Modern Wisdom - #061 - Christie Aschwanden - The Truth About Sports Recovery
Episode Date: April 4, 2019Christie Aschwanden is a journalist and author of "GOOD TO GO: What the Athlete in All of Us Can Learn From the Strange Science of Recovery". From fancy foam rollers to cryo-therapy, sleep optimisatio...n to compression pants... Today Christie is going to take us through every recovery method you've tried yourself or seen on Instagram, and give us the bottom line regarding their effectiveness. - Extra Stuff: GOOD TO GO Book - https://amzn.to/2YJ7mM5 Follow Christie on Twitter - https://twitter.com/cragcrest Check out everything I recommend from books to products and help support the podcast at no extra cost to you by shopping through this link - https://www.amazon.co.uk/shop/modernwisdom - Get in touch. Join the discussion with me and other like minded listeners in the episode comments on the MW YouTube Channel or message me... Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chriswillx Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/chriswillx YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/ModernWisdomPodcast Email: https://www.chriswillx.com/contact Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
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Hello friends, I'm finally back in the UK and you will be delighted to hear that that means
a return to the twice a week podcast publishing schedule, so let's get into it.
This week I'm sitting down with Christy Ashwandan, who is the author of Good to Go, what the
athlete in all of us can learn from the strange science of recovery.
One of my favourite episodes so far was with Alex Hutchinson on the limits of human
performance as he explained what he discovered during research for his book In Jure.
And today we're going to look at everything on the opposite end of that spectrum.
So from fancy foam rollers to cryogenic therapy, saunas, sleep, optimization,
those compression things, those weird compression
pant things, and every other form of recovery
that you can think of, and you've seen athletes
using on Instagram, we're gonna go through them today.
Christy has done a fantastic analysis of all of the
different ways that people are trying to recover
and assess just what sort of impact they're having.
So if you're an athlete or you know one who is looking to improve their recovery, then
today is absolutely for you.
Please welcome Christy Ashwander. I'm great. Thanks for having me. Thank you for coming on. So what do we go on to learn
about today? Exercise recovery, all things that have to do with exercise recovery. Okay. Recently, some of the guests will know, I spot on the back of your book, that Mr. Alex Hutchinson,
the man behind endure, is a big proponent, a big, big supporter of your book.
Obviously, what he was talking about was a lot of the things to do within training,
what's happening while you train and the experiences that you go through during a session.
And you're now talking about everything else, I guess.
Yeah, that's right.
And I think that the two really make nice companion books,
his book is all about training itself,
whereas mine is about the recovery process
and all of these adaptations and things
that happen in between workouts.
Fantastic.
So where does the book begin?
and things that happen in between workouts. Fantastic.
So where does the book begin?
It actually begins at a place called Denver Sports Recovery,
which is one of many, I like to think of them as recovery
spots that have popped up all around the US.
I'm not sure, actually.
Are these the thing in the UK as well?
I'm going to guess, is it one of those places
where there's a cryo chamber and you can get an IV drip of
nutrients and stuff like that?
Yes, exactly.
No, we are.
Unfortunately, in the UK, that's reserved for kind of elite level athletes.
It's not the sort of thing.
You can go to a spa and have a massage and go in a hot tub, but that's probably about the top end,
I think, of what you can get in the UK, unfortunately.
Yeah, that's interesting. I know that there are a few in Australia as well, but it's definitely
become a thing here in the US. These places, you can go in and for a fee, they're all sorts
of things. So it's not just massage and cryotherapy. You mentioned IVs, which is another common thing,
but there are also all kinds of foam rollers. I call them squeezy pants, but they're
pneumatic compression sleeves that you, they're sort of like sleeping bags for your legs. You
put them on and then they blow up with air and compress your muscles and it frankly feels really nice. That's another popular one. They'll have ice baths,
sannas, pretty much everything that you can purchase that would be used for recovery,
can be found at these places, at these recovery spots.
Wow. Okay. So you're at this spa and what's the story from that?
Yeah. So that was kind of an introduction for me of looking at, okay, when I was an elite
athlete, so I'll just step back for a second.
I used to be a runner, then I became a cross-country skier and cyclist.
And when I was doing these things at sort of an elite level in the early 2000s and late
90s, recovery was really something that we weren't doing.
It was something, and what I mean by that is, it was all these things that we weren't
doing.
You weren't standing up.
You weren't staying out late at night.
You weren't running around doing other stressful things.
So recovery was really about, you know, lying on the couch, maybe putting your nose in a
book, but putting your feet up and resting.
Maybe you took a nap or something.
But now, sort of in the interim, recovery has become its own thing
and almost an extension of training where people are doing all of these things.
They're putting on these squeezy pants.
They're massaging all of their muscles with a foam roller.
They're getting massaged.
A massage is something that is very old and was done in my time as well.
But it's become something where there's a sense that you need to do all these things.
It is not enough to just lie back and wait for recovery to happen,
but you need to do things to facilitate it.
So train hard, recover hard, right?
Exactly. Exactly. If you're not recovering hard, then you know, you're not doing enough.
Exactly, exactly. If you're not recovering hard, then you know, you're not doing enough.
I totally get it. So what during the course of writing this book, where was your mindset before you began? Because, you know, for me personally, I do see a lot of, you know, foam rollers that vibrate
and there's one that's got, you know, this one, I this one level Wi-Fi connection and this one plays
your Bluetooth music and you think like okay so how far do I need to go with these marginal gains
before it becomes sweating the small stuff? So where was your mindset before all of this?
