
This dude looks like he needs a mindset boost
Something odd happens to me when I face a physically challenging task. If you know me well enough, you probably can believe it what Iām about to tell you.
Dude, Ā I start feeling sorry for myself, and when I say āsorry,ā I mean sorry. Like take your sorry tail back home to mama kind of sorry.
This from a guy whose life literally revolves around physical challenges. Iāve labeled myself a lot of things in my adult life, and they usually ā-erā attached to the end. Ā Runner. Biker. Climber. Kayaker. Itās never been a pastime either. Iām either going 100% or Iām out entirely. It frustrates Jen to no end (me too).
But before any hard workout, scary climb, or long ride I have always gone through an intense period of self-pity, thinking Ā āOh man, Iāve got to do ____ and itās going to suck.ā Donāt get me wrong – I donāt back down. I get it done, and usually the monologue is entirely internal and goes away immediately upon assumption of the task. But underneath a calm exterior beforehand, is a maelstrom of lousiness.
I bring this up because as I talk about Mindset, itās important to identify the mental pitfalls that will bring us down. Mindset is about really about one thing: tenacity. Call it āintestinal fortitude,ā āwarrior mentalityā; call it what you want. What it boils down to is a mind that wonāt accept excuses. So for those of us for whom mental domination doesnāt come naturally (which is just about everyone), itās important to develop mental tactics which enable us to meet and exceed challenges.
Train like you race/race like you train. Racing is about 1% of what I do as I runner. 99% of running for me consists of training, of all things I do to get me to the start line. Training is what I have to to; racing is what I get to do after all that training. With that in mind, every run, every strength session becomes an opportunity to rehearse for race-day. In terms of mindset, it means not just going through the physical motions while ignoring the mental. One way I apply this in training is through the development of mental cues that will transfer seamlessly from training to racing. Mental cues are simple words, phrases, or memories I tuck away like little nuggets to pull out of my race-day toolbox. Some of the words I use: āStopā with the visual of stop-sign if negativity starts to creep into my noggin; āStrongā with an image of myself as a runner built to be strong, capable of crushing hills and competitors with perfect form; and āHammerā with the visual of putting sledgehammer through a brick wall. You might remember this phrase from my Grandmaās Race Report: āFingertips-hips-lean,ā which functions as a form check. Memories are a bit more difficult, but still a viable tool. As I train, I constantly look for experiences I can store away as reminders of what I am capable of doing. Before Grandmaās, I was on a 24 miler and hit a tough hill around 21 miles, which was right around where I knew Iād hit a tough hill on race day. So, with that in mind, I attacked the hill, hard. It hurt, but as I crested it, I told myself: āYou remember this on race day. Remember how you dominated a hill at 21 miles on tired legs. Let it strengthen you.ā And on the day, thatās exactly what I did. As I neared the hill, I recalled the memory and let it drive me past a handful of runners who were ahead of me.
Itās not about what you feel; itās about what you do. This is something I didnāt really figure out until the past year. For the longest time, I always looked for that perfect feeling that meant I was ready to go. I would put off training runs by hours, simply hoping to feel better, somehow more ready. If I didnāt feel totally strong in a workout I viewed it as going poorly, making it that much harder on myself. Over the past year Iāve really had to come to grips with this issue and attack it at its root. Sometimes, no matter what you do (and you could be perfectly rested, trained, fed, etc), you will just inexplicably feel lousy. The ground truth is that you simply can not control how you feel. What you can control is what you do with this feeling. Two weeks ago, I had a tough workout scheduled: 6M at 6:00 pace or faster, 1M easy, then 3 x 1M at 5:45 with just 60s rest in between each mile repeat. To complicate things, the workout was scheduled for the day after flying, which always leaves my legs feeling pretty lousy. As I warmed up, I was not feeling good. I just knew it wasnāt going to be one of those effortless workouts. The first mile of the 6M segment proved me right – I struggled. I started down that old path of self-pity, then I remembered: Itās not about how you feel. I literally felt like a load was lifted from my mind. I no longer felt the pressure to not only perform, but to feel a certain way. Did it make the workout easier? Nope. It was still a tough one. But I hit my targets, and did it with a mind working for, as opposed to against, me.
Hope for the best, but have a plan for the worst. As a young runner, I depended on the idea that I would feel good in key races. When it didnāt happen, I fell apart and raced poorly. In military jargon, I lacked a āGo To Hell Plan,ā which is to say I wasnāt ready for the variety of ways a race could unfold. So hereās the deal: if things go well and all the stars align and each step of your race is as blessed as the ones before, then bully on you. Youāll probably have to focus most on reigning yourself in as opposed to overcoming challenges. Understand, however, that those perfect days are rare. So best be prepared for the rest of the days. This translates to an application of what Iāve already talked about in terms of developing a sound approach and mental tools. As I approach races, I like to do run little mental checklists for what Iām going to do if things arenāt going as I hoped. For example, I imagine myself at a specific point in the race, and ask myself what Iām going to do if I feel like Iām working harder than I should. Maybe the response is that I dynamically re-frame my goals and fall back on a lower goal time. Maybe the response is that I need to work on gutting it outĀ so I tuck some mental cues away to get me through the bad times. You get the picture. Imagine what things are going to be like if things arenāt going as planned and have some plans in place so you arenāt taken down by a sneak attack. Ā
So, there you have it. Mindset by Matt. Sorry again for the late post -Iām literally finishing this standing up at a table in the Tampa airport. See you again tomorrow, and if I havenāt said it in a while, thanks again for stopping by.