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Recovery Metrics: Understanding What WHOOP and Wearables Actually Measure

Wearable recovery metrics — HRV, sleep stages, resting heart rate, respiratory rate — measure the physiological state that determines your readiness for training. Understanding what these metrics actually capture and what they miss is essential for using them intelligently rather than treating them as infallible performance oracles. This concept covers the measurement science behind wearable recovery metrics and how to incorporate them into training decisions.

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Why It Matters

Your smartwatch or fitness wearable gives you numbers every morning. Resting heart rate. Heart rate variability. Recovery score. Most people look at these and think: "Is this good?" But they don't actually know what the numbers mean.

Let's break down what these metrics actually tell you and why they matter for training decisions.

Resting Heart Rate (RHR)

This is your heart rate when you first wake up, before you get out of bed. A lower RHR generally means your heart is efficient and your autonomic nervous system (the system that controls stress and recovery) is in good shape. A normal RHR is 60-80 beats per minute for most adults, though athletes often have lower rates.

Why it matters: If your RHR suddenly jumps 8-10 beats above your normal, it signals that your body is stressed or not recovering well. Maybe you're overtraining. Maybe you're fighting an infection. Maybe you're not sleeping enough. It's an early warning sign.

Heart Rate Variability (HRV)

This is the variation in time between heartbeats. Sounds boring, but it's powerful. A higher HRV means your nervous system is flexible—it can shift between sympathetic (stressed, high-alert) and parasympathetic (calm, recovery) states easily. A lower HRV means your nervous system is stuck in sympathetic mode.

Why it matters: High HRV = ready for intense training. Low HRV = your body needs recovery. This is why wearables use HRV to recommend rest days. It's not arbitrary; it's reading your nervous system directly.

Recovery Score or Readiness Score

This is what Whoop and similar devices calculate from combining multiple data points—sleep, RHR, HRV, strain from the previous day. They spit out a single number: 68% recovered, 85% recovered, etc.

Why it matters: This takes all the guesswork out. Instead of trying to understand HRV and RHR separately, you get a single, simple answer: "You're 72% recovered. This is an ideal day for a moderate workout, not max effort."

The Practical Application

You don't need to obsess over these metrics. But they do give you one crucial advantage: objective data about recovery instead of guessing. Most people train hard even when their body is signaling it needs recovery, which leads to overtraining. These metrics prevent that.

The data gets really valuable when combined with AI. AI uses your recovery metrics plus your training data to say: "Your HRV is low and your recovery score is 55%. Doing your planned intense workout today is a 73% injury risk. Do a light day instead." That's actionable.

Try this: If you have a wearable that tracks these metrics, check your resting heart rate and recovery score for a week. Don't change anything. Just observe patterns. Does your RHR match how you actually feel? On days with low recovery scores, how is your energy and mood? Start noticing the correlations between these metrics and your actual experience.

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