HomeArticles You Should NEVER Skip A Workout, Or Should You?
You Should NEVER Skip A Workout, Or Should You?
If you want to be successful at anything,
discipline and consistency are mandatory.
You’ve got to be prepared to work hard week in and week out,
and put forth the effort even on those days when you’d rather stay at home, sit
on the couch and relax.
The
saying says that “80% of success is showing up”, and for the most part I’d say
that’s true.
Building muscle is no different.
You’ve got to stay rigid to your workout schedule and get
yourself into the gym even when it’s the last thing on your mind. If you want
to gain muscle size and strength as quickly as possible, you should never, ever
miss a workout…
Or should you?
Here’s the thing…
Yes, regularity is important. Yes, you should be sticking to
your workout schedule the vast majority of the time. Yes, simply bailing on the
gym out of pure laziness is not tolerable.
However,
I would like to bring up a quote from the late Mike Mentzer when he said… “Rituals
have nothing to do with science”.
What you need to keep in mind is that the human body is an
extremely complex biological “machine”, and that not every single workout and
recovery period is identical.
In other
words, just because your schedule states that you must train on days X, Y and Z
doesn’t necessarily mean that this will always be the optimal pattern every
single week of the year.
If you wake up on a training day and your muscles still
ache, you feel physically tired and your regular motivation to train just feels
like it has been zapped... don’t you think your body just might be trying to
tell you something?
Why would you force yourself to train in a situation where
more recovery time is clearly required, and when you know that your training
performance will be less than optimal? If your body, muscles and mind are
clearly still reeling from the previous session, what sense does it make to
force yourself to train despite this?
After all, we know that the recovery phase is the ultimate
“muscle builder” (the actual process of adding new muscle tissue occurs out of
the gym on resting days) and that intense weight training is extremely
demanding on the body as a whole…
So why would you deliberately interfere with the very
process that transforms your physique in the first place? Why not take an extra
24 hours off and re-enter the gym once you feel physically and mentally ready
to do so?
What
harm could there possibly be in that?
There is no risk of losing muscle size or strength, as these
decreases require 2 or more weeks of inactivity to be set into motion. Yet,
there is the perfectly likely reality of a positive gain in the form of proper
recovery from the previous workout and improved performance on the following
workout.
The underlying key is to listen to your body.
Rituals
truly do not have anything to do with science, and if it feels obvious to you
that additional rest is needed, take it.
Don’t force your body into another battle with the weights
if it clearly is not ready to do so. Don’t let your ego get in the way; just
because some muscle building guru told you to “never skip a workout” doesn’t
mean that it’s always the best approach.
You do have to use this method with caution, though...
If you develop the mindset of only training when you “feel
like it”, then it’s likely that you’ll start delaying your workouts and
convincing yourself that it’s correct to do so when in fact it is not.
There are plenty of times when you won’t feel like training
purely for psychological reasons rather than concrete physical reasons, and
that’s not what I’m talking about here.
I’m simply talking about those days where you are able to
sense that from a physical standpoint, taking an extra day of rest would be the
better course of action.
Just remember... there is no long-term harm in taking an
extra day of rest, but there IS the very real and immediate harm of training
your body without being fully recovered first.
If in
doubt, take the day off!
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