Respect the threshold of safety In the heat of competition, we often preach the gospel of pushing through the pain. But as a coach, I know there is a razor-sharp line between the grit that builds champions and the recklessness that ends careers—or lives. Your body is a high-performance machine with a sophisticated onboard diagnostic system. If you ignore the warning lights, you aren't being tough; you are being foolish. Real resilience starts with knowing when to hold the line and when to retreat to fight another day. Dizziness during active exertion Feeling lightheaded after a brutal high-intensity interval is standard; your body is adjusting to a sudden drop in output. However, if the world starts spinning while you are still ramping up the wattage, you have a problem. During exercise, your heart should be flooding your brain and muscles with oxygenated blood. Dizziness during exertion suggests a failure in that delivery system. If the lights dim while you're still pushing, shut it down immediately. The heart rate mismatch We train by the numbers for a reason. If you are cruising in Zone 2 but your heart rate monitor is screaming at 180 beats per minute, your internal rhythm is out of sync with your physical reality. A disproportionately high heart rate for a low-intensity effort is a clear signal of cardiovascular distress or autonomic dysfunction. Ease off safely and wait for the numbers to normalize. If they don't, you need a specialist, not more intervals. Unexplained breathlessness and chest tightness There is a specific type of breathlessness that accompanies a hill climb, and then there is "undue breathlessness." When your lungs can't keep pace with a workload they usually handle with ease, don't dismiss it as a bad day. Pay equal attention to new chest tightness. While some athletes have chronic tightness they've managed for years, any pressure or pain that arrives "out of the blue" is a red flag for a cardiac event. Tightness is often the first sign of a blockage that will eventually tank your efficiency and your health. Trust the baseline of your performance Winning requires a deep intimacy with your own physiology. You must know what a "good day" feels like to recognize when a "bad day" is actually a dangerous day. If your efficiency drops off a cliff and you cannot reach your standard intensity levels despite the effort, your body is likely diverting resources to manage an internal crisis. Listen to that signal. A coach can fix a technical flaw, but a health practitioner has to fix a cardiac one. Don't gamble your season on a symptom you're too proud to report.
cardiovascular health
Concepts
- 5 hours ago