Overtraining rarely starts with pain

Tom Johansson

February 28, 2025

Overtraining rarely starts with pain

Tom Johansson

February 28, 2025

Overtraining rarely starts with pain

Tom Johansson

February 28, 2025

Here’s what it usually starts with instead

Pain gets attention.
But by the time it shows up, overtraining has often been building for days — sometimes weeks.

Here’s a quick checklist of early signs that are easy to miss (and easy to brush off):

  • “That session felt harder than it should have.”

  • Performance is flat, even with normal recovery

  • You’re sleeping, but not waking up rested

  • Mood is slightly off — more reactive, less motivated

  • Small things feel heavier. Warm-ups take longer.

  • The same effort gives a different heart rate response

  • You’re training, but not adapting

None of these mean something’s wrong on their own.
But together?
They point to a system under strain.

If you’re seeing three or more of these, it might not be a bad week.
It might be the beginning of overload.

The good news: this is the window.
The one where small changes can still shift the outcome.

Here’s what it usually starts with instead

Pain gets attention.
But by the time it shows up, overtraining has often been building for days — sometimes weeks.

Here’s a quick checklist of early signs that are easy to miss (and easy to brush off):

  • “That session felt harder than it should have.”

  • Performance is flat, even with normal recovery

  • You’re sleeping, but not waking up rested

  • Mood is slightly off — more reactive, less motivated

  • Small things feel heavier. Warm-ups take longer.

  • The same effort gives a different heart rate response

  • You’re training, but not adapting

None of these mean something’s wrong on their own.
But together?
They point to a system under strain.

If you’re seeing three or more of these, it might not be a bad week.
It might be the beginning of overload.

The good news: this is the window.
The one where small changes can still shift the outcome.

Here’s what it usually starts with instead

Pain gets attention.
But by the time it shows up, overtraining has often been building for days — sometimes weeks.

Here’s a quick checklist of early signs that are easy to miss (and easy to brush off):

  • “That session felt harder than it should have.”

  • Performance is flat, even with normal recovery

  • You’re sleeping, but not waking up rested

  • Mood is slightly off — more reactive, less motivated

  • Small things feel heavier. Warm-ups take longer.

  • The same effort gives a different heart rate response

  • You’re training, but not adapting

None of these mean something’s wrong on their own.
But together?
They point to a system under strain.

If you’re seeing three or more of these, it might not be a bad week.
It might be the beginning of overload.

The good news: this is the window.
The one where small changes can still shift the outcome.