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Posted

Is it normal to have shaky hands during/after a working out? I notice I get the shakes during/after tough workouts, and its a little embarrassing when someone notices. Anyone know what causes the hands to shake? Is it a dehydration thing? Or not getting enough vitamins? I dont drink coffee or anything with caffine so that can be ruled out....

 

감사합니다.

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Posted
It's normal when starting out. It happened to me for a while, specially after sparring. I very rarely get them now, except when I do a tourny. Nervous, I guess.

Laurie F

Posted

Yeah, you nerves can really get it. WHen you are about to Spar, for people who have never sparred before, it can be a little scary.

 

Also, you may not be getting enoug hcarbs. You need energy. Eat a banana or 2 before the work out, along with a big glass of water. That should give you a nice dosage of carbs and vitamens to boost you energy levels when you work out.

Posted

It'll go away.

 

My legs use to shake when I started using a CrossTrainer (think thats what it was called) for easy warm ups. Actually your lucky, you can move your hands around and such and people will never notice. What was I suppose to do? Dance? :lol:

Posted (edited)
*edit* Edited by Kate

Respect, honesty, dignity - they're free how about we give them to each other?

Posted
I used to get shaky legs and abs when I used to do 3 - 4 km flat out on the treadmill - never noticed it any other time.

Currently: Kickboxing and variants.

Previously: Karate (Seido, Shotokan, Seidokan), Ju Jitsu, Judo, Aikido, Fencing.

Posted

Everyone shakes it a bit embarassing when you sensei see you 1 out of 9 classes it happen.

 

its not big problem.

 

i done a round house kick my leg crack and i have trouble walking to school..

I am still training however, having dabbled in Shotokan and Shotokai Karate. I am please to report that Kenshukai is one of the strongest and most disciplined styles ( i did not write this)

Posted
it could be sleep deprivation as well, as that tends to give you "the shakes". are you getting enough sleep? though it's probably just fatigue and/or nervous-ness, getting more sleep would probably help a bit. :)

"I hear you can kill 200 men and play a mean six string at the same time..."-Six String Samurai

Posted
I have the shaky hand problem too. I would get them after we did these very intense hand target drills in class, which involves punching targets high power for a long time. We usually do these for a couple of weeks after every testing (2 months). The first time we did this drill 3 days in a row and my hands shoke for almost a week. My instructor said that I probably needed more protein. Now I drink about 15-20g of whey protein before I train and that seems to help a bit. :)

"Success comes in cans not cannots." -Unknown


1st degree black belt Taekwondo

15 years old

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