Start A New Exercise Programme


Mike Finch |

A weekly plan can help you to stick to your new fitness goal. – By Susan Paul

Exercise programme

You can run seven days a week, as some runners do; however, should you run seven days a week is the real question! The short answer is no. As a new runner, you would be wise to vary your exercise routine to include a variety of activities, because this will boost your fitness, provide better conditioning and make you a more well balanced athlete. This will also decrease your injury risk and keep you mentally engaged in your training. At some later point, you may acquire the necessary conditioning to run every day, and then you can re-assess your training plan, but keep in mind that adequate rest is always essential to any training plan.

Your body will need rest and recovery days mixed in with your exercise days. Rest and recovery days are as essential to our training as the exercise itself. It is during the down time of a rest day that our bodies become stronger. During the rest phase, they adapt to the physical stresses we have placed upon them. Without rest and recovery, we risk over-training syndrome, injury, and burn out.

Rest days and recovery days are different. Rest means no running or exercising at all. Period. Recovery days refer to easy exercise days that help facilitate circulation, so they can aid recovery from more intense exercise days. Keep your exercise intensity level at a very easy level on a recovery day. Recovery days are not intended to facilitate cardio-respiratory fitness per se, but rather, their intention is to facilitate circulation or blood flow, which in turn assists the recovery process by delivering fresh oxygen and nutrients to muscles, while also removing waste products.

For most beginning runners, we suggest running three or four days a week on alternating days. Running alternate days builds in automatic recovery days. Incorporating strength and flexibility training into your routine will also help you achieve your health and fitness goals.

Plan to take one day completely off each week. This is your rest day. Rest days prevent overuse injuries, allow for restoration of glycogen stores, give the body time to heal and repair any soft tissue damage, and prevent mental burnout. When rest follows training, the body becomes stronger. Be on the lookout for fatigue, lingering muscle soreness, grumpiness, lack of motivation, etc. and if you experience any of these signs, you are in need of more rest days. You will gain more in the long run by resting than you will from over-training. As you stated, this is a lifelong endeavour, so think long haul, not immediate.

Here is an example of a beginner’s exercise plan for the week:

Sunday- Run

Monday- OFF/Rest Day

Tuesday- Run in the morning/Strength and flexibility in the evening OR you can do them back-to-back if
you have time.

Wednesday- Walk/Recovery day

Thursday- Run AM/Strength and flexibility train evening

Friday- Walk/Recovery day

Saturday- Aerobic cross-training: swim, spin, or row

Click here for our training programmes.

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