Were you skeptical of recovery or? Yeah that's a great question. So I really tried to go into it with an open mind. So I am a science
writer by training and by vocation. And I think it's really important. If you are having a scientific
mindset, that means always being open to new evidence to sort of keeping an open mind and making sure
that you're truly looking at the evidence before you without too much bias and all of
that. So I went into it thinking, you know, wow, things have really changed since, since,
you know, I was a serious athlete and maybe this is something really important that I need
to know about. But I also had a level of skepticism because I thought, you know, this didn't
always square with the things that I had experienced as an athlete and some of the things that
I knew. So I guess I would say I went in with an open but skeptical line. So sort of like trust but verify,
I think is a really good mantra and an explanation of how I went into this. So I was definitely open
to the idea that some of the stuff, this newfangled stuff was really important. And in fact,
I did find things that were good and that there are some new things that I have adopted for myself after researching this book. But it also turned out that a lot of the things,
you know, really weren't all that they were made out to be. I think that's fairly inevitable,
isn't it? Right. Unfortunately, it's an area where, especially when we're talking about marginal
gains here, it's so easy for a product to hide behind the fact
that it doesn't work with a clever marketing campaign.
The direction of causality is super.
So you know, like, who knows?
Like, some days I wake up and I feel fantastic
and I've only had six hours sleep.
You know, was it because of the very particular
bath salts that I had the I thought, was it the
incense that was burning in the corn?
Is it just a quirk of the fact that you're a dynamic system?
Right.
I think that's a good point.
We are dynamic systems.
Our bodies are very adaptable to you.
And that's the other thing.
We've sort of been taught or sold, maybe, this idea that everything has to be optimal,
and that it's possible to optimize your body.
And if you can just optimize, if there's this magical thing that will happen, and that,
yeah, you may be performing well now, but if you can get just all systems to this, you know,
mythical, optimal state, that everything will be perfect. And it turns out that, although,
look, I think that there is some
truth to that. It's all such true that our bodies are really, really good at adapting to different
environmental conditions. I mean, we evolved to, you know, be able to handle heat and cold and
all of these things that we might throw at it. And so, you know, we're pretty good at performing
under different conditions. And so although there may be things that you can do that will help a
little bit, I think that the expectations that we have here are oversized.
Yeah, I get that. So, you talked about marginal gains, and I think that that's an interesting
way of putting it. And this is sort of one idea that's out there that like, well, you can
do these things that on their own are really small, but if you put them together, then,
you know, so if you have a bunch of things that only make a one or two percent difference,
that may not seem like a lot, but if you do five or six of them, then all of a sudden, you know,
you may be getting to six or seven or eight percent difference, and that's really huge. And again,
in sport, even those small percent differences can be very meaningful. I mean, in a race,
a one% difference
could be the difference between the winner
and someone who's also ran.
So that's one idea that's really been put out there.
Now, there's been a lot of talk.
Sometimes, people who talk about marginal gains
have been accused of using that as we've
explaining gains that might have been made by more illicit means.
And that's a whole debate that I don't want to get into, but I assume that you're familiar
with some of that conversation.
Yeah, I'm sure that everyone who's listening will be.
So before we get into the meat of the individual elements, did you come up with a definition
or did you find an appropriate definition for exercise recovery?
Yeah, that's a great question.
And that's kind of where I started.
And I thought, okay, the first thing I need to do is define this.
And it was like, oh crap.
Like this is actually a lot harder than I thought.
And everyone I talked to would have a different definition.
I mean, in terms of looking at it scientifically, like, what are the factors that will show
that you're recovered?
And what do we really mean by this?
And so, I guess I would just say that on its most basic level,
I think recovery is really about a return to readiness.
So you've done a hard part of exercise
and recovery is basically that just means
that your body is recuperated, it's rusted,
it's ready to go hard again.
So whatever processes need to go on
in between those bouts have happened.
And it's this return
to readiness that really underlies it. Across the entire system. Right, right. Okay. So you found
your definition. Where did you, where did you move from there? What were the first things that you
looked into? So I started looking at, okay, what's really happening in the body when we're recovering?
And you know, what I found, and this had squared with sort of what I had learned back in
college, and also my experience as an athlete, is that basically, you know, adaptations that
we make in response to exercise are things that happen not during the training itself,
but in the interim.
So, you don't get stronger, you get stronger while you are lifting the weights.
You get stronger because your body responds
to that weight lifting that you did and makes changes.
And so you're creating microscopic damage
and the muscle is rebuilding itself
and sort of bolstering itself to become stronger
for the next time.
And so that's a really important sort of fundamental concept
is that recovery
really is when these adaptations take place.
That's something that I've heard from, you know, even when you're a gym bro, when you're 18 years
old and you start doing your first kill, first kill you gym, you hear all about the fact that you
don't grow in the gym, you grow when you sleep. think even then I had a massive amount of skepticism.
I'm like, oh yeah, whatever mate, like, you know,
I just need to, I just need to lift more weight.
But your suggestion is that that's correct.
It is. And I'll also just say it's interesting
that you bring up, you know, your younger self
because almost universally, as I was speaking to athletes
about recovery and particularly very accomplished and athletes who
had been in the game for a long time, they almost universally told me that yeah, when I was younger,
when I was first starting out, I really didn't give recovery the attention it deserved and I thought
it wasn't a big deal and I never really focused on it or gave it much of a thought. And as athletes
age and as they get more experience, they realize, oh wow, this really is a lot of the magic here. And one of the things that I really need to pay
attention to. And it's also true that as you get older, your recovery needs increased. So that's
another reason that older athletes have a better appreciation for recovery than younger ones.
