The answer is not “do nothing” or “keep training.” It’s somewhere in between—a strategic approach that honors your body’s need for recovery while maintaining the strength and mobility you’ve worked so hard to build.
Here’s your guide to a holiday break that leaves you refreshed, recovered, and ready to return to the studio stronger than before.
After weeks of rehearsals, multiple performances, and the mental stress of Nutcracker season, your body has accumulated fatigue that goes deeper than surface-level soreness.
What’s happening inside your body:
- Microscopic muscle damage that needs repair time
- Depleted energy stores in your muscles and liver
- Stressed tendons and ligaments that need to rebuild
- A nervous system that’s been in high-alert mode for weeks
- Mental fatigue that affects focus, motivation, and injury risk
In my work with dancers, I see that those who take strategic breaks have fewer overuse injuries and return stronger after a break. But the key word is strategic—complete inactivity isn’t the goal.
A strategic break with the appropriate balance of rest and light activities helps a dancer’s capacity return to a higher level after it was depleted during Nutcracker season. If dancers don’t allow their bodies to recover, their threshold for developing injuries is going to be much lower for the rest of the season.
Think of your holiday break in two distinct phases, each with a different purpose.
Primary goal: Let your body repair and restore.
Movement approach: Complete rest for 3-5 days, then gentle active recovery.
What this looks like:
- Days 1-3: Complete rest from structured exercise. Sleep in, enjoy holiday activities, let your body truly decompress.
- Days 4-7: Add 20-30 minutes of gentle movement if you feel ready (see activities below).
Mental shift: This is not laziness. This is strategic recovery that makes you a better dancer.
Primary goal: Keep your body moving without the intensity or pressure of training.
Movement approach: Active recovery 4-5 days, with optional light strength work 2-3 days.
What this looks like:
- 30-45 minutes of low-intensity movement most days
- 2-3 short strength sessions (20 minutes max, bodyweight only)
- Continue prioritizing rest, sleep, and enjoyment
Mental shift: Movement should feel good, not like training. If it feels like work, dial it back.
Not all movement is created equal during recovery. Here are activities that maintain your conditioning without stressing your body.
Walking or hiking
- 30-45 minutes at a conversational pace
- Great for mental clarity and gentle leg conditioning
- Bonus: Get outside and enjoy winter scenery
Easy swimming
- Gentle laps or water walking
- Takes pressure off joints while maintaining cardiovascular fitness
- Excellent for full-body mobility
Casual bike rides
- Flat terrain, easy pace
- Low-impact option for leg strength maintenance
- Can be social—ride with family or friends
Key principle: You should be able to hold a conversation easily. If you’re breathing hard, you’re going too intense.
Restorative yoga
- Yin yoga or gentle flow classes
- Holds stretches longer but without force
- Includes breathwork for nervous system recovery
Foam rolling and self-massage
- 15-20 minutes targeting “tight” areas
- Calves, quads, hamstrings, glutes, back, feet
Gentle stretching routine
- Hold stretches 30-60 seconds (not to pain)
- Focus on areas that feel tight from Nutcracker
- Best done after light cardio when muscles are warm
Dance-inspired movement
- Slow barre work at home (no jumps, no forcing turnout)
- Gentle port de bras and balance work
- Improvisation or creative movement without choreography
You don’t need to do full strength workouts, but 2-3 short sessions help maintain what you’ve built.
Bodyweight circuit (20 minutes, 2-3x/week):
Lower body:
- Squats: 2 sets of 10-12
- Lunges: 2 sets of 8 each leg
- Single-leg balance: 30 seconds each leg
- Calf raises: 2 sets of 15
Core:
- Plank: 2 sets of 20-30 seconds
- Side plank: 2 sets of 15-20 seconds each side
- Dead bug: 2 sets of 10 each side
- Bird dog: 2 sets of 8 each side
Upper body:
- Push-ups (modified if needed): 2 sets of 8-10
- Arm circles: 10 each direction
- Resistance band rows (if available): 2 sets of 12
Key principles:
- Keep intensity at 50-60% of your normal effort
- Focus on control and form, not fatigue
- Stop before you feel tired
- Skip this entirely if your body is telling you it needs more rest
Some activities feel productive but actually interfere with recovery:
❌ Taking full dance classes
Your body is recovering from a high volume of dance hours with Nutcracker rehearsals and performances. It needs a break from this to avoid repetitive overuse injuries.
❌ Trying to increase your flexibility
This is not the time to force new splits or extensions. Maintain what you have.
❌ High-intensity interval training or boot camps
Your body doesn’t know the difference between dance and HIIT—it’s all stress.
❌ Long runs or intense cardio
Save the cardiovascular training for after your break.
❌ Learning new skills or choreography
Mental and physical recovery go hand-in-hand. Give your brain a break too.
Your holiday break is about more than just physical rest. Use this time to support your dancing in other ways.
Aim for 7-8 hours per night
Sleep is when your body does its deepest repair work
Catch up on the sleep debt you accumulated during Nutcracker
Eat regular, balanced meals (protein, carbs, healthy fats)
Don’t restrict food—your body needs fuel to repair
Stay hydrated (even though you’re not sweating as much)
Enjoy holiday treats without guilt
Journal and get your thoughts out on paper
Set intentions (not rigid goals) for the new year
Watch dance performances without analyzing technique
Spend time with non-dance friends and family
Do activities that have nothing to do with dance - many dancers miss out on these things during the season. It's very healthy to explore other things that you enjoy that are outside of the dance realm.
What went well this season?
What do you want to work on when you return?
What does your body need more of? Less of?
How can you prevent the injuries or challenges you faced?
How do you know if you’re balancing rest and movement well?
Good signs:
- You feel energized after movement, not exhausted
- Soreness from Nutcracker is decreasing
- You’re sleeping well and waking up refreshed
- You feel mentally recharged and excited (not anxious) about returning
- Your mood is stable and positive
Warning signs you need more rest:
- Movement feels like a chore or obligation
- You’re still experiencing significant soreness or pain
- You’re not sleeping well or feeling constantly tired
- You’re irritable, anxious, or unmotivated
- You’re thinking obsessively about “losing” your technique
If you notice warning signs, add more complete rest days and reduce intensity.
As your break winds down, start thinking about your return:
3-4 days before returning:
- Gradually increase movement duration (but not intensity)
- Do one longer mobility session (30-40 minutes)
- Mentally prepare for the transition back to structure
First week back:
- Expect to feel rusty—this is normal
- Start at 60-70% intensity
- Prioritize your warm-up more than ever
- Be patient with yourself
Remember: It typically takes 3-5 days to feel back to your baseline. Dancers who take full breaks often return stronger and more technically proficient than those who trained through and never took a break.
Your holiday break is not a break from dancing—it’s a break for your dancing. Strategic rest combined with smart, low-intensity movement gives your body what it needs to repair, restore, and come back stronger.
You’ve earned this rest. Your body needs it. And your future dancing will thank you.
Permission granted: Rest without guilt. Move without pressure. Enjoy the holidays.
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