Cannabis is showing up in more athlete recovery conversations. Partly because hemp-derived products are now widely accessible, partly because the “no hangover” pitch appeals to people who train and actually care what they put in their bodies. But accessibility isn’t the same as compatibility – and the timing question matters more than most people realize. One thing is worth mentioning first: do not take a delta 9 gummy before your workout. Not because of some blanket anti-cannabis stance, but because the physiology genuinely works against you. THC raises resting heart rate – typically 20–50 BPM within minutes of onset. Exercise already pushes your cardiovascular system hard. Stack those two, and you’re putting unnecessary strain on your heart before you’ve touched a barbell. Add in compromised coordination and a dulled perception of exertion (so you miss the signals that tell you when you’re pushing too hard), and the risk profile isn’t theoretical. It’s just bad timing. The more interesting question is where cannabis might actually make sense. And the answer is more specific than most articles admit. Sleep Is the Strongest Case Slow-wave sleep – the deep, restorative phase – is when muscle repair happens. Growth hormone peaks. Inflammation from training clears. If you’re sleeping poorly, your recovery ceiling drops, regardless of how well you eat or how much you foam roll. THC does reduce sleep onset time, meaning people fall asleep faster. That part is reasonably well-documented. The complication is that it also suppresses REM sleep, which handles memory consolidation and cognitive recovery. So for athletes whose sport involves skill acquisition or pattern recognition – most sports – trading REM for faster sleep onset isn’t obviously a win. It might help you feel rested without fully recovering your decision-making. The practical takeaway: if sleep onset is genuinely your problem (you […]
If you are taking GLP-1 medications, you already know they change how your body signals appetite and fullness. But what often goes unnoticed is that some people may drink less or notice weaker thirst cues while digestion also slows down. This combination can directly affect your daily workout energy. For active people, managing fluid intake requires a much more intentional approach. Because exercise brings added sweat loss and higher recovery demands, relying purely on your body to tell you when it is thirsty may not be enough. You may be at risk for “sneaky” dehydration simply because you no longer receive the same biological prompts to drink. The goal is to shift from intuitive hydration to scheduled hydration. You need a practical system that keeps your performance high, even when you do not feel hungry or thirsty. Let’s look at how to build a hydration routine that realistically supports your active lifestyle. Why Hydration Can Get Harder on GLP-1s Hydration can get harder on GLP-1 medications for two main reasons: some people may drink less or feel fewer thirst cues, and digestive side effects can make fluid intake or fluid balance harder to manage. First, some people taking GLP-1 medications may drink less or notice weaker thirst cues. In one small study involving dulaglutide, participants drank less fluid during a controlled test period, suggesting that GLP-1 medications may influence drinking behavior in some people. However, this should not be treated as a universal estimate for all GLP-1 users. When your appetite lowers, you may also face a “hydration gap.” Because people naturally get a meaningful portion of their daily water from food, eating smaller meals or having fewer water-rich snacks can lead to lower overall intake and fewer built-in drink reminders. Second, the way these medications digest food complicates fluid […]
City commuting has changed a lot in the last few years. More riders are using e-bikes for commuting, errands, fitness, and weekend rides, which means a helmet now has to do more than simply sit comfortably on the head. It needs to support visibility, help riders feel more predictable in traffic, and work well with the stop-start rhythm of urban roads. That is why electric bike helmets are becoming more thoughtful. Some focus on lights, some focus on comfort, and others add connected safety features that can make a real difference during everyday rides. For riders who want a helmet that feels built around modern city cycling rather than just adapted to it, these are the brands worth knowing. 1. UNIT 1 UNIT 1 is the strongest brand to lead this list because it understands what city riders actually deal with. The ebike helmet from UNIT 1 is not only about impact protection; it is also about being easier to see, easier to read in traffic, and better prepared for the unexpected. Their smart helmet range is built around a more complete safety experience. Models such as AURA and FARO bring together MIPs protection, integrated lighting, app-connected controls, and crash detection, so the helmet feels like part of the ride rather than an extra accessory. For e-bike riders in particular, AURA stands out because it is designed for higher-speed urban movement and includes e-bike-focused safety certification. What makes UNIT 1 feel especially relevant for city cycling is the way the features work together. The front and rear lights help riders stay visible in mixed traffic, while turn signal compatibility through the handlebar remote allows riders to communicate direction without relying only on hand signals. Automatic brake light functionality also adds another layer of awareness for drivers, pedestrians, and other cyclists […]
If you ask recreational tennis players what they need to improve, most will mention their serve, forehand, or backhand. Yet coaches often notice a different problem. Players are late to the ball. The issue isn’t technique. It’s movement. The truth is that tennis is won and lost with footwork long before the racquet makes contact. Even the cleanest stroke mechanics become ineffective when players arrive late, off balance, or out of position. Watch any professional match and you’ll notice something interesting. The best players seem to have more time than everyone else. They aren’t necessarily faster runners. They’re simply moving earlier, recovering more efficiently, and positioning themselves better before each shot. That’s why footwork remains one of the most important—and often overlooked—skills in tennis. Why Footwork Matters So Much Every shot in tennis begins with positioning. Good footwork allows players to: Reach balls earlier Maintain balance through contact Recover quickly after each shot Reduce physical fatigue during long rallies Improve consistency under pressure Research and coaching programs consistently emphasize movement quality as a foundation for performance because efficient movement helps players stay balanced and prepared for the next shot. When players struggle with footwork, the symptoms show up everywhere. Groundstrokes become rushed. Volleys feel uncomfortable. Timing disappears. The solution isn’t always hitting more balls. Often, it’s improving the way the body moves around the court. The Foundation: The Split Step One of the simplest yet most effective footwork habits is the split step. The split step is a small hop performed just before an opponent strikes the ball. It prepares the body to react in any direction. Without it, players are often flat-footed and slow to respond. With proper timing, the body is already loaded and ready to explode toward the next shot. Many amateur players know what a split […]
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