Oh, I mean, when you're young, when you're a teenage athlete, you just made a rubber and
fairy dust, aren't you?
And you're capable of bouncing back from anything.
And injuries just, you grow a new arm and you lose an eye, you know, the one comes back
like it's, it kind of does feel a bit like that.
But yeah, as you mature through your athletic career, you become chronically aware of your own mortality.
Absolutely, absolutely, yeah, to a fault right now.
Yeah, totally. So you've defined what exercise recovery is. Did you create any broad categories of what contributes to that? Yeah, so there are a couple of things and I think one really important concept that came to me and I think is sort of
unappreciated or underappreciated by a lot of athletes is that your body responds to stress the same whether it is physical stress or
emotional stress. So in other words, we often when we're thinking about recovery, think of it in terms of, okay, I did a hard workout today, or I didn't,
or today was a rest day in terms of what my training was.
But at the same time, don't give attention to, okay,
what kind of stress is going on in my life?
What's happening in my personal life,
am I stressed at work, or if you're a student athlete at school?
And these other stresses can be just as, well,
stressful to your body as a physical
stress. And so to really recover well, you need to address the other stresses, you know,
the psychological and emotional stresses in your life. And this is something that pretty
much every good coach that I talk to has also sort of learned and tells their athletes
that, you know, if on your rest day day you're dealing with stress at work or difficulties at
home, you're not really resting and you need to find ways to
address the stress in your life.
Did you manage to quantify the relative contribution to or
degrading of recovery based on those factors versus the, I
guess, the more physical ones?
Yeah, I mean, that's a good question, but I don't think that it has a hard and fast answer. I mean, a lot of this stuff is just extremely hard to quantify.
And I have a whole chapter in the book called, I believe, the Magic Metric, and that is all
about sort of attempts to use data to quantify recovery and find ways to measure it.
And it's really interesting. Oh,, this is kind of a spoiler,
but they've been so many different studies
and looking at so many different physiological factors.
But it turns out that in the end,
nothing really trumps just this qualitative measure
of how are you feeling.
And things like mood actually are much better predictor
of overtraining than something like,
you know, something you could measure in a blood test or on a heart rate monitor.
What's very interesting about that, and I'm sure that some of the listeners will be agreeing
with me, is that in, in juror by Alex Hutchinson, what he talks about is RPE, or as I've kind of re-adopted it, the rate of perceived discomfort, the RPD.
Right.
And he uses that and he says, you know, you can look at the lactate threshold and the V or
two max and you blah, blah, blah.
But the best determinant of someone's capacity to endure is how they feel under X degree
of stress. And you're saying that this,
I guess, what would we call it, rate of perceived recovery, the RPH, perhaps, or the,
that would be the best overall aggregate, global figure that you could give yourself.
global figure that you could give yourself. Yeah, that's right.
In the book, I talk about some different attempts.
So there are some measures that are like little tests or things that people can keep track
of various factors.
And again, it doesn't go down to one single thing, but looking at things like mood or paying
attention to just sort of patterns in your life that people have been working on.
And there are actually a couple of interesting apps and sort of computer-based or diary-based things
that people can use. There's a really good one of the best measures and sort of trackers for
looking at overtraining and the athletes can use to prevent themselves from going over the edge.
Actually looks at mood states and sort of not just how you're feeling
like are you feeling tired or not, but are you feeling moody? Are you feeling depressed?
Do you feel like training? So it was really interesting for me to learn that like I am
someone who during my athletic career had some bouts of overtraining. And basically when
this happens, you just, you get in this hole and you can't get out of it. No matter what you do, you're just tired, your muscles are blown and you just can't, you know, you're
not coming back. And it turns out, and you know, when I was in periods of over training,
I almost always felt like I didn't feel like training and I didn't want to train and
I was in a bad mood. And what I learned while researching this book is that those feelings
and those moods were not,
at the time I thought, wow, I'm really terrible here.
What kind of athlete am I that I don't feel like training?
But that's my body saying, take a rest.
Lay off for a while.
And I think that this is really common, though.
And in fact, I have some stories in my book
about other athletes of all sorts of different ability
levels and sort of types of athletes who have gone through this.
And it's almost universal, I think that if you are an athlete who's training hard,
you're just really inherently driven. And so there's this idea that, you know, your body may be telling you,
I'm tired and you think, I just got to push through this. And if I just go harder, do more,
the rewards will be there. But it turns out that that's not how it works.
It's so difficult. It's a very nuanced appreciation to know, am I giving up because I am stopping
myself before my work is done, or am I giving up because I've pushed myself too hard?
And this came up again with Alex, so I'm like, where do you draw the line between being
a bit of a pussy, both with your training
and with your recovery, and how do you know that you're still pushing yourself hard enough
and I suppose the devil's in the details there.
If you were to take the foundations that you've found in terms of the basics of good recovery,
would you be able to take us through those kind of what are the building
blocks upon which recovery should be started?
Yeah, so the most fundamental and important building block is sleep. I mean, it's really,
if you were to ask me, tell me the one thing that works, it's sleep. And yeah, I would say that
the top 10 or top 10 things that work for recovery or sleep, sleep, sleep, sleep, sleep.
Like it's really that important.
It's sort of like sleep is the cake and everything else is just icing.
It really, if you're not sleeping well and you're not getting enough sleep, you're just
everything else doesn't matter.
And so sleep is a really important thing.
And also just resting in the sense of relaxation, I guess, I would say.
