Hi everyone, I’m new to working out. I’ve mostly been walking and rowing. On Monday I incorporated body weight strength training, which included squats and lunges. Today is now Wednesday and I’m feeling the pain in my legs. How do I recover from this? Should I stick to my routine or take it easy today? I do warm up/warm down, stretch and eat protein heavy foods btw. I also really want to keep going as it helps my mental health. TIA.
You can still work out if it’s just DOMS and not a developing injury. I suggest easing into the routine, as time goes on and you start getting into shape DOMS will be less of an issue. Then you can start to push yourself. In the beginning take it a little bit easy, make sure you don’t get hurt, make sure you build that habit and you’ll definitely be able to stick with the new routine.
I feel like a lot of people burn out in a blaze of glory at the beginning because they are so ambitious. So definitely try to be gentle on yourself for the time being
Being sore is ok good even if you ask me. It seems like you are going easy into it and as long as you can still move your limbs and they are not that sore that they hurt to say stretch out your arms (trust me that sucks) I say keep going. I still often feel soreness in my back and legs. It makes it feel like I actually did something.
Everywhere else is just sleight pain that’s kind of enjoyable haha. My legs though are another story. Sitting down on the toilet is next level. I do want to keep going I love the routine and the mental wellness it brings me. I did start easy with walking and rowing, increasing the time as I went. With the body weight exercises I made it to half the sets and plan to build up as I go.
The best tip I can give you is stay active. Especially after a leg session, take a walk and don’t do it on a Friday arvo where you then sit around all Saturday doing nothing. I train legs on the Monday then I have to be on my legs all week for work, the moment helps push out the lactic acid and stretch the muscles.
Peer reviewed science answer:
Foam Rolling for Delayed-Onset Muscle Soreness and Recovery of Dynamic Performance Measures
Conclusions: Foam rolling effectively reduced DOMS and associated decrements in most dynamic performance measures.
A single study with sample size of 8 can hardly be called a science answer.
According to A Meta-Analysis of the Effects of Foam Rolling on Performance and Recovery the results across are sometimes contradictory, with no agreed upon mechanical reason for why it should work and heavily tied to the psychological aspect of it.
It can be effective placebo treatment if you believe in it, but won’t actually treat the DOMS.
What I always found best was doing something active but gentle straight after the workout session. If available, a swim is great for this, as it involves the whole body. A proper warm-down with stretches and general movement does the job too, but you need to do it in a complete way.