05/26/2026
Can't buck the system forever you know?
I live in the health and fitness world so I hear this word a lot and its almost becoming taboo.
"Recovery." WTF is it? Does it really matter? How do I do it? Is it BS?
Its so interesting to see the wide variety of opinons on it and how folk response when talking to them about it.
Cold plunges. Saunas. Massage guns. Supplements. Stretching. Sleep trackers. Red light therapy. Some are spending more money/time on this stuff than ever before, yet a lot of them still feel beat up & tired.
That’s because recovery itself was never supposed to be the goal.
Adaptation is!
And how you approach it mentally creates a big difference.
A farmer doesn’t water crops because getting the crop wet itself is the goal. The point is growth! The water just creates the conditions for growth to happen.
Exercise or rehab must be viewed in the same way.
The purpose of training is not just to sweat, get your heart rate up, or feel exhausted afterward. The point is to slowly teach the body to tolerate more. More movement. Different movements. More force. More steps. More stress. (Wait, what?)
That process is adaptation. But adaptation only happens if stress and recovery have some sort of balance over time.
That’s where most people get lost. No plan. Just ram your face into the wall and hope it'll be ok in the end... Yea, how's that going?
Years ago, when railroads were first being built across the country, engineers learned something important pretty quickly. Steel expands under stress and heat. If they laid tracks too rigidly without enough spacing or flexibility, the tracks would eventually warp and crack.
The stress itself wasn’t the problem. Poor adaptation to the stress was.
Human beings are not much different. Too little stress and the body becomes fragile. Too much stress without enough recovery and the system starts breaking down.
A lot of people unknowingly (but often knowingly) live in that second category.
They train hard but sleep poorly. They work out consistently but eat like garbage.
They push through stress all week and then wonder why their joints hurt, their energy crashes, or their motivation disappears.
A simple example we see often is someone starting a training program after years of inconsistency. The first few weeks usually feel rough. Muscles get sore. Cardio feels embarrassing. Sleep can even temporarily worsen because the body isn’t used to the demand.
But then something interesting happens around weeks 3 to 6 if they stay consistent. Their joints stop aching as much. They recover faster between sessions. Their mood improves. Their confidence improves. Movement becomes less threatening.
Nothing magical happened. Their body adapted. That’s the whole point.
This is why I get frustrated when people treat recovery like it’s separate from training itself. Recovery is part of training. It’s the phase where the body actually rebuilds and upgrades itself after stress.
Without recovery, stress just becomes damage. But without intentional, PROGRESSIVE stress, recovery has nothing to adapt to.
You need both!
This is one of the biggest misunderstandings in modern fitness. People think they need to annihilate themselves every workout to get results. In reality, the body responds best to appropriately dosed stress repeated consistently over time.
That’s fitness.
At Charge and ReCharge, this is exactly why we focus so heavily on the full picture.
Not because recovery itself is trendy, but because adaptation is the actual goal.
We’re trying to build people that can tolerate more life without falling apart every couple months. And honestly, most people are far more capable than they think they are. They just haven’t had enough structure or consistency long enough to prove it to themselves yet.
If there’s one thing I’d encourage you to think about this week, it’s this:
Are you just trying to survive your workouts and your weeks… Or are you intentionally building a body that can adapt and handle more over time?
Big difference.
Dom + Team
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