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3 Things to Know to Outperform Your Competition 3 Things to Know to Outperform Your Competition
The grind is real. When you’re training to compete your competition is training to win. Train to win, play to win, and implement recovery... 3 Things to Know to Outperform Your Competition

The grind is real. When you’re training to compete your competition is training to win.

Train to win, play to win, and implement recovery to top off your game and help you build deeper capacity for performance.

Too many athletes overly focus on the active aspects of training. They go to practice, drill strategies/techniques/plays/etc. They exercise to strengthen and fortify their bodies. But these activities literally “break the body down.”

The Grind is Real

To get into top form, to go from grind to game, here are 3 things you should know to up your level of performance.

• Know that, the score will take care of itself the better you take care of yourself. Call it whatever you want – biohacking, athletic recovery, or self-care but it starts by knowing that exercise, activity, and effort all break the body down, they don’t make us stronger. When measured post-exercise, health bio-markers look as though we’re sick. It’s the rest, right refueling, and smart recovery that we do that makes us stronger and better. Get clear, overtraining can set you up to under-perform rather than outperform your competition.

• Get good sleep and take naps. I used to operate from the “work hard, crash hard” mindset. Sleep isn’t only about needing rest and feeling energized. Quality sleep is probably the single most important physiological factor that we need to perform our best. Sleep consolidates the information you were trying to embed into your body by drilling and practice. It enables our brains to clean out toxins more effectively than when we’re awake. Exercise and sleep both trigger the release of HGH (human growth hormone) which increases metabolism and increases athletic performance, but 75% of HGH is released during sleep. Top athletes not only get a good nights sleep, they nap during the day. Don’t sleep on this advice!

• Get a massage or bodywork session, down-regulate your nervous system, or use sensory deprivation. Exercise is a type of stress, things like massage and bodywork, float tanks, and cryo or ice baths can affect the parasympathetic nervous system recalibrating our bodies into rest, relax, and recover mode. This may even help strengthen heart rate variability, a strong indicator of overall good health.

Good to Great

A good athlete is strong, ready, and on, but great athletes are adaptive, present, responsive, and calm.

Great athletes can turn it up or down on demand. They are present to circumstance and know how to operate internal control switches.

Adaptability and resilience increase performance, and they are also characteristics of good health. Don’t keep running in the red, seek out the right therapies and know your local resources that will allow you to modify, make use of, and increase the results of your down time.

 

About MedicinEvolution:

MedicinEvolution’s purpose is to reduce pain and other symptoms that you haven’t had luck with.

 

MedicinEvolution helps you Outperform Your Competition training alone cannot.

How you feel IS your quality of life. Take ownership, transform, and thrive today!

Do you want to improve your function or discomfort?

Get the knowledge, tools, and principles you need to transform your body.

Chris Corrales of MedicinEvolution shows you how to Outperform Your Competition

Chris Corrales

Chris combines the wonders of postural, alignment, and bio-mechanics through bodywork and structural integration to help patients get rid of pain and remain active in their daily lives. For over 10 years he has been Dublin's top sports massage therapist, working with Olympic level athletes, martial artists, NFL and college football players, high school athletes, and professional athletes looking to compete at their highest level. He is certified in Massage, The Rolf Method of Structural Integration, as well as Energy Medicine, the Emotional Body, and the dramatic effects of subtle spinal interventions. He is active on YouTube and has his own podcast. Chris staffs transformational growth workshops which he sees are an extension of the bodywork. In his spare time he enjoys training in Brazilian Jiu-jitsu, and being in nature with his family.

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