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Can You Be Healthy AND Super Fit At The Same Time?

One often hears this bandied about: You can’t be really healthy and super fit at the same time, they’re different things.

Introduction

Part of this statement is correct and another part is only partially true. They absolutely are different things and attaining a high level of fitness for a specific sport can be detrimental to your overall health. However, they are definitely not mutually exclusive, they simply require a separate focus on each. Let me explain.

Fitness

Fitness is defined as the ability to perform a task. So, if I want to run a marathon, I need to get fit to run a marathon by running. It’s perfectly possible to achieve this without reference to my health at all and there are multitudes of people whose bodies are a testament to this.

I’ve written a lot about fitness for your event on this blog, not least this post about specificity.

The irony is that many, if not most of us got into sport - especially endurance sport as a way to improve our health. At some point though, the health befits started to wane as we went after better and better performance (fitness). I’d argue that it’s possible to get back to that original intention without sacrificing the performance aspects we’ve become so accustomed to chasing.

Health

Health, on the other hand, can be defined as the optimal interplay of the organs (and I’d add organ systems). Being healthy doesn’t require much fitness at all. It does, however, require that you look after a myriad of other things. These are often the same things that our busy lives, made busier by our devotion to endurance sport, cause us to neglect.

We come to accept so many things as normal, "because we're athletes" when they simply aren't. Sore joints are not normal. Recurrent muscle tears are not normal. Frequent upper respiratory infections are not normal. Disturbed sleep is not normal. Constant irritability is not normal.

Also, while these can be symptoms of overtraining, they can simply be the result of a lower than normal level of overall health.

I’m not going to explain each item in the following list because explanations for many can be found elsewhere on this blog. In your pursuit of being healthy and super fit, you need to consider...

  • Sleep
  • Hydration
  • Nutrition
  • Mobility
  • A degree of cardiovascular fitness (not a problem if you’re an endurance athlete)
  • A degree of strength (a big missing link for many endurance athletes)
  • Recovery time, including walking
  • Relationships (We need friends and family who support what we do. Few things are harder than trying to achieve a goal that runs contrary to what significant people in our lives want.)
  • Other hobbies and diversionary activities (Fixating on your sport 24 hours a day is not good for your mental health.)

Summary

I’d like to encourage you to reflect for a moment, first on why you started your sport in the first place and then on what areas you need to address in order to be truly healthy alongside being the athlete that you most certainly are. A healthy athlete is one who can continue to be an athlete for the long term.

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Will Newton


In over twenty years of coaching, I have coached everyone from absolute beginners to world champions.
My interest in getting the best results for people who train for health and fitness or the love of sport, rather than as professionals, drives me to find the most effective ways to get results.
My mission is simple: Be in better shape at 70 than most people are at 20, and to help you do the same.