for a bodybuilder who has been training for many years. Depending on your lifestyle and overall fitness level, you will need to train with a certain level of intensity and practice proper recovery to achieve great results. It’s also a good reminder that exercise isn’t to be taken for granted; you need some in your life, but too much is never truly necessary.
What else do you want to know?
How Much Protein Is Needed For Training?







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