So that sort of, and by relaxation, I mean this sort of overall holistic thing where
you're not just sitting still and not exercising, but you're also reducing the stroke in your
life and you're feeling relaxed.
Like that sort of rejuvenation and relaxation is really essential to sort of letting your body do
the work that it needs. You're giving it all those resources to make those repairs and to make
those adaptations that you're looking for. Was there a Goldilocks zone that you found for athletes
who are training, let's say that a typical athlete's training, you know, between an hour to two hours a day, five days a week, was there an appropriate
amount of sleep or is it very massively person to person?
So sleep is individual, but it doesn't, there's a lot of, well, let's say, oh, I sleep six
hours and I feel great and it turns out. So there is a genetic condition that is extremely
rare, though.
I will say, like chances are, if you think you're one of these people, you probably aren't.
There's a genetic condition, though, where some people really, truly only need something
like four or five hours of sleep.
But this is something that runs in families.
It's very distinct.
It's not just like you think you feel okay if you get less sleep.
It's something where people just fundamentally can't sleep longer. But most people who say that they get by fine and feel great on say six hours of
sleep are actually fooling themselves. And what is true is that they're just extraordinarily well
adapted to sort of coping with the impairments that they have on that much sleep. So they're actually
fooling themselves. And there's some interesting studies which I talk about in the book where they
look at people, you know, who are sleep,impaired. And what happens is the first night after
you don't get enough sleep, you feel tired and you sort of know that you're impaired and you feel
awful. But if this continues, what happens is you sort of stop noticing it and that kind of
cognitive impairment and physical impairment just becomes the new normal to you. And so while you think that you're coping well, you're not.
And you know, probably if you asked, you know, your co-workers or friends or whatever,
they might be able to set you straight as well.
Yeah.
Okay.
So sleep is important.
We've said that.
Is there a minimum amount that you would recommend for most athletes?
I mean, I think Savun is kind of the minimum.
And again, this is something individual, the very best way
to figure out how much you need is to have,
one light isn't enough.
If you're chronically sleep deprived,
it's going to take you out to kind of get caught up
to where you're at some sort of baseline.
But have a few nights where you are not setting a alarm,
don't have any reason to get up,
where you can just truly sleep as long as you want to,
and see how much sleep your body wants. But I would say, you're less than seven, you're
really playing with fire. And a lot of athletes, and having talked to a lot of athletes while
writing this book, it seems as though many, many athletes prefer to get a minimum of eight.
Yeah, I think, sort of for me, the listeners to the show will know that we are massive Matthew
Walker evangelists on the show and there was a podcast.
If you haven't checked it out, it's in the 20s, I think maybe number 29, with Dr. Greg
Potter from University of Leeds as we talk about the definitive guide to sleep.
And in that, we can talk about sleep hygiene and the room needs to be a little bit cooler
in our hot showers before we go to bed and you know the darkness and do it in line with the circadian rhythm, sunlight exposure
during the day and dark exposure at night etc. it's all the sleep hygiene stuff. And you know the
specifics of it aside, I think the bottom line is kind of the same as time and attention right,
it's like you you can try and fine tune your environment as much as you want, but it's the
equivalent of buying a really nice pair of running shoes and
never going out for a run. You like, look, like just, just go
to sleep and get some sleep for a bit.
Right. Absolutely. And so much of it, like you say, is
really about building good habits, it shouldn't be a
spushing that you're trying to get more asleep before a
competition or after hard workout, but that it really
becomes like the way that you live an important part of you're trying to get more sleep before a competition or after hard workout, but that it really becomes
like the way that you live an important part of your life. And really, I think that it's important
to note here that one of the ways that, or one of the things that needs to happen for this to,
you know, for you to get good sleep is to prioritize it. You know, we're just in an era where we have
things constantly at us and buying for our attention
and it's really easy to get caught up in screens
and different things.
And you just have to say, look, sleep is a priority for me.
And it's something that I'm going to prioritize over,
there may be other things that you have to give up
or that you have to give lesser attention to
in order to get that sleep.
But until you prioritize it,
it's not going to happen for you.
Yeah, I get that. So sleep is important. How, how about recovering through our diet?
Yes, good question. So food is really important for recovery. You're obviously hard
work out. You're burning through carbs, protein, all kinds of things you're using.
Energy that you need to replenish. You need to, our muscles are fueled
on glycogen. So, these glycogen stores, and so after particularly endurance workout,
these can be depleted, and so you want to replenish those stores. What I found out while
researching the book was kind of interesting, and that is, yes, nutrition is absolutely important. Of course it is.
But we've kind of made it out to be something more precise than it is.
So it's important to get carbs.
It's important to get protein.
And as you get older, protein becomes a little bit more important to...
This is a little bit preliminary, but it seems as though, as you get older,
your body's ability to sort of take up protein becomes a little
bit impaired.
And so you really need to be sure not to skim on protein as you get older.
And obviously, if you're doing strength training or things that are really taxing your muscles,
where there's going to be a lot of repair going on in the muscles, then protein is important.
But this idea that there's this magic window, recovery window under which you have to get
these nutrients in to optimize your recovery.
It turns out that that's something that is really overstated.
I had one researcher tell me, you know, it's not a recovery window, it's more like a recovery
barn door that as long as you're not.
So there is a circumstance under which it's really important to get these, you know, nutrients
in right away.
And that is if you are about to perform again.
So if you are, say, at a track meet where you're having one bed of exercise and then you're
going to do another one soon, now again, if you're doing something really short, you're
probably not depleting a ton of energy.
