meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Fuel Your Strength

Are You Overtraining?

Fuel Your Strength

Steph Gaudreau

Fitness, Health & Fitness, Nutrition

4.81.2K Ratings

🗓️ 14 March 2023

⏱️ 36 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Having a good training plan is key to helping you achieve your goals, but it's not everything. Overtraining can happen for a large number of reasons that have nothing to do with your training plan, which is why it is so important, especially for us athletes over 40. If you are concerned about overtraining but not sure if your training plan is to blame, this episode is for you.

If You Want to Prevent Over Training, You Should:

  1. Make sure that you are fueling appropriately for the level of activity you are doing

  2. Learn how to fluctuate your intensity in your training to promote active recovery

  3. Dont forget the importance of viewing sleep as a non-negotiable

The #1 Problem I See

If you want to have a high energy output when it comes to your training, you need to have a high energy input; it is as simple as that. Not fueling properly for the activity level you are engaging in results in an energy mismatch that can have a serious effect on your results.

Not eating enough is the biggest problem I see in my clients and community. Undereating for the level of activity you are doing will put you in a state of low energy availability, and it will be impossible or even dangerous for you to push to the level you want in your training.

Finding a System That Works

The good news is an athlete over 40, you don't need to do less of the things that you love; you just have to be clever about it. Allowing your body to properly and actively rest is another major key to gaining better adaptation through your training.

Fluctuating your intensity to allow for proper rest is the only way that you are going to make progress in a sustainable way. By blending your active recovery with your intensity and learning to listen to what your body is telling you, you can avoid overtraining and get better at the things you love to do.

Have you ever considered that your overtraining might have to do with something other than your movement program? Share your thoughts with me in the comments on the episode page.

In This Episode

  • Understanding my personal backstory when it comes to overtraining (3:12)
  • The problem with making up your own programming when you don't have enough experience (10:33)
  • One of the biggest issues I see out there in the world that may be impacting your training (15:00)
  • The first thing that you need to do to prevent a state of overtraining (22:14)
  • Why you need to be strict about your sleep and active recovery (29:09)

Quotes

“I have made all of these mistakes. I have taken the long ass way to figure them out. And luckily for you, I have been able to condense all of that learning, all of the education, from both formal education to the school of hard knocks, and put it in the resources, the podcast, the private podcast, the courses, the coaching that I do.” (7:26)

“I’m doing this episode for you because I want you to be able to look outside of just the training plan itself and figure out if you are really overtraining or if there are other things at play.” (10:02)

“Your eating has to support your training.” (20:29)

“You can do it! You can do it all! You just have got to fluctuate the intensity of those things.” (24:17)

“Yes, having a smart training plan matters. But being able to adjust the plan is just as important.” (28:20)

Featured on the Show

Apply for Strength Nutrition Unlocked Here

Find the full show notes here

Follow Steph on Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube | Pinterest

I'd really love it if you would take 1 min and leave us a rating and review on iTunes!

Podcast production & marketing support by the team at Counterweight Creative

Support the Podcast

Get 20% off Legion Supplements with code STEPH

Get 10% off GORUCK with code FYS10

Follow Steph on Instagram

Rate and review on Apple Podcasts

Related Episodes

FYS 394: Within-Day Energy Deficit

FYS 392: Understanding Total Daily Energy Expenditure

FYS 391: What is Relative Energy Deficiency in Sport (RED-S)?

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Past your mind back to the year 2010. Let's go back in that mental-time machine. I want to tell you a story.

0:06.5

I had just come off of a season of racing endurance distance mountain bikes.

0:13.2

Long long races and then I transitioned right into racing exterra off road triathlon.

0:19.4

I had never done triathlon before but I had done lots of distance running. Of course lots of

0:23.6

distance biking so hey why not just go all the way and start adding swimming in and doing triathlon

0:30.5

which I did. After my last exterra race of the season I was completely depleted. I was just exhausted

0:39.3

and I burned out. I burned out from racing. Now that event ended up being a blessing in disguise

0:46.6

because I found strength training after that. But if I had to look back and say did I really

0:52.5

burn out from racing was I overtraining? I've learned a lot from that experience that I want to share

1:00.1

with you because oftentimes what we pin on overtraining as we're just doing too much exercise

1:08.6

is actually down to three key things that I see my students getting wrong very very often

1:17.4

until they come to work with me. In this episode I'm going to be sharing three tips to prevent

1:22.9

overtraining that you may not have heard before. Of course the topic of overtraining goes very far

1:30.9

but today on this episode I want to go into three important things that I want you to look at

1:37.0

besides the training plan itself if you suspect that you might be teetering on the edge of overtraining.

1:48.2

If you're an athletic 40-something woman who loves lifting weights, challenging yourself and

1:53.8

doing hard shit the fuel your strength podcast is for you. You'll learn how to eat, train and

2:00.6

recover smarter so you build strength and muscle, have more energy and perform better in and out

2:07.6

of the gym. I'm strength nutrition strategist and weightlifting coach Steph Goddrow. The fuel your

2:13.7

strength podcast dives into evidence-based strategies for nutrition, training and recovery

2:20.2

and why once you're approaching your 40s and beyond you need to do things a little differently

2:25.8

than you did in your 20s. We're here to challenge the limiting industry narratives about what

...

Transcript will be available on the free plan in -744 days. Upgrade to see the full transcript now.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from Steph Gaudreau, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of Steph Gaudreau and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright © Tapesearch 2025.