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  1. #1
    Join Date
    May 2004
    Location
    Longmont, CO
    Posts
    545
    Quote Originally Posted by Dogmama
    Frequent illness is a sign of overtraining. You can overtrain easily when you add life stressors onto a heavy workout schedule. And, it sounds like you have a pretty stressful life right now. How about gearing down a bit - giving yourself a couple of days rest or active rest each week?
    I definitely second this. I had a goal of riding every day last year, plus some ice hockey and some martial arts and ... well, I had all sorts of symptoms of overtraining. Poor sleep. Frequent illness and injury. Constant fatigue. It sucked.

    Here's a list of symptoms:

    http://sportsmedicine.about.com/cs/i.../aa040600a.htm
    monique

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jan 2005
    Location
    Vernon, British Columbia
    Posts
    2,226
    This spring I thought I was overtraining, too. The jury is still out, but I did find out one thing....

    It seems I am allergic to ginger. Each time I got sick, I took more ginger to try to kill the bug....but I think I was just poisoning myself.

    I had a mess of bloodwork done, which all returned normal.

    Now, I said the jury is still out because I haven't actually gotten back to serious training yet, so I don't know for sure. But I sure do feel better now that I've cut ginger out!

    How this relates to you?....maybe you have an allergy instead of or in addition to overtraining or being stressed...

    Regardless of what's causing the sicknesses, you do still need time for yourself and for relaxation! Good luck, Late! You'll be okay!

    Namaste,
    ~T~

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
    Location
    San Diego
    Posts
    1,516
    LBTC- that's the first thing I thought of too! I developed allergies at 29 yrs of age and couldn't figure out what was wrong with me all of a sudden... just kept getting "sick"... finally it got outta control and I went to get checked... allergies! Bloodwork all fine so no indicator there either...

    my doc said it's very common to develop allergies... appears to go nicely with my gray hair... sheesh...getting older blows!
    There is a fine line between "hobby" and "mental illness".

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Nov 2004
    Location
    Central Maryland
    Posts
    39
    Overtraining is a culprit. I can do cold, wet, etc. and am normally fine, except when overtired.

    Allergies also crept on me in the early 40s. Don't know where you are, but... they hit you and you don't expect them. At the same time, I got all these respiratory infections and was sent to ENT, Pulmonary Function docs, asthma guys, etc. Turned out it was reflux and with a change in diet, tilt of the bed and proper medication, that symptom cleared up. Turns out lots of the throat and lung and cough was reflux, which even got sinus involved. Make sure they look at that.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    May 2005
    Posts
    546
    You have all been such a big help! I AM 45 (Holy Hannah!) and I do believe some allergies are creeping into my life. For instance, I never used to get poison ivy, didn't even need to know what it looked like, and now I do need to know.

    But when these symptoms (congestion, headache, fatigue) come with a fever, it's gotta be something else. I did take it easy the long weekend (no choice), and will add some training back in GENTLY when I'm fever free! A friend reminded me today that though it seems like it's been a long time to me, this lifestyle change is still pretty new to my body and a body needs time to adjust to changes. It's really easy to get over-ambitious when you discover the joys of challenging yourself physically - I have to remember that balance is the key. No matter how much I do, I tend to beat myself up over not doing/achieving more. I think the mental exhaustion might be taking it's toll even more than the physical.

    Thanks again - and I will forever be interested in your insight and advice. This is a strange new world for me. Despite this blip, I'm loving the change.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    Corvallis, OR (aka"Bike Central")
    Posts
    66

    Smile

    Hello latelatebloomer! ^^

    I'm sorry to hear that you're having problems getting sick all of a sudden; that just sucks beyond all reason! Have you ever considered taking prenatal vitamins??? It may sound silly, but if it hadn't been for my prenatal vitamins, I would have been much worse off while I was sick with Chron's had I not had them. For as physically sick as I was, I was somehow suprisingly healthy at the same time. I only had just a few colds over the 4 years of being sick, and I was expossed to bronchiteous (sp?), strept throat and the flu, and never got sick with any of them-and Chron's is an autoimmune disease too; go figure!

    I know it's one more pill and believe me I get tired of talking a bunch of pills too, but the prenatal vitamins are great; they've got a little bit of everything in them but it seems to do the trick! Plus, they help to make your hair grow and nails grow longer! Nice perks! ^^

    And congrats on loosing weight!!! I'm going to need a new par of shorts my self as mine are getting so loose that they're riding up and slinking down! *lol* They're not supposed to do that!

    Anyway, I hope you get better and that you're system adjusts soon, it's no fun always feeling under the weather! :P Hugs to you! ^^

    ~Liz
    Last edited by chick on a bike; 07-14-2005 at 12:06 PM.
    Riding a bike takes an amount of certain skill....but riding a bike and not falling off takes true talent.

    ~chick on a bike

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Sep 2004
    Location
    Albuquerque, NM
    Posts
    3,099

    From the allergy queen:

    actually allergies Can cause fevers. After all your body is trying to fight off something it sees as a foreign body so it'll call everything into play to fight it. The biggest problem with allergies is the symptoms can be very vague and nebulous: you may not feel "bad" but you sure don't feel "good". If you do in fact have some allergies And you're overtraining you are now taxing your immune system beyond it's abilities to fight back. So along with everyone else - take some time off. Or if you just can't stay off the bike (seems to be My problem! ) do what they call "active" recovery. The best description I read was: where you ride so slow kids on Big Wheels can pass you!!
    Life should NOT be a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in an attractive and well preserved body, but rather to skid in sideways, champagne in one hand, strawberries in the other, body thoroughly used up, totally worn out and screaming: "Yeah Baby! What a Ride!"

 

 

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