And so you don't need to get calories and calories and calories.
A small snack will do it.
But unless you're going to perform again within the next 10 or 12 hours,
something like that, it's perfectly fine to just have your next meal,
have a regular meal, eat what you would eat.
You're going to be okay.
Again, it's important to replenish those carbs in the protein.
But getting this really specific amount
or getting it in a particular window just isn't nearly as important as you may have been
told.
So the anabolic window as it's called and the interest or the intra-workout glucose drinks
and stuff like that is what's the efficacy of those?
Yeah, so it turns out, you know, here the timing, it's not the timing that's magical, it's
the nutrients themselves.
So, like there are some studies looking at timing of protein and it's like, it turned out
that it didn't matter, you could eat the protein before the workout or during the workout
or after and like the results were sort of the same.
It wasn't, you know, that perfect timing that was making the difference, it was just that
you were getting those nutrients
to begin with.
And so it looks as though proteins
throughout the day is a really good approach
rather than trying to take it all in one bowl list
right after a workout.
Like it's fine.
You wanna have protein in your diet.
You need to have carbs particularly
if you are doing endurance exercise.
And I know I'm very familiar. I know that there's a debate going on about whether, you know,
that's high fat low carb diet is good for athletes.
And some people are proposing that.
But I think a lot of research is just showing that, you know,
when you exercise hard, you do deplete carbohydrates.
And that's what your body's fueling itself on during those those
bouts.
I was going to say, what's your stance on people doing
marathons on keto? I actually think I don't have like a really strong stance on this. So
if you go and look, I actually wrote a story for 538 where I'm the lead science writer
a few years ago, I believe the headline was something like you can't trust what you read about
nutrition. Maybe you can put trust what you read about nutrition.
Maybe you can put it in the show notes.
But basically looking at nutrition studies, and it turns out that nutrition is just a really
difficult thing to study.
And a lot of the things that we think that we know about nutrition are based on pretty
shadi methodology and studies that aren't nearly as definitive as we've been led to believe.
I think that there are a lot of ideas out there about diets.
A lot of it is more sort of religion and science.
People sort of take their stand.
And I think that it's totally legitimate for athletes to try different diets.
And if someone finds that a keto diet works for them, go for it.
I don't see any reason to tell them they absolutely can't do that.
I'm not convinced that it's performance enhancing.
I mean, there was the Louise Burke did a study of race walkers,
elite race walkers, where she had them on this diet,
and it did not seem to improve performance.
But you know, there are people that swear by it,
and I do think that you died as something that's worth playing around
with on an individual level. But I think that we just don't have the evidence on a level
of granularity that we want. We want to be able to say, if you eat exactly this much of
this nutrient or this food or this that or the other thing, we'll get this outcome. But
those things that we're looking at are so complicated that it's really hard to attribute that to one food or to one component
of food. And so what ends up happening is, yeah, you have what are probably small effects,
getting drowned out in a lot of the noise with the complexity of these issues that you're looking at.
I get that completely. I think sweating the small stuff is, you know,
like sweating the small stuff is, you know, athlete seem to be super concerned that the pre-digested vegan way that paleo and ethically sourced from the mountains of Kenya has been
taken in with the right blend of MCT, and you think, yeah, mate, you're still in a calorie
deficit and you're training four hours a day. Like, don't sweat the small stuff, focus on the big winners,
which I'm gonna guess is making sure that you're eating
enough and eating a very diet.
Exactly, exactly.
And I think the other thing to note here
is that, you know, they're elite athletes in sports
that eat very different diets, you know,
and they're performing well.
So, you know, one athlete, you know,
if you're in Norwegian skier,
you probably start the day with toast and that brown,
sort of sweet cheese that they like to eat.
And that's not something that people generally eat in the US,
but it works fine.
And so to say that those Norwegians here are so fast
because of the brown cheese is just ridiculous, right?
The brown cheese is like the most Norwegian food. Toast and brown cheese is just ridiculous, right? Brown cheese is like the most Norwegian food.
Toast and brown cheese is exactly what I thought
Norwegian people ate.
Okay, so why does you symbol work well on chicken nuggets?
Well, I think it's an example of just showing that here you've got
the sky who's the world's best sprinter, right?
And like, so you can decide that he needs to eat this like super specific special diet, but what he decided when he was at
the Olympic Village in Beijing and was worried about eating the local food because it was
unfamiliar to him was that he was going to go for the thing that he knew he liked. He knew
that, you know, he could digest it without problems. And so, you know, he ate a bunch
of chicken nuggets at the Olympics and one a bunch of gold medals.
And to suggest that the chicken nuggets
were the secret behind the gold medals is ridiculous.
But I think you have to flip that around
and also say that had he eaten something
that we more traditionally thought was
the performance enhancing, some of the things you were
mentioning, the vegan protein or the whatever it is, it would be just as ridiculous. And so,
you know, what's important is that he got, he replenished the calories that he needed.
He got protein, he got carbohydrates, he got, you know, the basic nutrients. And so he
was fine. And I think that one, one danger here is that if, if the things that you're doing
for recovery are, if you're nutritional needs, so you're an things that you're doing for recovery are if you're nutritional
needs, so you're an athlete, you're on the road competing.
And if it becomes so important to you that you have this special specific food that's
hard to get, that just becomes a new source of stress.
And it's kind of the opposite of recovery.
And you're not doing yourself any favors and chances are whatever benefit you're getting
from that special food is being
outweighed by the stress that you're experiencing by, you know, this need to procure it.
