How to Know It’s Time to Pull Back With Your Training

When you’re working hard to hit your fitness goals, it’s natural to push yourself in every session. However, knowing when to pull back and give your body the rest it needs is just as important as training itself. Overloading without adequate recovery can lead to increased risk of injury, decreased performance, and burnout. Here’s how to know when it’s time to pull back with your training and prioritize recovery.

1. Persistent Fatigue and Random Aches

Feeling unusually tired or noticing aches and pains popping up in random areas can be a sign that it’s time to deload.

  • Fatigue is a natural response to intense exercise, but if you’re feeling worn out in every session, it might mean your body is struggling to recover.

  • Random aches and niggles can indicate that certain muscles or joints are overworked or that you’re developing muscle imbalances. Ignoring these small signs can eventually lead to more severe injuries.

A deload week—a period where you reduce your training intensity or volume—can give your body a chance to repair and recover. You might reduce the weights you’re lifting, the volume of work you’re doing, or even take a few days off altogether to reset.

2. Constant Tiredness and the Importance of Nutrition

Constant tiredness isn’t always from lack of sleep or mental fatigue; it can also stem from inadequate recovery in your diet.

  • Protein intake is essential for muscle repair and recovery, especially for resistance-trained individuals. A general guideline for recovery is 2 grams of protein per kilogram of body weight per day.

  • Energy balance matters too. If you’re training hard but not eating enough overall, you may feel depleted, and your body won’t have the fuel it needs to repair tissues and replenish energy stores.

If tiredness is becoming the norm, try evaluating your diet. Are you getting enough protein and calories to support your recovery? Upping these factors, along with adding more sleep and rest days, can reduce fatigue and give your muscles a chance to come back stronger.

3. Managing Stress as Part of Recovery

A factor often overlooked in training recovery is stress management. The body doesn’t differentiate between different types of stress, so psychological stress can have just as much impact on your physical recovery as training stress.

  • Psychological stress activates the sympathetic nervous system, or the body’s “fight or flight” response. This can lead to increased levels of cortisol, which in turn can impair muscle recovery and reduce performance.

  • Coping mechanisms like deep breathing, meditation, and gentle stretching can help calm the nervous system, allowing your body to shift into the parasympathetic “rest and digest” mode.

Incorporating stress management techniques into your routine can improve your ability to recover and make your training efforts more effective.

Knowing when to pull back in your training is key to long-term success and injury prevention. When you feel unusually fatigued, experience persistent soreness, or find yourself constantly tired, it may be time to adjust your training. Prioritizing protein intake, managing stress, and taking advantage of deload periods will keep you feeling strong, energized, and on track toward your fitness goals. Remember: rest and recovery are vital parts of the training process, not signs of weakness. Embrace them to stay at your best.

How we can help…

  1. Get to know you:
    Understand whether the problem is due to behaviour or trauma and relate the problem to a particular pattern in movement or in life.

  2. Find the cause:
    Is the problem due to an injury that needs a diagnosis or is it something movement related that needs to be assessed and identified?

  3. Make a plan:
    Agree on what the problem is, what the goals are, the way we’re going to achieve the goals and over an agreed timeframe.

  4. Follow up:
    Check in with you along the way and have an open line of communication to ensure you’re on te right track.