Monday, April 18, 2022

The Burnout And Making The Best Of It

 At some point in our lives, we all have been burnt out whether from sports, exercise, work or performing as an artist in music or films. You can only go so far and at some point, you hit a peak and it's just wearing you down. We can at times push through and just toughen it out but does that really do anything for your mental health or physical wellbeing? If you're burnt out and you can't perform at your best and it consistently ends up being at your worst, how do you keep going without going insane?

Life is a pain in the ass, we know that and there are tough people out there gutting it out day after day whether they're at their best or when they're most exhausted and running on fumes just to squeak by. I respect those that push themselves to take care of loved ones or just themselves and make their living but also it can be hard going on and the light is just barely lit enough to where you're crawling and dragging yourself mentally or physically and it can lead to being a bitter person with life draining out of them. 

From a fitness POV, burnouts usually happen when one starts out and just goes for the kill without giving themselves time to progress and think their superman or wonder woman right off the bat. How many times are we going to read or hear that old cliché of going hard for a short period and than just being so broken down it takes a longer time to come back or even the will to come back? The thing is, it can happen to those who've been doing fitness for decades or even a few years and all of a sudden, that candle goes out. How do we come back from that? 

We can make the best of it by either changing something up, recharge and built ourselves back up or we can take that energy and put it into something that gives us that enthusiasm and interest. I can already hear the "easier said than done" set of shouting in my head and I feel you man, it happens to the best of us and it's hard finding a balance but without balance, you'll fall over and one extreme will come more than the other and you're left with scratching and clawing to balance things out again when you're already on your last breath or physical/mental effort. 

I've gotten burnt out from doing hundreds of squats a day, going too long on Animal Workouts, pushed the weights harder than I should've and put stress on myself that it becomes like depression when it's just not there anymore. For me, when that happens, it becomes a battle with your mental self to get back up and find something that helps you get out of that darkness and get back to that level of not just interest but happiness, the thing that makes you you and a level of willing to keep fighting but at a different intensity. When I need a break, I try to do things at much lower intensity like just doing Joint Loosening workouts or going swimming when it's nice out or go for a small walk or do mediation to clear my head. I still train every single day but it isn't hardcore or killing myself, it's about finding ways to refresh everything and powering up the batteries until I'm at my best again.

When you're burnt out, it can affect your performance and when you're off your game for a period of time, the performance can get smaller and smaller until you're so off it looks like you've forgotten completely how to do something right. Yes there is muscle memory and your reflexes are still there but if things aren't in sync or flowing, it becomes dangerous and not in a good way and could end up hurting yourself or others and it wouldn't matter whether it was physical or mental. 

When you're feeling burnt out or about to hit that threshold, do your best to breathe and slowly take a step back. I'm not saying this for every situation because that's not how things completely work but it's important to reassess, give yourself a bit of a breather and possibly slow the pace down. Listen to your body and your mind. 

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