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Long Hockey Night: When Fatigue Disappears

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Field Notes / The Good Life

Long Hockey Night: When Fatigue Disappears

  • March 26, 2026
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Man wearing number 15 jersey skating competitively in a hockey game at 63 — real proof that active engagement unlocks hidden physical reserves that passive rest never reveals.
Number 15, late-night game, 63 years old — showed up exhausted, left feeling reborn. This is what hidden reserves look like when you give your body the right stimulus instead of the couch.

It's 7 PM. I've just finished a long, exhausting workday. Came home, ate, relaxed on the couch.

Then I remember: hockey tonight.

Games start late—9 or 10 PM usually. That's when everyone can play. Work done, family obligations handled, we can give hockey our full attention.

But right now, sitting on this couch, the last thing I want to do is get up.

Two voices start arguing in my head.

Voice One: "You have to go."

Voice Two responds immediately: "Go where? Hockey again? Look at yourself. You're exhausted. Just rest tonight. Watch something. Hockey will be there next week."

Voice One: "No. Get up. You're going."

Voice Two gets louder: "Are you serious right now? You can barely lift your hockey bag off the floor. That thing weighs 40 pounds with all the equipment. You're really going to strap all that gear on and skate hard for 90 minutes? At your age? After the day you've had?"

Voice One: "Stop whining. Let's go."

I go.

I arrive at the rink. Walk into the locker room. Everyone's there—some of these guys I've known for 10, 15 years. The pre-game conversation starts. The jokes. The familiar ritual of putting on the equipment, piece by piece.

Suddenly, I don't feel quite so tired anymore.

Step onto the ice. Start warming up. Moving feels... different now. Better.

The game starts. Fatigue? What fatigue?

For the next 90 minutes, I don't just forget about being tired. I forget about every other problem that exists outside this arena. Work stress, project deadlines, whatever was bothering me three hours ago—gone.

I'm present. Moving. Competing. Alive.

Game ends. Hot shower. Walk out to my car.

I feel reborn.

Not just "not tired." Actually energized. So much energy I could turn around and go back to work right now if I needed to.

This happens almost every time.


The Lesson

This experience taught me something crucial about the human body: we contain enormous reserves we don't even suspect exist.

Most of the time, what we interpret as "I'm too tired" isn't genuine depletion. It's understimulation.

Your body isn't empty. It's bored. Unchallenged. Waiting for something to activate it.

The right stimulus doesn't drain those hidden reserves—it unlocks them.

This is why active recovery works better than passive rest. Movement, challenge, social engagement—these don't exhaust you when you're "tired." They reveal capacity you didn't know you had.

But there's a critical distinction here: this isn't about "pushing through exhaustion always." That's how you break down.

It's about understanding the difference between genuine depletion and temporary fatigue that dissolves with the right engagement.

Genuine depletion needs rest. You'll know it—elevated resting heart rate, poor sleep despite good habits, decreased performance that doesn't improve with warm-up. When those signals appear, I scale back immediately.

But temporary fatigue from a long day? That's different. The right activity—something engaging, social, physically demanding—often eliminates it completely.

Your body has more in reserve than you think.

The challenge is learning to distinguish between "I need rest" and "I need different activity."

Hockey teaches me this lesson repeatedly. The voice saying "you're too tired" is often wrong. Not always—but often enough that I've learned to test it.

Get off the couch. Show up. See what happens.

More often than not, the fatigue disappears the moment you engage with something that demands your full presence.

Your body isn't as depleted as your mind thinks it is. You just have to give it the right stimulus to prove it.

Mind Training and Longevity: Why Mental Performance Matters After 40
Research Note 1

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