When you get an overtraining injury from running, it's not because you did too much, because you were too strong or too motivated.
You got injured because you were too weak.
You were too weak to sustain the stress applied to that piece of tissue, that one injured piece of tissue that got injured when you did one workout.
That's what really happened.
If you get injured, you have to understand how to correct that specific weakness.
Understanding this is crucial.
Overtraining injuries in runners are actually caused by weakness.
And that's what we're talking about today in the Doc On The Run Podcast.
Can running on the road cause Achilles tendinitis in one leg and calf strain on the other?
Foot pain that is truly a pain in the butt
Methodical testing is the key to running after injury
Scared of re-injury after trying to build strength
After healing a stress fracture should I use Alter-G after I start running outside?
Are you using a treadmill for returning to running after an injury?
When are x-rays useful for runners with Morton’s neuroma?
Best way to file toenails for marathon runners
When is plantar fascia surgery necessary for runners?
Ankle pain vs sinus tarsi impingement when running
Does the plantar plate need to “heal” on MRI before I can run?
How long should I use crutches?
Plantar wart treatment options in runners
Bone bruise vs stress reaction in a runner
FHL tenosynovitis PRP injection vs. Cortisone injection
How pneumonia made my Kona dream come true
What is subungual melanoma?
FHL Tenosynovitis vs Sesmoiditis
697 Hallux rigidus shoe traits for runners
Work out now or do more workouts later
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