Sometimes we get or feel banged up during a workout or sports performance, but there’s a big difference between feeling hurt and being injured. Feeling hurt might mean muscle soreness, the burn of a tough workout, tightness and/or bruising but it’s something that generally heals with rest. An injury involves actual damage to your muscles, joints, or bones and usually needs more than just a day off to heal. Listening to your body’s signals is crucial and ignoring them can turn a minor issue into a serious injury. When you push through pain without recognizing its source, you’re letting your ego override the real needs of your body, and that’s a fast track to sidelining yourself. You’re not always gonna feel 100% but whether it’s cutting back the intensity or focusing on a more in depth warmup, it’s best to prep and take care of you the right way.
Be Pro-active, Not Passive:
Injury prevention isn’t just about avoiding bad luck, it’s about being proactive in how you approach your workouts. A typical workout routine might focus on building strength, speed, or endurance, but an injury prevention-focused program looks at the bigger picture. It includes exercises that target your weaknesses, improve flexibility, and enhance joint stability, areas that regular workouts might overlook. Now this doesn’t mean you need to change up everything you’re working towards, just implement a little bit here and there. By being proactive, you can identify potential problem areas and address them before they become injuries. This means incorporating exercises that might not seem like much now but will pay off big time in keeping you healthy and injury free.
Evaluate Your Needs:
Not everybody has the same needs when it comes to injury prevention. True injury prevention includes the essential evaluation of your own biomechanical needs. Whether you’re lifting weights, running, or playing a sport, different activities put stress on different parts of your body. Reflect on the specific demands of your chosen activity and how your body responds to them. Are your knees taking a beating during your runs? Is your lower back feeling strained after lifting? What are common injuries in my chosen activity? By identifying these stress points, you can tailor your injury prevention strategy to target and strengthen these areas, helping you stay strong and resilient.
Simple, Small Steps:
Injury prevention doesn’t require a complete overhaul of your workout routine, but just small, consistent steps that will make a big difference. Start by slowly incorporating injury prevention exercises into your warm up or cool down. These can include mobility drills, stability exercises, or light strengthening moves that prime your body for the main workout while also fortifying it against potential injuries. Over time, these small additions will build up your resilience, making your body more prepared to handle the demands of your workouts and/or performances without breaking down. Keeping it small and simple will add up to significant progress in keeping your body healthy and injury free.
Written by:
Dan Aquino – BS, ASFA-CPT
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