Why Are Your Muscles Sore After Working Out? DOMS Explained
You crush a leg session. The next day, stairs feel like a punishment. Two days later, it's somehow worse. This is DOMS — delayed onset muscle soreness — and it's one of the most misunderstood aspects of training. Here's what's actually happening and what to do about it.
What DOMS Is
Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness (DOMS) is the pain and stiffness felt 24–72 hours after exercise, peaking around the 48-hour mark. It's caused primarily by eccentric muscle contractions — the lowering phase of movements (lowering yourself in a squat, bringing the weight down in a bicep curl). Eccentric loading creates microscopic damage in the muscle fibers, triggering an inflammatory response that the body uses to repair and rebuild the muscle stronger.
DOMS is more pronounced after: new exercises you're not adapted to, returning from a break, increasing weight or volume significantly, or movements with high eccentric load (Romanian deadlifts, Bulgarian split squats, Nordic curls).
DOMS Is Not the Goal — But It's Normal
One of the most persistent gym myths is that soreness = good workout. It doesn't. A lack of soreness doesn't mean nothing was accomplished, and extreme soreness doesn't mean you trained better. DOMS is simply a byproduct of mechanical stress your body hasn't adapted to yet. As you get more experienced and consistent, DOMS becomes less frequent — not because you're not working hard enough, but because your body has adapted.
Ken's rule: train to perform, not to be sore. If you're consistently sore for 4+ days after every session, you're doing too much volume for your recovery capacity. Dial back and progress more gradually.
What Helps DOMS Recovery
- Light movement: Low-intensity activity (walking, easy cycling) increases blood flow to sore muscles and speeds recovery. Sitting still makes it worse.
- Protein: Adequate protein accelerates muscle repair. This is one more reason hitting your daily protein target matters — especially in the 24–48 hours after training.
- Sleep: Most muscle repair happens during deep sleep. If you're sleeping poorly and feeling chronically sore, the soreness is a symptom of inadequate recovery.
- Cold/heat: Ice and cold water can reduce acute inflammation and pain. Heat (sauna, heating pad) improves blood flow and reduces stiffness. Both work; use based on preference.
- Creatine: Research shows consistent creatine supplementation reduces exercise-induced muscle damage and DOMS severity. Another reason it belongs in your stack.
When Soreness Is Not Normal
Normal DOMS resolves within 72 hours. If pain is sharp (not a dull ache), localized to a joint rather than a muscle belly, or doesn't resolve after 5–7 days, it may not be DOMS — it may be an injury. Persistent joint pain, swelling, or severely limited range of motion warrants medical attention. Don't train through sharp joint pain hoping it'll resolve.
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