If you force yourself for about a week, a couple of things will happen--
1. Your...er...."system" will demand that you wake up at 4:XX to take care of business.
2. Any pets you have will become conditioned to being fed and doted on at 4:XX. If they are big and/or loud enough and have access to your bedroom, no alarm is then needed.
3. You will be so tired by 8 PM that your night owl tendencies will fly right out the window.
This from someone who NEVER thought she could get up before 6 AM! The challenge now is getting body and cats to cooperate when I CAN sleep in
(rest/recovery days, when I can only train in afternoon due to pool hours, if I'm sick, on vacation, etc.
) I thought at first that maybe easy AM workouts might be doable, but actually I can do anything early AM that I can do later, often with better quality than later in the day. I do need 5-10 more minutes of warmup
(maybe 20 total
) before I can really hit hard efforts, though.
I have a pretty active job
(elementary teacher, coach part of the year as well
), and thought that would be an issue for recovery after early morning workouts, but actually, I recover much better being active all day than if I do a late day workout and then mainly lie around or go to bed. No difference with swimming, but definitely can feel it with biking and running.
Edited by Hot Runner 2017-04-27 5:06 AM