20 Ways to Nurse an Injury and Still Dominate

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Being a triathlete makes you feel like you have superpowers. You swim. You bike. You run. And your friends and family agree: You are unstoppable.

And then you get injured.

There goes the master season plan you built six months ago. You know the one that you drew up one night and then dropped over $500 on registrations for? The ones you told all your friends you were doing? The ones you can't race anymore?

Not all is lost. Every year I see athletes come down with injuries that interrupt their training but don't end their life as they know it. The key is being able to refocus, to shift your goals and apply the energy to a new intermediary set of milestones that will get you back on track.

You might not be able to salvage your entire season, but you can certainly come back stronger than ever. There are a variety of options for you. Remember, the "right" one might vary based on your current situation or injury.
Take a break.
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Your body/mind might just need a rest. Start with seven days and continue adding a day, up to 14, until you feel human again.
Make sure your doctor fits your needs.
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Use this chance to find out just how "athlete-friendly" your primary care doctor is; do you need to change?
Determine if surgery is the next step.
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Might need surgery? Be sure to search your local and/or online communities for folks who've had the same work done? Get it from those who know!
Drop the run.
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You can still race: Sign up for an aquabike!
Race with friends.
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Convert your entry into a relay team and recruit some friends to do the sport(s) you can't.
Try physical therapy.
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Find a physical therapist to help with an efficient recovery.
Refresh your gear.
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Scan your training gear to see if old, faulty or poorly fit equipment is to blame.
Research self-care.
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Research some self-care options to see how you might be able to speed recovery.
Try a chiropractor.
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Identify a chiropractor or other healer in your area.
Volunteer.
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Transfer your race entries to your friends—if legal—and be the best damn volunteer ever.
Devote time to other obligations.
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Use the non-training time to rock your work, family and social obligations.
Put your all into recovery.
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Apply yourself to recovery as you would do if it were training.
Try a different approach.
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Consider homeopathic remedies, treatments or cures.
Become a yogi.
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Become a yoga triathlon god or goddess and master those five poses that have kicked your butt for so long.
Go back to the basics.
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Return to basics and review your form and technique for areas that could use work.
Work on your weaknesses.
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Can't run? Bike more. Can't bike? Run more. Can't bike or run? Swim and aqua jog more.
Focus on nutrition.
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Focus on your diet and lock in great eating habits so your triumphant return will be doubly impressive.
Find the cause.
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Review your training logs to find the culprit; swear to heed the warning signs early and avoid this same issue in the future.
Share your experiences.
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Take notes on how you heal so you can pass them on to your friends/team should it happen to them.
Move on.
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Have one pity party and get on with it. You are so blessed to be a triathlete and you WILL be back!
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