Yeah, I suppose unless it's perhaps something that you know that you can always carry with you or
whatever it might be. Right. You're right. You're totally, totally correct there. So you touched
earlier on upon massage, soft tissue work, foam rolling, and other techniques like that. Moving into that, what does the science say?
Yeah, it's really interesting. So I think massage is one of the most popular recovery modalities. I know I'm a huge fan. I love it. I think most athletes like it.
And you know, would you look at the science behind it? There are a lot of claims that are made. So for instance, that it's flushing your blood, that's getting lactic acid out of the
muscles, and that that's important.
And I'll just say that whenever someone tells me that something works by flushing lactic
acid, I'm sort of like, okay, that doesn't hold up because we used to think that lactic
acid was what made you sore after hard work at.
And we now know that that's not the case.
And regardless, it turns out that your muscles are really good at clearing lactic acid was what made you sore after hard work at. And we now know that that's not the case. And regardless, it turns out that your muscles
are really good at clearing lactic acid on their own.
So by the time you're using one of these things,
the lactic acid is probably gone to begin with.
But with massage,
you know, there are claims that are made about this
or, you know, hormones or flushing lactic acid.
And those don't seem to stand up.
But what massage really does, and almost universally does,
is it makes people feel good.
It makes someone lie down for an hour at relax.
And, yeah, they're not looking at their phone.
They're not thinking about other things.
They're just sort of actively relaxing.
And I think, you know, at its most basic level,
that is recovery.
You know, anything that makes you feel good, anything that allows you to take some time out of your day
to really give your body a chance to rejuvenate and to relax, that's recovery and that's working.
Like, we can consider that working.
Yeah. So one of my first ever episodes is actually with Dr. Quinn Henneck,
the Dr. Physical Therapy for Juggernaut Training Systems. And in that podcast, he said
the sentence, there is no scientific basis to say that massage, static stretching or
dynamic stretching does anything on the mechanism that people think it thinks it
thinks that it does work on. And he used an analogy, have you heard about the experiment
that was done using metal tools to do soft tissue work
on rats?
Have you seen this?
I think that's a little mice.
I think so.
Little mice, ACLs.
So they ruptured the mice as ACLs,
and then they did some work with steel tools.
One iteration of the study, they used it
soft tissue work, and then another one they didn't do
anything and they did find that in this iteration of the study where they used this tool,
that the recovery was quicker.
But what they didn't explain was that the size of the tool that they were using was a human
size tool and the amount of pressure that they were applying was human pressure to a mouse.
And the study, he ran the figures forward and basically worked out that your flesh would
literally shear a part, it would rip apart before you created a 1% shear in the muscle tissue.
So I think you're right, And it's interesting and also reassuring
to hear that there isn't massive amounts of conflict
between what you've discovered
and what he says as well.
But that I think people presumed that they're lying
on a foam roll of the vibrates
because it's working out adhesions in the muscle,
it's helping with microscopic tears and stuff like that.
And yet what the main mechanism it's working on appears to be activating the parasympathetic
nervous system and just getting people to calm down and be in a state which is conducive
to recovery.
Is that fair to say?
Is that romantic?
Oh, you just explained it right there.
I mean, it's just as you said that it's not.
So one thing, this is sort of recurring theme in my book is that there are a lot of things
that people said worked and claimed worked and really, you know, were like, you can take
this, you know, over my dead body.
Take this away from you over my dead body.
But oftentimes the explanations that were given didn't hold up.
So it wasn't that it's not working, but it may just not be via the mechanisms that they say. And you've just explained it quite well. I'm the Bapnes
Oj and particularly things that that seem to target fascia. And it's interesting because fascia
is something that's, this is an area of a lot of research right now. And I think it's very early days.
So there's a lot more we don't know than that we do about fascia.
And it may end up that, you know, there are things that we have not yet come to understand.
So, you know, in terms of whether foam rolling is good or bad, I would say that right now,
the science that we have suggests that, you know, a lot of the way that it's working
is really through the nerve system. It's not so much that it's some
physical mechanism there, but we're still, you know, it's still early days with this.
There's lots to be discovered, right?
There's lots to be discovered. And so my advice here is just sort of like, if you're doing it
and you feel like it makes you feel better and you feel like it's quote unquote working,
then keep doing it. There's no, like there's nothing that I found that was, oh my God, foam rolling is terrible
stop doing it.
At the same time, I did not find any compelling reason why it should be done.
So if you're someone and I've had multiple people tell me, please tell me I can stop foam
rolling.
If you're one of those people, I give you, I hear by give you license to not do it.
To force yourself from your phone roller, you don't need to take, you don't need to take
custody of the lacrosse balls.
You can have that with the phone roller and you keep like,
one thing that's just come to my mind there,
did you look at recovery and short bouts?
So let's say that someone's doing a five by one mile
or five by 400 meters with a couple of minutes rest in between.
Did you look at that super short period recovery
and what people can do?
Because I am used to lying on the floor
and hoping that the world will stop spinning,
but I have been told by numerous coaches
that I need to stand the fuck up.
So did you look at that?
A little bit.
So there is some evidence potentially that in that sort of
scenario that a little bit of massage can be helpful that sometimes something cold night help.
But really, one thing that's really great is just really light exercise. I mean, when I was
high school runner, we used to call it a warm down or warm up, right?
And so, but that easy activity, it could be, you know, on the Tour de France, oftentimes,
you'll see the guys spinning on their trainers after a race.
But where you're just sort of keeping the blood flow going so that, you know, the muscles
are warm, that you're still doing some motion without it being taxing.
