08/06/2026
Athletes, sleep is not just about feeling rested.
Sleep is part of how your body adapts to training.
Training gives your body the stimulus.
Sleep helps your body recover, repair, and actually turn that stimulus into performance.
Your brain uses sleep to process skill, timing, coordination, reaction, and decision-making.
Your body uses sleep to repair muscle tissue, regulate hormones, manage inflammation, restore energy, and prepare you to produce force again.
So when sleep is constantly low, you may still be training hard; but you may not be adapting well.
Your lifts can feel heavier.
Your speed can feel flatter.
Your reaction time can slow down.
Your soreness can linger.
Your motivation can drop.
Your body can feel like it is fighting you.
And I’m speaking from experience. My sleep has not been where it needs to be lately, and I can feel the difference in my performance and recovery.
There is a time and place to show up when you are not fully recovered, but you have to do it smartly. That is a different conversation.
But for today: if you have performance goals, sleep cannot be an afterthought.
Sometimes discipline is training hard.
Sometimes discipline is shutting it down and choosing recovery.
SportsPerformance