Post-Workout Recovery

What you do in the 15–30 minutes after training sets the tone for how well you recover. Post-workout protocols bring your heart rate down gradually, flush metabolic waste from worked muscles, and restore baseline range of motion before tissues cool and stiffen.


Fitness Considerations

Stopping abruptly after intense training leaves blood pooled in working muscles and your nervous system revved. A proper cooldown — light movement followed by targeted stretching — transitions you from performance state to recovery state. It takes 5–10 minutes and pays off in reduced soreness.

Post-workout stretching should focus on the muscles you just loaded. Leg day? Hit hip flexors, quads, hamstrings, and calves. Upper body? Stretch the pecs, lats, and shoulders. Generic stretching is fine but specific work is better.

This is the ideal time for longer static holds (60–120 seconds). Your tissues are warm, your muscles are pliable, and post-exercise stretching has been shown to maintain or improve range of motion without the power-output concerns of pre-workout stretching.


Protocols

# Protocol Description
42.01 Post-Workout Recovery General post-training cooldown and recovery sequence