Why is that a good idea?
Because for me as a lay person thinking about the body, I think, right, it's worked as hard
as it can.
Now it needs to not work as hard as it can.
Whereas this is more like a middle ground.
Right, it's kind of a middle ground.
And I'll just say that we don't have compelling evidence that this is like absolutely necessary. And, you know, an interesting
thing that I learned while we're here on this book is that so many of the things that we do
in sport are based more on sort of like, we've been doing this, it seems to work, and beliefs
about like, well, this is how we did it before and we've had success, then on hard scientific
evidence. And this isn't to say that like don't care about evidence, or they're trying to push
off things that don't work, but just that the stuff is really hard to measure sometimes,
and it's hard to study.
And so if something's working, there's a lot of compelling, or that's perceived to be
working, there's compelling reasons there, in many many cases to keep doing it. And so, you know, if we don't know
for sure whether it's good, then a lot of people will say, well, I like it. So, yeah, some cases that
may be. And that's good enough. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. So we talked about the cryo chamber stuff, like
there's these super cool, kind of tanks that you step into, right? And it goes to some insanely low
temperature. Yeah, yeah, it's quite an adrenaline rush. I'll say just how cold does it fit? I've
never been in one and you know, I step outside my door sometimes in the middle of January and
the north of England. And I think I could last for about five seconds. So it's about that cold.
the North of England, and I think I could last for about five seconds. So it's about that cold.
Does it work?
And is there any evidence to suggest it works?
And I could not find any compelling evidence that these cryo tanks were performance enhancing
or recovery enhancing that said.
And some of the claims that are made about them are just ridiculous.
I mean, I have a scene in the book where I'm sort of relaying some of the claims that are made about them are just ridiculous I mean, I have a scene in the book where I'm sort of relaying some of the claims that have been made to me
by
Perveyor of cry out therapy and the sports science expert that I'm talking about starts laughing because I mean they're they're really that
What are the claims?
things about
Spur oxygenating the blood which of course isn in a thing and, um, you know,
doing all these crazy hormone things. Um, but I think at the end of the day, why people like
this so much is, um, I also have a whole chapter in the book about placivos and the placebo effect.
And I think it's worth reading because one of the things that I get into there and it's probably
beyond the scope of our discussion here, but it's just how some people and some coaches are using the placebo effect to good for good. So we
kind of tend to think of the placebo effect as a sign that, well, it doesn't work, but it turns out
that, you know, our bodies are really powerful and the expectation that we have can be,
in some cases, almost like a powerful drug. And so I don't think that this is something we should dismiss.
And it is worth thinking about whether it's something to harness.
And I think that, you know, my experience, the cryo-chamber really had a strong, you know,
seem to be set up to have a strong placebo effect because there's pretty good evidence
that placebos that are unpleasant work better than
things that are pleasant or that you don't have anything.
So like taking a pill, placebo pill is less effective than having a
placebo shot, for instance. But the other thing I could say,
so it turns out that cryotherapy, the tanks are really popular among
martial arts fighters, and I can totally understand this because
you get in there
and then you get out and you just have this like feeling of being totally pumped and totally
amped and it's just this huge adrenaline rush. And I can totally get why that would feel great
before a match and just really get you ready. But in terms of like, is this going to make you recover
better? There's just not good evidence for that. So the mechanism again, what we're talking about here is that it's how it makes you feel
and potentially that it's making you think about your recovery and spend some time on it.
What's one of the super cool things that spoke to Dr. Greg Potter from University, a
leads about the sleep expert was he said that the placebo effect is the most reliable
effect in all of pharmacology.
And if we were somehow able to bottle a placebo, we would have a panacea.
And you're like, oh, yeah, it's so hilarious that you've got this thing, which kind of
doesn't work, but the fact that it doesn't work is the reason it does work.
And it's like universal snake oil, but it's actually kind of got it.
It's really, I find the concept, my increasingly deep understanding
of what placebo's can do.
It's really, really enjoy it.
So moving forward, what were some of the crazier approaches
for recovery that you came across?
Obviously, crazier than super cooling your body
to minus 50 degrees.
Right, right, crazier than I have the whole deride.
I think when someone asked me the other day,
if there was anything that I refused to try,
and one of them, there are places now
that you can go to get IV injections of vitamins and things.
And this is supposed to aid recovery.
And I actually have a whole chapter in the book
about supplements, nutritional supplements,
including vitamins.
And so I said, absolutely not,
I'm not gonna inject these things.
I mean, my research showed that none of these things
were likely to be helpful in the first place
and the idea of injecting them into my bloodstream
just seemed like foolishness.
So the IV drips, because there's,
it's not the same in the UK at the moment,
but in America, I know especially in like party towns like Vegas
You can go and get like a hangover drip, right?
You like you wake up in the morning and you you suffer in a little bit and then you go in and they they fill you up with this
With this drip and you lie there for an hour and then your hangover magically goes away. Oh
Yeah, so the one that I was at they actually had I was watching there was a couple there
I was at, they actually had, I was watching, there was a couple there, dressed in, and I'll just say a clothes that made me think that these were high-end parties.
They had just flown in that morning from the party in Aspen, so this was in Denver.
So they had just flown in specifically to get this IV, and it was clearly intended to undo
whatever damage they may have done party the night before.
I find the whole concept of like a medical procedure to undo a hangover. I mean, to be fair, I've had some hangovers where I've wished that a doctor would be able to come and fix it. So
maybe it's just maybe it's just let's be honest, we've all had at least one morning where we
wished for such a thing. Just want, the fucking pill of the IV drift.
