I wanted to ask a question - just out of curiosity.
I had a too strenuous training regime a couple of weeks ago and I ended up a bit overtrained. I suffered then from chronic exhaustion and my results became much poorer. All improvement that I had made during the past three months was gone. I started to swim 50m fc at terrifying time of 41-43 secs, though I had already been able to do the same in 38 secs for 50m (not great, I know, but my swimming career is yet rather short).
I decided to have a rest. I was going to the pool only two - three times a week, decreased the volume to 1500-2000 and abandoned any demanding tasks. Just leisure swimming - technique and turns.
After about 10-12 days I was feeling great. No sign of exhaustion. In fact the fatigue disappeared already after about three days of rest.
But then, whenever I tried to experiment with speed and swim one or two 50s or 100s I found my results still as poor as at the time when my exhaustion reached its peak. I could not understand why my body does not want to stand a heavier effort even though my subjective symptoms of overtraining (i.e. fatigue etc) are no longer felt.
Now I am back in form - even did my pb at 50m :) (probably because I focussed so much on technique during the past three weeks).
Still I am very curious why it was so hard to me to swim faster, even though I did not feel any chronic exhaustion any longer? Is it possible that the effects of the overtraining last still longer than you subjectively experience them?
It wasn't quite that much, closer to 80-100. I did 2 a days and took every other Sunday off. Looking back, it wasn't very smart.
Betcha got that "runner's knee." Every other Sunday off is not exactly quality rest. Runners are even more compulsive than swimmers, I find. If you get "swimmer's shoulder" now, you will be in big trouble! My knees are surprisingly trouble free (probably cuz I'm not a breaststroker.) It's my loose ankles that cause problems for me in running. Good for swimming, bad for running. Both are great sports.
Back on topic, I have felt a bit of "overtrained" when I'm doing running and swimming and weights, but I think it's just hard training and not "overtraining" -- to date. I was just like Beth -- mega burned out from mega yardage in college.
It wasn't quite that much, closer to 80-100. I did 2 a days and took every other Sunday off. Looking back, it wasn't very smart.
Betcha got that "runner's knee." Every other Sunday off is not exactly quality rest. Runners are even more compulsive than swimmers, I find. If you get "swimmer's shoulder" now, you will be in big trouble! My knees are surprisingly trouble free (probably cuz I'm not a breaststroker.) It's my loose ankles that cause problems for me in running. Good for swimming, bad for running. Both are great sports.
Back on topic, I have felt a bit of "overtrained" when I'm doing running and swimming and weights, but I think it's just hard training and not "overtraining" -- to date. I was just like Beth -- mega burned out from mega yardage in college.