EndureChallenge Recap - An athletic point-of-view.

Chris McDonald, Gordo, Ironman, Ironman Wisconsin, adventure, endurance, fatigue, marathon, running, sports psychology, triathlon No Comments »

Here’s a few links to where and what the EndureChallenge was:

1. How it started - Why guys need to find fitness (and life) milestones
2. When I decided what to do - Celebrating 30 years of living well
3. Great Illini Race Report - iron distance race on Sept 6th, 2008
4. Lake City Marathon Race Report - marathon ran on Sept 13th, 2008

I was able to get some data loaded into motionbased, but not all because the Garmin 305 started deleting the oldest data during the week.  I have the totals of the workouts, but not the gps data (and therefore no maps or motionbased links).  Here’s what I have:

1.  Great Illini Marathon - don’t have gps
2.  Effingham, Illinois to Paris, Illinois - don’t have gps
3.  Paris, Illinois to Attica, Indiana - Sept 9th
4. Attica, Indiana to Logansport, Indiana - Sept 10th
5. Logansport, Indiana to Warsaw, Indiana - Sept 11th
6. Lake City Marathon

It’s too bad that I don’t have the gps map from my first day of bike touring, it would be comical to see how much I was backtracking and moving around the Illinois countryside to get away from small gravel roads.  The other thing about the data during the bike touring is that I started the gps when I left the hotel in the morning and stopped it when I got to the next one at night; therefore the charts are a little odd because I stopped to eat at diners, fast food joints, talk to locals, etc.  That’s what I love about touring!

Thoughts on what this taught me about my athletics:

Lesson One: The biggest lesson that I’m taking away from this event is that I don’t need to fear Ironman.  This was my third Iron Distance race in the past three years and up to this point I think that Ironman was still intimidating me in some ways.  The biggest way that it intimidated me was (as I mentioned in the lake city race report) by making me fear a complete collapse during the run that left me immobile.  That fear caused me to develop a race strategy that was possibly too conservative.

Granted, I did have somewhat of a breakdown during the last 10 of the marathon on the 13th, but the next time I do Ironman (Ironman Louisville in 2009) I will remember that it too 2.4 miles of swimming, 435 miles of cycling and 40.2 miles of running before I finally slowed below a 7:30 pace (and I still managed a 7:22/mile pace overall).

Lesson Two: I can ride a bike faster than “touring” pace.  I have been pretty consistent over the last couple years in telling myself, “back off the bike or you won’t be able to run… back off, back off.”  If you read my Ironman Wisconsin Race Report from 2007, that was a pretty consistent theme during that ride.  I wish that I had my heart rate data from the Great Illini because I guarantee that I rode well above 145 - 150bpm, which is what I used as my ceiling (or mostly) during IMMOO last year.

The one little bit of data that I have from the bike is when I turned my Garmin 305 on during the last couple miles of the bike during the Great Illini (to have it ready for the marathon).  During that period I was sitting in the 157 - 161 bpm, which is a time that I was trying to relax and prepare for the run.  The best thing is that I got off the bike and ran well!

Lesson Three: The third thing that I learned (again) will relate to training over the next year - when you find your behavior and emotions changing, it is a good sign of overtraining.  I noticed this during the touring that occurred between the two races.  I remember sitting down in the hotel room after one of the nights of touring and just felt like crying?  No reason, I felt wasted and wanted to cry as I laid there on the bed.  You can probably see some of this if you watch the youtube video updates that I shared.

As I sit here (Wednesday, 4 days after the last marathon) I have been dealing with small levels of depression each day.  Nikki has noticed that I haven’t been in the “best mood” too.  It might be an exaggeration to say “depression”, but it is really hard to find anything to be happy about - even though I know there is a lot to be happy for.  I believe this is just another way that our mind tries to tell our body what to do and not do?  It’s not easy to get out there and exercise when you have lowered moods; therefore I’m going to listen and be very careful over the next few weeks.  I don’t want to get sick (like I did two years ago a few weeks after Ironman).

