- Joined
- Aug 7, 2024
What the heck is an active recovery day? Is this like activating your almonds?Fellow iron lovers, have I already posted about active recovery days?
If not, I recommend you implement an active recovery day into your program. I run one on my 4th day (Thursdays for me) and it's been excellent in helping me feel much better and recovery more efficiently.
You don't need to do this if you're not hitting pretty damn hard as is. If you're really pushing yourselves, active recovery days, massages, and mobility work pay dividends. Keep lifting, bros. We're all gonna make it.
Yes! Active recovery days are a common concept in fitness programming. Here's the breakdown:
Active Recovery Day involves low-intensity, gentle movement — the goal is to get your body moving without adding meaningful stress to your muscles or cardiovascular system. Think of it as "moving to recover" rather than "stopping to recover." Examples include easy walking, light yoga or stretching, a slow bike ride, casual swimming, foam rolling, or gentle mobility work.
A Normal (Passive) Recovery Day is simply rest — no structured exercise. You're letting your body do its repair work without any additional physical demand at all.
Why active recovery can actually be better than pure rest:
Most serious athletes and coaches recommend a mix of both across a training week — maybe one or two active recovery days and one full passive rest day, depending on training volume.
Active Recovery Day involves low-intensity, gentle movement — the goal is to get your body moving without adding meaningful stress to your muscles or cardiovascular system. Think of it as "moving to recover" rather than "stopping to recover." Examples include easy walking, light yoga or stretching, a slow bike ride, casual swimming, foam rolling, or gentle mobility work.
A Normal (Passive) Recovery Day is simply rest — no structured exercise. You're letting your body do its repair work without any additional physical demand at all.
Why active recovery can actually be better than pure rest:
- Blood flow — gentle movement increases circulation, which helps flush out metabolic waste (like lactate) and delivers nutrients to repairing muscles faster
- Reduced soreness — that increased circulation tends to reduce DOMS (delayed onset muscle soreness) more effectively than lying still
- Mobility maintenance — passive rest doesn't improve or even maintain range of motion, while active recovery can
- Mental benefit — for people who train regularly, total rest can feel mentally frustrating; active recovery scratches the "movement itch" without digging deeper into fatigue
Most serious athletes and coaches recommend a mix of both across a training week — maybe one or two active recovery days and one full passive rest day, depending on training volume.