When you knowingly and willingly begin to compromise your health, your "fitness" plan has gone too far. It's ironic really. You adopt a training or diet plan to lose fat, build muscle, get strong, or extend your life, then things go sideways and your fitness plan begins to wreck your fitness.
Most of the time, there are deeper psychological issues at work here. But for dedicated folks who love to train, it can be a fairly easy trap to fall into. Some examples:
What about athletes? Christian Thibaudeau recently wrote on the T Nation Facebook page, "Every single competitive sport is bad for the body when done at the level required to compete at the highest level."
For those folks, it's not really about fitness. It's about winning. But you're probably not an elite or pro level athlete. And damaging your body probably isn't putting retire-at-40 money into your bank account.
The lesson here? Health first. Whenever health falls down to the number two or number three spot, or disappears altogether, your fitness plan, well, isn't about fitness anymore.
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