Lesson Four: I have talked about this a little bit in the race reports from both races (Great Illini and Lake City Marathon) - but when racing in endurance events, getting the mind out of the way is a major part of the race.  The body must be trained and fine tuned, but the mind must also get out of the way and allow the body to work.

Chris McDonald just did an interview over on Endurance Corner Radio where he talks about his 2nd Place finish at Ironman Louisville and 1st Place finish (and course record) at Ironman Wisconsin a week later.  It’s a great interview and he does talk about the mental challenge during Ironman Wisconsin and how it played a role in his race.  They spend a couple moments talking about the mental aspect of fatigue.

The last thing that I’m excited about is that I’ve learned about barriers that I’ve built over the years and how those barriers are abstract constraints that I’ve placed on myself more than they are real physical and physiological limiters.  That is a lesson worth its weight in gold.

Have a compelling story!

BobbyMcGee, Gordo, affirmations, destiny, mental skills, mental training, positive self talk, sports psychology, successful 5 Comments »

I am about half way through a book titled “Beyond Booked Solid” by Michael Port. The book is a business read, but I just read through a section that seemed to apply very well to an athlete’s attempt at a new fitness goal (Remember - Brad says we are all athletes!).

In the chapter, Projects - How to Get Things Done, Port goes through a list of “simple rules to get things done.” Of course the rules are designed to address a business project, but isn’t taking on a half marathon, marathon or a triathlon a project? A project on yourself!

Think of all the management skills you have to use when you begin this journey of endurance: scheduling workouts, relationship building, family management, coordinating outsourced help (from coach, trainer, nutritionist, physical therapist, etc)… it really is a project.

Reading through the list of rules that Port shares, the one that really made me think about this connection was the last rule - “Have a Compelling Story for Your Project.” Let me share a couple quick quotes from that section:

“Keeping your passion and your focus depends on telling and retelling the story of your project” … “[your story] will become increasingly important as you face problems, setbacks, or any type of project breakdown”

Discussing some research by Dan McAdam’s, author of The Redemptive Self: Stories Americans Live By, Port talks about the value of our story to our behaviors:

“.. when we tell our life stories, we are really just telling ourselves who we are and why. McAdams found, for example that successful people often tell a life story characterized by overcoming adversity, connections with others, and a belief in the future. In fact, the narrative themes we choose when we tell our life story may well be diriving factors in our behavior.”

The Direct Application to the Journey of Endurance:

Some of the stories that I’ve heard over the years are pretty amazing.  When I think about the people that give me motivation to continue my own journey, it is because they have had a compelling story.  Here are a couple stories:

- Gordo Byrn - now he is a professional triathlete, finished top five at Ironman multiple times and has a performance lab in his basement in Boulder, Colorado.  But that hasn’t always been the truth, nor was it the story that inspired me to call him my hero in triathlon.  At the age of 30, Gordo was a beginner, just like most of us - with a full time job, etc, etc.  He used to talk often of his process to “come off the couch” and become the professional athlete.  This story is actually the force that compelled a masters swimmer to tell me about him back in 2001, and while the professional Gordo is interesting, the couch to athlete story is motivating.

- Brad (right here at sweat365) -  The title of his blog is pretty revealing, “Fat Kid becomes Ironman.”  Over the past year, I’ve had the ability to read and share in Brad’s story because he has been open to us readers through his blog.  It is a story that many people probably relate to, especially when they decide to take on this endurance project.

There are many more stories that I’ve heard at races, on blogs and lately on podcasts (steverunner, zentriathlon and confessionsofarunner), but one thing to think about when figuring out your own story is this:

Take control of your story.  Define your own path.  Don’t be afraid to dream (and become) big. Be positive.

I have written about the benefit of positive “story telling” in a post I titled:  Talk Yourself into a Better Triathlon Performance.  It was about the thoughts I had after reading Bobby McGee’s book, “Magical Running,” integrated with some ideas that I shared about - Mental Training for Endurance Athletes.

