K
Knackered
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I don't mean this as a snide remark, are any of you planning on getting tested for XMRV?
when it's available at a price I can afford yesI don't mean this as a snide remark, are any of you planning on getting tested for XMRV?
Always be patient and carefull with exercise of any sort, which is hard for us, as ME patients are generally very motivated folks!
sasha, i think whatever u can do thats convenient and doesnt make u sick. Sometimes i would to just 2-3 sets of 3-5 reps, i would rest enough between sets so that i was breathing normally before i did another set. I would have atleast 1 full day off before training again and found 2 days a week was enough. But my workouts expanded and contracted on how i was feeling.
I think u could try something like squats for 2 reps everytime u go to the kitchen or something like that, as a very basic idea and can help u keep some sort of condition until u feel well enough to expand on it or do a traditional type work out.
good luck with training
I don't mean this as a snide remark, are any of you planning on getting tested for XMRV?
I just want to say I agree with all the advice you've had here. I did weight training, no cardio/aerobic exercise at all, when I was in remission and it was FANTASTIC and made me just feel better and better. DEFINITELY go for it if you feel ready.
As far as the discussion on exercise tolerance goes, yes you can do some non-aerobic exercise when you are in really good remission. Over 25 years I have been bed-bound and near coma-like with this illness for 3 years and also been in enough remission to do a 1 hour workout every day and work full time. At the moment I have very high RnaseL cleavage, low CD57 NK cells and high autoimmune antibodies, a repulsive list of bacterial infections etc etc. and I cannot get up one flight of stairs without resting half way, but when I was feeling pretty good, I still had this illness, whatever it is.
So to those of you who feel corpse-like (like me currently) PLEASE DON'T LOSE HOPE, you can go through some much better times where you only feel mildly ill and are only slightly limited compared to healthy people. Honestly.
Apart from the advice you've already had,
1. build up very slowly at first, never push it to the lactic acid phase, and use pathetically tiny weights, building up very gradually. Trust you own body, it knows what is best. I was doing 3 sets of 10 reps for each muscle group with a brief pause between each. I did the same weight for all 3 sets. The bodybulider tactic of doing a shorter set with higher weight for the middle set is not a good idea.
2. always rest afterwards for the exact amount of time you have exercised. Rest means lie down without moving and, even better try to fall asleep. Eat a high protein snack just before crashing out for maximum muscle development.
3. You can use stretching exercises for warm up and cool down, though I did find that I could manage about five minutes in a very leisurely way on the rowing machine to get the blood flowing at the start of my workout. This is easier for your heart than running or anything where you are on your feet. Your heart will never manage to go as fast as it should do, so don't aim for any kind of speed at all, the idea is just to loosen up your muscles.
4. As Wonko has said, don't use large muscle sets (eg. squats). You need to exercise very restricted/small muscle groups at a time so stick to the girly machines - no free weights at all except the baby handheld bumbells.
5. Take a long time in the shower afterwards as the hot water will help your muscles.
6. Get your heart checked before starting this exercise campaign. I didn't and it was risky. I've had heart surgery since that last period of remission, my heart was in a truly terrible state and what I was doing could have been making it worse even though generally I felt better. You need professional guidance here.
It seems you guys are lucky, on my good days I can walk down to Tesco and I don't feel so bad when I do.
However.
I've just walked up my stairs to take some things in to the bathroom, come back to sit down and it feels as though I've just ran a marathon, all my muscles are aching, my breathing's shallow and laboured and I feel like throwing up. I'll have to sit down now until it passes. I can't imagine how I'd feel if I lifted anything of any significant weight, I wouldn't be able to do it.
When I first saw this thread it upset me a little bit, not because you can lift weights, I think it's really great you can. I was bothered because I feel as though we don't have the same illness yet what we have is called the exact same thing. That isn't your fault of course, yet it is something that I believe has been holding a lot of people back, there's lots of it on this forum. From weight lifting to homeopathy to prayer and miracles, I sometimes wonder when on earth I'm here. If it wasn't for posters like Gerwyn and Parvofighter etc I think i'd leave.
I know exactly how this thread would look to Joe Average, "If the people in this thread can lift 120kg, what the hell is wrong with the rest of them? Are they just lazy and Don't want to get better?"
I can't wait until this XMRV business is sorted out, then hopefully we won't have to put up with the monkey tennis.
thanks flex but it's not just about exercise - thats how I think about life with M.E. - that was just a specific example - it's a life philosophy which is under constant revision/updateWonko
I really liked your explanation about recovery from exercise, it was logical and simple and better put than any physician I have ever heard. As we exercise we then need to rest for our bodies to heal and recover. We have literally damaged our muscles and cell tissues and need to give them repair time. Even top athletes train like this to gain physical strength and capacity. In the rest day our bodies cannot summons up the physical demand required to to repair the damage done by exercise even in rest, that is why exercise is so damaging for many of us. We don't have the energy capacity required to recover. At least I think that's what you said.
Makes so much sense when put like that.