Right.
Yeah, no, I totally get that.
So you mentioned that the IV drips were in there with the craziest stuff.
Was there anything else that you came across that you were surprised by or couldn't believe?
Yeah, and so, okay, so I live in Colorado.
I'll just preface this by saying, and so we're at high altitude.
And so we get a lot of tourists
and so people worry about the altitude and whatnot.
But I was seeing in multiple places
that I went these oxygen inhalers,
so the ideas you inhale, the straight oxygen,
and that was going to make you feel better,
which, you know, if you had a medical condition
or were truly low in oxygen, that could be helpful.
I think anyone who's really an athlete in decent shape
is probably not in that category.
And it's just not going to be helping you,
even at higher altitude of the order
that most places in Colorado are.
It's not going to be the thing that's the limiting factor
in your recovery.
You've touched upon it there.
Altitude chambers, I'm going to guess,
are a commonly used tool for two of the front. Altitude chambers, I'm going to guess are a commonly used
tool for two of the front athletes and endurance athletes, I suppose. Yeah, they are. And these
aren't used all to say these aren't used so much for recovery as for training. So it's really about
getting adaptations and whatnot. But they do seem, you know, it's interesting. The literature shows
that there may be responders and lesser responders to altitude,
which is kind of interesting.
Some people go to altitude or use an altitude chamber and really get more red blood cells
and whatnot and others don't.
I think we're still trying to sort of figure out how that all lays out.
But these have been used for a long time and seem to be an effective training tool, particularly
if you're going to be competing at altitude. That is super interesting. I guess again, as you said earlier on, horses for courses,
you need to learn what works for you. One thing that I wanted to touch on before we finish up was,
did you find any particular individuals who have an unnatural ability to recover or some people who have
particularly poor abilities to recover. Is there a big swing with regards to that?
Absolutely, and I think that this is, I mean, this is in a way similar, I think it's a different
skill or a different talent, but just as some people respond really quickly or really well to training,
there are some people that need more or less recovery. And I talk about one person in the book, her name is Camille Heron.
She's an ultra marathoner, and she seems to have just a super natural ability to recover.
It's quite remarkable. She kind of got into the ultra endurance events after figuring out that she
could do marathons in a row. And you know And there are people that do many marathons,
seven marathons in seven days and things like that.
But usually they're sort of in it to finish,
which is a huge accomplishment.
She's someone who can actually perform at a high level
doing that.
And she is now doing ultra marathon.
She currently holds the world record for 100 mile run for any person of any gender on a certified course.
So she's, she's an amazing athlete and she seems to really back back.
So a record for a 100, a 100 mile run is currently held by a female.
Mm-hmm.
That's right.
That is crazy.
Why do you think that is?
I think it's because she's an extraordinary athlete.
If you're asking why is this the event, this is a whole topic of conversation that's been
ongoing for a long time, is there an event where women could not perform men?
And there's a lot of thought that maybe if there was such a thing, an endurance event might
be that because of differences in metabolism and things like that.
So, that may be part of it.
I also think that this is an event that she is someone who is very elite and is probably
some of it is that these things are somewhat new.
They're not entirely new.
But, yeah, I think she's just an incredible athlete and I don't think that her her biggest accomplishments are yet behind her.
Wow. I mean, that's to have to have an event like that, which is ultra, ultra running,
where you wouldn't have considered a woman to be winning the 100 meters and you roll that forward
and you go, well, why is 100 miles any different? As far as, you know, I didn't know that fact. And in my experience, the main endurance event that women had in advantage in,
as far as I knew was swimming, long distance swimming, because of the particular
makeup of their body and changes in buoyancy and their ability to move through the
water and stuff like that. But to hear that the 100 mile race is currently held by a woman,
that's really cool. Yeah, yeah, it really is.
It's awesome.
So, Christy, can you tell the listeners
where they can find you online
and where they can find your book?
Yeah, so my book is www.goodtogobook.com
and you can find me on Twitter at CraigCrest
that's C-R-A-G-C-R-E-S-T, as in like, Craig, Craig-E, Crust. It's a place
Dave, it's actually the name of my favorite trail run. And then my website is my name,
Christyashwondon.com. Fantastic. I will make sure that the link to Good to Go and all of
your socials plus all some good articles that we've spoken about will be in the show to be below.
I had one other little thing to plug,
and that is next month.
So in mid February of 2019, I'm launching a new podcast.
It's a little bit of a departure for what we've been talking
about, but it's called Emerging Form.
And it's a podcast about the creative process.
My co-host is a poet, and we basically spent 30 minutes each episode
talking about some creative commendrum and then we bring on a guest to help us
answer some questions and I do think that there are a couple of episodes that
would be interesting though to athletes as well. One of the ones that I really
like is about talent and whether it's necessary and so we have a pretty good
debate about that. That's fascinating. Yeah you can find it. It hasn't launched yet, but it will soon. And it's at emergingform.com.
Amazing. Well, once that's up, make sure that you send it across and I will fire it out
to the listeners. But in the meantime, hopefully we will have helped some people understand
their recovery. I genuinely think that if everyone was to go back and listen to Alex Hutchinson's
episode where he talked
about endurance and then comes to this hopefully we've got you know you're training sorted and you know
yeah your RPE and then you've got your recovery sorted and you've got your RPR and now you just need
to go and sleep and then lift some weights. That's right absolutely. Thank you very much for your time. Thank you for coming on today. Oh, thank you for having me. It's been my pleasure. Bye-bye