One of the more personal stories that I’ve shared related to self-image and running was a story I shared a couple years ago, Define Yourself (and Be Positive).  The point was of sharing that story is that we will have face our doubters.  We’ll have people telling us we can’t do that because we are not good enough, fast enough, strong enough, healthy enough or anything-not-like-them-enough.

It might be that we’ll have more people telling us that we can’t than telling us we can.  I even had a guy continually telling me I was “running too fast” - “was going to bonk” - “wasn’t going to finish” while running my first marathon.  (Jerk!)

But that’s the secret.  Develop your story.  Define who you are, what you want to accomplish and then share it.  The platform here at sweat365 gives you that ability.  And then sell that story to every person you see.

Micheal Port says in his book, “Never discount the power of the stories you tell about your projects.  Stories articulate why a project is important to everyone involved, and they keep the project on track.”

I’d love to hear your story.  If you’ve already constructed your story - Please share it by posting a link in the comments of this post.  We can all improve by reading other compelling stories.

The Ultra that wasn’t and Podcasting bests of the past week.

Billy Mills, Gordo, IT Band Syndrome, Phedippidations, TriTalk, podcast, ultra No Comments »

One: So I was supposed to do the ultra at the Land between the Lakes this past weekend…. to make it very short, I didn’t make it. The decision came down to either driving in bad weather and doing the race in the bad weather or stay home and safe. I made the best decision, I think, but knowing that others were there pushing through the trails was hard to take, emotionally.

Two: Podcasting is something that I have been spending some serious time learning about. My first podcast was supposed to be phases of the ultra run. I had tested and researched various mobile podcasting set-ups and got the stuff ready to do the editing, but I don’t have those edits (obviously).

Don’t worry, I have some outtakes from my week leading up to the ultra. So I’m going to put together the first podcast soon and include some discussion on various material on nutrition I’ve been reading. Stay tuned.

Three: There are quite a few podcasts that I listen to (and motivation for me to try) and recently I have heard a couple very good podcasts. I wanted to share the links and a brief idea of what you’ll find:

a. Steverunner.com with his podcast, Phedippidations. One of the podcasts that I’ve listened to the longest. But one episode that I downloaded this week and listened to was the show that talked about the running legend, Billy Mills.

Here’s the link: Billy Mills at Phedippidations - go to episode 125, Dec 2007

Billy Mills is a huge childhood hero of mine. There are many reasons that I admire Billy Mills, part of it I believe is that growing up in Nebraska the American Indian culture was always close by, but probably more due to the fact that I could identify with the scenes from the movie “Running Brave.” I remember running along the country roads or next to my uncles bean fields, especially as a way to escape.

I have actually blogged about this a little before : March 16, 2006.

b. Tri-Talk.com - go to the most recent episode (60). David talks about the importance of the glut medius in the runner. I urge you to go listen to the podcast and talk the advice he has. Nikki and I have been working on a project that will hopefully help runners address these issues. (I know another promise of “stuff to come”… but it will be soon!)

c. Endurance Corner Radio - go to the Feb. 20, 2008 podcast. This is Gordo, et. al’s podcast. The podcasts are interviews with athletes and coaches, so sometimes they are not as entertaining as some of the other podcasts (such as the touch of comedy in Phedippidations) but you can pick up a lot of information as you workout if you want.

If you want to skip to what I thought was great information to listen to go to: minutes 17:45 to 32:00. Here’s a list of the topics that Gordo and Dr. John Hellemans discuss:

- Health - Injury - Overload and Intensity - Basic Week - Consistent Training - Job and Commitments - Family - Depression -

The discussion back and forth between them can provide some gyms that Ironman triathletes can use in their approach to their athletic careers. Advice that will help them stay Health and Fit, and likely help them achieve good performances too. (The three steps I love.)


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