The summer days are longer, children are getting ready to go back to school, and the weather is still fair. The summer season brings a lot of activity. Whether the increased activity involved greater physical training for local fun runs or sexier swimsuits, longer workdays with longer daylight hours, increased travel to various destinations, they are all stressors to the body. This continued burden leaves it, sometimes literally, aching for rest and recovery.
Any time a person undergoes physical, mental, or environmental change, the body reacts physiologically and emotionally. According to Dartmouth University’s learning center, some physiological responses include elevated heart rate and blood pressure, sweating, tightened muscles, dry mouth, and headaches. Emotional responses may include negative thoughts, restlessness, and inability to sleep.
Those reactions are similar to the human response to months to years of physical overtraining, as when athletes train at high intensities for long courses of time. Athletes’ training schedules consist of workout cycles of varying intensities, modes, and duration. Weeks of rest are strategically planned in order to keep the athletes performing optimally.
When a body is exposed to bouts of stress, it adapts and becomes stronger. However, when bodies are forced to perform under continued exposure to physical, mental, and environmental stressors, without time to rest and recover, this continued stress becomes strain and can result in orthopedic injury, weight gain, physical and mental fatigue, mental disengagement, and insomnia.
Unfortunate in our culture is the common perception that rest equates to laziness. Nevertheless, even computers need to reboot in order to function normally. Scheduling time to rest to “recharge the batteries” is permissible, especially when it yields results like “new and improved” energy for performance of our daily activities.





