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Soreness


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Originally posted by linabina

just keep stretching... u also may be lifting more than ur body can get used to right away... lower ur weight and/or do a lil less of what ur doing and see if that makes a difference.. but either way, STRETCH :D

lina is right, but it sounds like your working muscles in your body that arent use to being worked, thus the soreness. being sore jus means that you are waking up unused muscles.

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The easiest way to stop the pain is to stop working out...

Usually if you work out really hard (lifting weights) and your muscles are sore the following day, you have made tiny tears in your muscles. The preceding days, your muscles will heal/repair this time making your muscles a little stronger to avoid that happening the next time. In essence with weight lifting, you try to work out harder than your previous time that way this process repeats - your muscles get stronger and you get bigger/more tone.

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What captainpec is referring to is called microtrauma. Very very tinny tears in the muscle. This is basically how your muscles grow. You break them down and they grow larger and stronger to cope with the added stress from weightlifting.

A little bit of soreness is to be expected, it means you are working the muscle. If it's chronic and severely painful then you may be using bad form or have injured yourself.

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learn to love the pain.. it means your workout is working.. just remember to take in a lot of protein to build the muscle. If it hurts too much lighten the load until you feel more 'comfortable' pain if you know what I mean. Also make sure its muscle pain and not joint pain.

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  • 2 weeks later...

glutamine is a good idea

supplements do help

*Antidioxidants

Try 500 milligrams of vitamin C and 400 to 800 IU of vitamin E,

or any muli- antioxidant complex before or after your workout. This will help reduce some of the oxidative damage that will occur with exercise, which also can lead to soreness, as well as reduce the production of cell messengers called cytokines--which are involved in the chemical pathway leading to muscle damage and soreness.

* Warm up thoroughly before lifting weights aerobics, treadmill, bike, any cardio to increase your body temperature, including the temperature of your muscles--this increases their pliability and ability to resist damage.

* Do cardio after your weight workout.

This increases blood flow to and away from the muscles, meaning delivery of more nutrients and hormones for recovery and growth, and removal of the chemical waste products that lead to soreness.

* Stretch after your workout. Stretching does help reduce soreness.

* Ice it. Place ice on your muscles for about 15 minutes after a taxing workout.

Unless the pain is severe and debilitating, like you can't walk after heavy squats, don't taking an NSAID [nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug] such as motrin/ibuprofen.

Motrin can actually inhibit muscle growth by blocking the pathways that lead to the muscle soreness, but also lead to the stimulation of muscle growth.

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