Hi. I've been working out about four times a week for the past six months or so, and probably real regularly since about the beginning of November. Anyway, I'm really feeling tired, stagnant, like I don't want to work out and I think I may be plateauing.
May you have the foresight to know where you are going, the hindsight to know where you have been and the insight to know when you have gone too far.
Lets rock with these like thoughts, BABY!
When one plateau's, the types of plateau's and its degress can be different in many ways (and related to one another) and the causes can be a variable blend of different stumuli within the persons life.
You listed these symptoms:
1. Stagnant. What does this mean to you?
2. Tired.
3. Dont want to workout.
The amount of calories and the circumference of DIET can a be major driving factor in ALL THREE symptoms you listed. You could be eating inappropriately and allowing enough REST between workouts (and I am assuming your work out routine is adequate to keep things equal), and STILL have these symptoms if the diet is not correct for you.
In addition, it could be a combination of an inadequate diet and not enough rest (recuperation and repair of your body from rest, and not feeding in the tools of repair with diet).
Furthermore, it is possible you are overtraining, not allowing enough rest, and your diet is inadequate at the same time. Additionally, it can be your diet is adequate, and your overtraining and not allowing enough rest. Even with proper diet, overtraining (ALONE) can cause these symptoms. And, its possible you are training properly, diet is correct, and you are not allowing enough rest (recuperation time).
The possible and potential causes can be many.
However, one can have a foundation or source material to review to assist in addressing the problen if one:
1.
Has a Weight Training Log. This would contain your prior history.
If one is keeping a training journal (and they should as progression is a key factor), this essential journal can tell you many things: your progress from one work out to the next (and individual exercises), and whether your progress is occurring good and/or slowing. Its this sort of detail, than can tell you if you need to change an exercise (apply a different stimulus), and in effect tell you if you need to change things up. In addition, if one is keeping a diet journal per day along with the training journal, one can look in the diet journal per day and compare results in the training journal and in effect determine if its something in the diet or training and/or both is slowing progress (not to mention personal intensity application to the exercise and overal routine, as there are many factors that can hamper progress).
2.
Has a Diet log. This contains what you had eaten (types of food, macronutrients), and calorie history coresponding to your days off and weight training history.
3.
A honest running diary on how workouts went. Problems with diet, how you felt, etc, etc. For example, you list whether you are getting stronger and/or whether you can see physical differences in your physical composition. In addition, you can add any "life" factors that have effected how you feel toward yourself--and whether this has effected how you feel about your training.
4.
Set a consistent course to obtain knowledge of diet and fitness on a regular and continued basis. Including the mental side.
Its been my opinion from the day I joined the forum, that one needs to learn how to "master their self" within the confinement of the types of bodily feedback (psychological, biological, etc) that one WILL receive when deficit dieting or surplus dieting. We deal with motivation with college and issues in life, and meet and exceed our goals, and pay so little attention to the VERY ISSUE that is the motivation killer in diet and fitness.
ONE MUST TRAIN THEIR MIND and while in development, you will have the tools to work with to deal with psychological, biological, etc, that WILL COME your way. Be not surprised. This WILL NOT BE THE FIRST TIME nor the last.
It should be no surprise that if you "diet", that the body is going to kick in some psychological and biological defenses to compel you to eat or if one is in surplus, cause barriers in eating enough.
In addition, it should be no surprise that parts of ones personality (likes and dislikes, etc) can be a inhibitor. We can spend so much time on the basics on diet and fitness, and lose focus on one of the PRIMARY functions that can cause failure: Psychological and biological feed back of the body. Give TIME to gain knowledge on how to deal with them. Then learn how to apply what you have learned--you WILL NOT be sorry for the time or effort sacrificed.
I realize that the first "three points" do not fit everyone, but their IS power in these three logs nonetheless.
For example:
1. You can pinpoint exactly when a progression plateau develops in your training routine, and you know the coresponding rest periods given at this time. You also know what type of training you have been doing.
2. You can then look at your diet (with a KNOWLEDEABLE EYE) within this period.
3. You also have a history of how you felt leading up to your problem. In addition, you will have a log on your strengths achieved from your training and any physical improvements.
Now, lets say one embarks on "active" learning toward, weight training, diet, and mental factors associated with what they are doing (Is trying to learn all he/she can while exercising at the same time). One can take this foundation, make applicable changes, and will not be guessing as to prior history and will have something SOLID to work with.
With this in mind, I would like to know the following:
1. What has your diet been like? Your calories and macronutrients? Have you determined your MT Line? I see your trying to gain muscle. What has your surplus been running, if any? Drinking enough water? How much?
Diet can mess with strength and physical progression. Diet can mess with mental attitude, cause depression, and a feeling of being lethargic (to name a few examples). It can also mess with motivation.
In addition the Diet is the first place one looks if there not gaining good weight, and the first issue is the amount of calories, and then whether your eating enough nutrients to allow some growth decisions to occur in the body.
Adjust this very thing, correctly, you will gain weight. Secondly, you do want appropriate amount of "Stimulation" for growth (to allow the extra calories to do its job), this "Stimulation" is the weight training, and Third, you want to allow "rest and recuperation" to allow the body to use the calories and nutrients from the appropriate "Stimulation" for growth to occur.
2. What specifically has your training been like? The specific exercises, days of rest, etc. The stimulation of muscle growth occurrs within the gym (or the reason for a body change), however, actual growth occurs during rest.
What you are doing and what you are not doing in your training can mess with strength and physical progression. This too can mess with mental attitude, cause depression, and a feeling of being lethargic (to name a few examples). It can also mess with motivation.
3. What has your physical improvements been like? What has your strength increases been like--leading up to the present. This is one PRIMARY personal motivator and inhibitor of motivation at the same time--dependent on progress toward ones goal.
ALWAYS set time intervals of review and reflection. Do not stick with one routine--too long. Stick with it long enough, but change it every now and then.
Answer my questions.
You already to took one GIANT step toward solving your problem. First you recognized it, second, you are seeking advice and knowledge to solve it. Add in "application", and you will NOT FAIL--EVER.
ROCK ON!
Best wishes to you in life and within fitness,
Chillen