How to Become an Olympian

Thứ sáu - 26/04/2024 23:11
Becoming an Olympian can be an incredible and rewarding experience. If you want to prove your athleticism on the international stage, you'll need to choose a sport and train rigorously. With persistence and the right mindset, you'll be on...
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Becoming an Olympian can be an incredible and rewarding experience. If you want to prove your athleticism on the international stage, you'll need to choose a sport and train rigorously. With persistence and the right mindset, you'll be on your way to achieving your goal.

Part 1
Part 1 of 3:

Setting Out

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Part 2
Part 2 of 3:

Getting Serious

  1. Step 3 Monitor your life 24/7.
    You're not training a few hours a day — you're training 24/7. Everything you do will determine your progress, performance, and success. This takes diligence, perseverance, patience, mental stability, and discipline. Here's why:
    • Your diet. Everything you eat affects you. Load up on carbs at the wrong time and your workout could crash and burn. Too much caffeine and you're not sleeping. Too much or too little of anything that keeps you from performing at 110% is off limits.
    • Sleep. Most Olympic hopefuls get 8 to 10 hours of sleep every night, and often take a 30 to 90 minute nap during the day.[9] Your body needs downtime to repair and recharge after intense exercise.
    • Your lifestyle habits. If you're downing a 40 of PBR between bong hits, this isn't for you. Let's just leave it at that.
    Stick to your routine. "Olympians have to endure significant hardships over the years until the Olympics. I'm working hard for the Olympic trials and creating my training routine. It will include significant amounts of sleep, an extremely healthy diet, and careful budgeting." - Nick S.
    Take your training seriously. "I always wanted to be a volleyball player or a 100m sprinter because I have been doing these sports my entire life. I wasn't taking the training very seriously until my coach showed me this article and I read it 6 times. I realized that I still have a chance if I commit to my practice. I’ve redoubled my efforts and now plan to be on the Olympic team!" - Jake P.
    We want to hear from you! Advice from our readers makes our articles better. If you have a story you’d like to share, tell us here.
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Part 3
Part 3 of 3:

Going for a Medal

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Sample Training Schedule, Diet, and List of Sports

Sample Olympic Training Schedule (Long Jump)
Sample Olympic Diet Plan (Sprinter)
Olympic Sports


Warnings

  • Injury is a constant danger. Never train harder than you know you can, even if your trainer tells you to. Anabolic threshold, sprains, pulled muscles, broken bones, brain damage, the list goes on.
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