But consider
this...from an adapatation standpoint, of the following two scenarios, what
would give your body the greater stimulus for growth?
If you train the muscle
hard once, you'll get a good growth stimulus. Your body immediately starts
sending nutrients to the damaged area and starts rebuilding. When the muscle is
fully recovered and is no longer sore, you train the muscle again and restart
the process. This is the standard way of training and it usually means directly
training a muscle twice a week with at least 2 or 3 days in between sessions for
that specific muscle.
In the next scenario, you
train the muscle hard then the next day, train it hard again. Recovery is
nowhere near complete and the muscle is sore when you train it on the second
day.
Here's the key...if you
think about it, would the body see this second scenario as a greater threat to
its survival? Would the body then ramp up its recovery processes to try and
prepare for the next challenge, which it (from its recent experience of being
hit with the same hard stimulus two days in a row) thinks is coming again very
soon?
In my experience, this
absolutely happens. The body's response to training is a very simple
"stimulus-response" system, but your body is also fully capable of sending more
resources where more resources are perceived as being needed.
When you eat, your body
sends more blood to the digestive system. Your brain doesn't tell it to do that,
it just happens. When you get hot, your body produces perspiration. The same
thing happens with training. For example, when you train your biceps, your body
sends blood and nutrients to the biceps for recovery. It doesn't send it to the
calves if the calves haven't been worked.
If you train your biceps
hard two days in a row, your body sees this as a big threat to the biceps and
will ramp up recovery processes to specifically protect the biceps. If the
biceps are still sore... VERY big threat! THEN you allow the biceps to recover.
The two days of training has built much greater recovery momentum, getting more
results out of your training.
Here's yet another
advantage to training a muscle when it's still sore...even if you don't train it
hard, you will still be sending blood (and therefore nutrients) to that muscle,
helping it to recover faster than if you didn't train it at all. So even if
you're not up for a hard workout for a sore muscle, even giving it some light to
moderate work will still help with recovery.
So I've talked about
training a muscle two days in a row...what about when you're scheduled to train
it a couple of days later and it's still sore at that point? The same concepts
apply - your body will STILL perceive that as a greater threat and increase
recovery.
The only times I would NOT
recommend training when sore is if the soreness causes you to use poor form in
your exercises or if the soreness is so bad that it makes the exercises too
painful to do.
For instance, if you just
did deadlifts for the first time in your life and the next day, you have a VERY
hard time sitting down without falling down into the seat, you may want to wait
a bit before doing deadlifts again. Your form will change because of the pain
and it could lead to injury.
But if your muscles are a
bit stiff or sore, go ahead and train them. Your body will ramp up your recovery
processes in response.
How do I know training the
body with this frequency can be effective? I'll give the best example I know
(WARNING - if you're a proponent of high-intensity, very infrequent training,
this will make you shiver in your boots!). This is NOT a program I would
recommend lightly to anyone because at this time, being on vacation from work, I
was basically only eating, sleeping and training...no stress, no extraneous
activity.
This was one of the most
extraordinary programs I ever put myself on, not only in terms of workload but
results as well. It involved doing total body workouts twice a day, six days a
week. This meant 12 total-body workouts per week, increasing the workload every
week.
I used partial training,
negative training, low reps and high reps. For the entire first week, I was
EXTREMELY sore but I stuck with it and trained everything twice a day, no matter
how sore I was.
After 3 weeks of this
training, I backed off, still doing 12 training sessions per week but splitting
the body in half - I was still working my whole body every single day and doing
partials and negatives.
During the back-off phase,
my recovery processes were practically unstoppable! NOTHING I did could make me
sore (and believe me, I tried!) and my strength and muscle mass shot way up.
Conventional wisdom would
believe I would be completely totaled at the end of a program like this,
overtrained, small and weak. My results? In 6 weeks, I went from 208 lbs in
bodyweight to 228 lbs. I went from a 295 bench press for 1 rep to 350 lbs for 1
rep. I did a partial top-range lockout squat with 1100 lbs for 150 reps (not a
typo!).
This is a VERY extreme
example of training through muscle soreness and using maximum workout frequency.
But the take-home lesson from it is this: you CAN get great results by training
even when you're sore! Your body will react to the stress and ramp up recovery
in response.
One quick tip: if you want
to decrease post-workout soreness, try taking 500 mg of Vitamin C about an hour
before your workout. This helps protect against muscle soreness.