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I have been browsing these forums for information for the past few months but today is the first day the search function on both this site and google have failed me, so this is my first post.
I applied to the CF last month and began training (since I was out of shape) shortly before that. I have made a lot of progress since I began training about 6 weeks ago, but I have unfortunately caught the flu. My whole body aches and I have a fever. Any research I do says that while I have any symptoms below the neck (body pain, sore stomach, fever, breathing problems...) I should not do any exercise at all.
My fever is gone now. I am still sick but apparently I should be OK to do SOME training. My question then becomes, how much do I need to workout to simply not lose progress. To be more precise, while I am sick, I have no interest in improving my progress, but I want to do enough training to not lose any of the progress I have already made in the past 6 weeks.
I jog for 30 minutes every second day and do push-ups, sit-ups, squats, and planks (of varying styles) on days where I do not run.
I have made the following progress in the past 6 weeks (yes, I know, it is pathetic, but it is still progress).
I applied to the CF last month and began training (since I was out of shape) shortly before that. I have made a lot of progress since I began training about 6 weeks ago, but I have unfortunately caught the flu. My whole body aches and I have a fever. Any research I do says that while I have any symptoms below the neck (body pain, sore stomach, fever, breathing problems...) I should not do any exercise at all.
My fever is gone now. I am still sick but apparently I should be OK to do SOME training. My question then becomes, how much do I need to workout to simply not lose progress. To be more precise, while I am sick, I have no interest in improving my progress, but I want to do enough training to not lose any of the progress I have already made in the past 6 weeks.
I jog for 30 minutes every second day and do push-ups, sit-ups, squats, and planks (of varying styles) on days where I do not run.
I have made the following progress in the past 6 weeks (yes, I know, it is pathetic, but it is still progress).
- 0.3km jogging until too tired to go on -> 2.5km jogging before getting too tired to go on. (using couch to 5k programme) End goal: at least 5km in 20minutes.
- 4 consecutive push-ups -> 16 consecutive push-ups (I wish this would progress faster). End goal: at least 30 consecutive push-ups.
- 20 consecutive sit-ups -> 50 consecutive sit-ups. End goal: Already met, the rest is gravy.