Often you can hear: "Professional sports are a disability, and amateur sports are health." But is that really true? Let's look at what is more beneficial for the body and psyche: running for medals or just for the soul.
Professional sports are extreme loads. It requires working to the limit of one's abilities, often overcoming pain, lack of sleep, and chronic fatigue. Training for 5-6 hours a day, a strict regimen, endless training camps. Amateur sports are moderation. Training 2-3 times a week, the ability to skip a workout without feeling guilty, recovery at a comfortable pace. If we look at the pure impact on the heart and joints, amateur sports provide more benefits. It strengthens the cardiovascular system, reduces the risk of diabetes and obesity, without overloading the body. However, professional sports often lead to joint wear, microtraumas, and chronic pain. Paradox: a professional athlete may have worse health than an average amateur.
The biggest minus for professionals is trauma. In any sport: from football to figure skating. Concussions, ligament tears, fractures, back problems are the norm for those who compete at the world level. Amateurs get injured less often, as they do not force the load. However, they also have stretches, for example, if they start running suddenly. However, professional injuries leave a lifelong mark, while amateur ones usually heal without consequences. Even if we do not count acute injuries, professional sports accelerate the wear of the knees and hip joints. Many footballers develop arthritis after 35 years. Amateurs' knees last longer.
Professional athletes often develop "sportive heart" — myocardial hypertrophy. This adaptation to loads can lead to arrhythmias and even sudden cardiac arrest in the long term. Cases of the death of young athletes on the field occur with frightening regularity. Amateurs' hearts work in a normal mode, although trained. It does not hypertrophy, but simply becomes more enduring. Lowering blood pressure, normalizing pulse — this is what amateur sports give, and it is safe. Professionals are at risk of atrial fibrillation due to constant exceeding of the anaerobic threshold.
Amateur sports strengthen the immune system. Moderate loads stimulate the production of antibodies and phagocytes. Professional sports, on the contrary, suppress the immune system. Intense training causes the release of cortisol, which suppresses the immune system. Professionals often get respiratory infections after competitions. This is called "an open window" — a period when the body is weakened. Amateurs almost never have such windows, as the loads do not exhaust resources. Therefore, professionals catch colds more often than their "home" colleagues.
The difference is even more noticeable here. Professional sports are constant pressure. An athlete depends on results, sponsors, coaches. He lives in fear of losing and losing a contract. This leads to anxiety, depression, burnout. Amateur sports give the joy of movement, the pleasure of the process. You are not obligated to win, you just get dopamine. You can come to training in a bad mood and leave with a smile. Such things happen rarely to professionals — their mood is tied to the result. Thus, for the psyche, amateur sports are an antidepressant, while professional sports are often a source of stress.
Studies show that professional athletes live on average no longer, and sometimes even less than ordinary people. This is especially true for contact sports (football, American football, boxing). High body wear, chronic injuries, heart problems shorten life. Amateurs, on the contrary, live longer because they maintain tone but do not destroy the body. According to some data, regular physical activity of moderate intensity increases life expectancy by 3-5 years. Intense activity does not increase, and in some cases even decreases. So, for longevity, it is better to be an amateur.
Professional sports require huge expenses for recovery: massages, physiotherapy, rehabilitation, medications. These costs often cover the income from sports, especially if the athlete is not at the top. Amateur sports are cheap: sneakers, uniform, a swimming pool membership. And they bring more health benefits because you do not spend resources on "patching holes." It turns out that amateur sports are a profitable investment in your body, while professional sports are a risky investment.
But not everything is so clear-cut. There are sports where professionals maintain their health due to strict medicine. For example, swimming or long-distance running. There is less trauma, and medicine is well developed. In addition, professional sports give discipline and willpower, which can help in life. But these are more side effects than benefits for health. Overall, if you choose between "setting records" and "just being active," the second option is almost always better for the body.
The optimal option is amateur sports with elements of serious preparation. That is, regular training, a competent coach, a heart rate monitor, a nutrition plan, but without fanatism and without sacrifices. You can participate in amateur tournaments, set goals, but not put them above health. This approach gives almost all the benefits of professionals (shape, achievements, confidence) and almost all the benefits of amateurs (rest, enjoyment, safety). This is the balance that doctors and sports psychologists recommend.
So what to choose? If you are over 20 and ready to dedicate your life to sports, the professional path has the right to exist. But if you care about your health, a long life, and not suffering with knees at 50, amateur sports are undoubtedly better. Health cannot be won at competitions. It can only be preserved.
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