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Performance Research Unit

6 Easy Ways to Recover After a Hard Workout

10/1/2020
Technical Data
6 Easy Ways to Recover After a Hard Workout
Rapid Answer Context

6 Easy Ways to Recover After a Hard Workout: The Short Answer

To recover faster after a hard workout, take an active rest day with easy movement, get a massage, use an ice bath to reduce soreness and inflammation, refuel with protein and complex carbs within 30 minutes, wear compression garments, and stay consistent with proper nutrition. The faster your body recovers, the sooner you can train hard again.

6 Easy Ways to Recover After a Hard Workout

Being an endurance athlete is tough business. It requires an individual to endure repeated difficult and painful workouts. We all know that feeling when our body is totally depleted and exhausted. We're zapped of all energy and strength. It hurts so good!

In the end, muscles need repeated workouts to adapt and become stronger. One secret to improving your endurance and strength is effective recovery. The quicker your body recovers, the sooner you can look towards your next workout. Here’s a handful of easy and very effective ways to speed up your recovery.

The bottom line; recovery helps you get back into action.

1. Take an Active Rest Day: I’ve lived my whole athletic career living by the saying, “Train into shape, rest into fitness.” To me, this means it’s best to spend several weeks building up to tougher and tougher workouts, then rest the muscles so that they can become stronger. Go out for a good workout, then come home crawling with exhaustion.

Greg LeMond once said that he would never take a rest day. On his rest days, he would roll around the neighborhood cruising in only easy gears. He wouldn’t go hard or strain his muscles. He simply didn’t like that stale feeling after a day without moving the muscles a bit.

Go for a rest day, but do something to move the blood around. Give your muscles time to mend, but keep your muscles feeling fresh by doing something active.

2. Get a Massage: Massaging muscles helps move blood through, unties “knots” that have built up with your connective tissues and reduces swelling.  Take it easy, don't press hard, your muscles may feel tender.

3. Take an Ice Bath: It’s an intimidating thought for some (especially me!) however ice baths are also very effective in reducing core body temperatures and can effectively reduce soreness and inflammation. Fill the bathtub with cold water and throw in a bunch of ice. Afterward, your muscles will feel fresh, relaxed and cool. You may also experience more comfortable sleeping.

4. Eat Something: After your workout, your muscles are eager to start the recovery process, therefore absorption happens quicker. Focus on protein and complex carbs for your immediate recovery nutrition. Begin refueling within 30 minutes after your workout. This is especially important for events that last for multiple days (e.g. stage races).

5. Use Compression Garments: For most of us we’d like to recover from a tough workout then, the next day, get back to another tough workout. Research has shown that compression garments can help improve recovery time.

**6. Use Consistent and Proper Nutrition:**Proper nutrition is not easy in our way of life. We all have to work at it and be consistent. We always recommend using real food as your foundation of nutrition. Using supplements, like a multivitamin, will help ensure that you aren't deficient in any essential nutrient.  Take Beetroot Pro and Endurance360 to help enhance your recovery and protect against muscle cramps.

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Technical FAQ Extension

How soon after a workout should I eat to recover?

Begin refueling within 30 minutes after your workout. Right after training your muscles are eager to start the recovery process, so absorption happens quicker. Focus on protein and complex carbs for your immediate recovery nutrition. This early refueling is especially important for events that last multiple days, such as stage races, where you need to recover quickly for the next effort.

Do ice baths and compression garments actually help recovery?

Both can help. Ice baths reduce core body temperature and can effectively reduce soreness and inflammation, leaving muscles feeling fresh and relaxed, and may improve sleep comfort. Research has shown that compression garments can help improve recovery time. These tools work alongside the foundational habits of active rest, massage, proper nutrition, and consistent supplementation.

What is an active rest day for endurance athletes?

An active rest day means doing something light to move blood around rather than sitting completely still. The idea follows the saying train into shape, rest into fitness: you build up to tougher workouts, then rest so muscles become stronger. Cycling in easy gears or other gentle movement gives muscles time to mend while keeping them feeling fresh instead of stale.

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*Technical citations and PubMed references are provided for performance education only. These statements have not been evaluated by the FDA.