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| Coach T |
I realized as the deadline for renewing my membership loomed, that I was putting way too much pressure on myself. I was taking myself too seriously. I tend to see myself more as a hard working runner that happens to be able to pull off some fast marathon times rather than an "elite runner". I think a lot of this pressure stemmed from the fact that I was spending a lot of money on coaching. In some warped way, I felt that I needed to get my money's worth and that was affecting my judgment. When I think about what really matters to me, I realize that first and foremost I just want to run. I have to get back to it, and I have to get back to a place where I enjoy it.
In reading through my own recent blog posts, I recognized that, somewhere along the line, I lost confidence in my own good judgment. I reflected on my success leading up to Chicago. It was no fluke that I improved enough over a six year period to qualify for the Trials. While I credit good coaching and a solid training plan for a lot of that success, I hadn't realized before how much responsibility I had for my own training and health. Over the last three years, Coach Nicole advised me, but I made the decisions. Before that, it was pretty much all me. Those decisions led me to six years of (nearly) injury-free training. On top of that, in the three years leading up to Chicago, I completed all but one scheduled workout. That's like hundreds of workouts, and it's not like my training was easy either. I did this by knowing myself and listening to my body. Nicole told me that over and over, reminding me that I knew my body well and should listen to it.
Being the analytical type that I am, I have enjoyed looking through all of the running books I own and ordering new ones to see what type of a program I might follow next. I am not foreclosing on the prospect of having a coach in the future, but for now Coach T is cheap and I think being fully responsible for my own training is a good way for me to get my mojo back. I know a number of self-coached running superstars that give me faith that it can work. As far as I know, they don't have anyone like Coach T on their side, so I think I will have a distinct advantage.
As for my running plan: I ran 37 miles last week and have 40 planned for this week including strides and a mild progression run this weekend. I'm back to fitting in some cross training and have added back into my program some of the strength work I was used to, like the Rock Circuit which I did this morning and realized I kind of missed. I think my runner's body is used to and thrives on variety. It certainly kept me strong for 3 years, so I'm going back to the stuff I know worked.
Coach T told me to go out and ride my bicycle for as long as I wanted on Sunday. It was fun to set out without an agenda and just ride. I rode 20 miles to Coffee Republic in Folsom, had coffee and apple pie, and rode 20 miles back home. It was lovely.
In reading through my own recent blog posts, I recognized that, somewhere along the line, I lost confidence in my own good judgment. I reflected on my success leading up to Chicago. It was no fluke that I improved enough over a six year period to qualify for the Trials. While I credit good coaching and a solid training plan for a lot of that success, I hadn't realized before how much responsibility I had for my own training and health. Over the last three years, Coach Nicole advised me, but I made the decisions. Before that, it was pretty much all me. Those decisions led me to six years of (nearly) injury-free training. On top of that, in the three years leading up to Chicago, I completed all but one scheduled workout. That's like hundreds of workouts, and it's not like my training was easy either. I did this by knowing myself and listening to my body. Nicole told me that over and over, reminding me that I knew my body well and should listen to it.
Being the analytical type that I am, I have enjoyed looking through all of the running books I own and ordering new ones to see what type of a program I might follow next. I am not foreclosing on the prospect of having a coach in the future, but for now Coach T is cheap and I think being fully responsible for my own training is a good way for me to get my mojo back. I know a number of self-coached running superstars that give me faith that it can work. As far as I know, they don't have anyone like Coach T on their side, so I think I will have a distinct advantage.
As for my running plan: I ran 37 miles last week and have 40 planned for this week including strides and a mild progression run this weekend. I'm back to fitting in some cross training and have added back into my program some of the strength work I was used to, like the Rock Circuit which I did this morning and realized I kind of missed. I think my runner's body is used to and thrives on variety. It certainly kept me strong for 3 years, so I'm going back to the stuff I know worked.
Coach T told me to go out and ride my bicycle for as long as I wanted on Sunday. It was fun to set out without an agenda and just ride. I rode 20 miles to Coffee Republic in Folsom, had coffee and apple pie, and rode 20 miles back home. It was lovely.
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| Hey! Get your ass to work! |
That Coach T is a hard ass.

