Endurance Coach

Endurance Coach

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Goal Setting for Success

Want to have a successful season? You must set goals.


Here are some tips for goal setting:

• Goals should stretch you. Anything less will not properly motivate you to improve.

• Goals have to be balanced with other aspects of your life. It is easy to lose balance in our endurance world. No race achievement will mean anything if you lose your family in the process.

• Set training objectives for each training block – stepping stones that will lead you toward your seasonal goals. Every 4-6 week block should have mini-goals.

• Every day, act like you believe. When you set a goal, you may not honestly know that you can reach it. But you do have to pretend that you do. Act with your nutrition and sleep habits. Act with your approach to each training session. Act with your attention to the details that will matter on race day. And on race day, keep pretending – all the way to the finish line.

• Go to bed each night with no regrets. Ask yourself, “Did I do all that I can towards achieving my goals.” Make that answer a yes often. Race with no regrets as well.

• Surround yourself with training partners and friends who believe you can do it.

• Enlist a coach who knows that you can do it.

Best wishes for your best season yet!

Monday, March 1, 2010

American Birkebeiner 2010 - For the Joy of It

Birkie 2010 is in the books!  It couldn't have been a better day for the 8000+ skiers on Saturday.  It was 3 degrees as we drove to the race and 35 degrees when we finished.  Brilliant blue sky framed the birch and pine forests through which this hilly 50km course climbs. 

Although we both felt sluggish in the first half of the race (logical - since we barely fit in skiing this year), we were both able to negative split the course and finish strong.  Our Boston and IM St. George training kicked in for those tough later hills.  Looks like I passed more than 200 skiers in the last 20km.  After reviewing the last 10 years of results, the numbers show that I raced my 17th Birkie about as well as any I've raced since having kids.  Not bad for someone swimming, biking and running her way through Birkie training.

So why do we insist on racing a long, tough, logistically complex ski race in the middle of training for our upcoming "A" races?  It is difficult to describe, but I'll try.
  • For the JOY of it.  The Birkie is a celebraton of skiing.  Most of the 8000 skiers are there because they absolutely love to ski.  This is the place to find like minded people and to celebrate everyone's race and everyone's stories from the past year and from their own 50km that day.
  • For the INSPIRATION from it.  The Birkie honors those skiers based on how many Birkies they've managed to finish (no small task).  We got to see our friends Bob and Bill be honored for their 30th Birkies at a special breakfast.  How inspiring to see our fellow skiers continuing to tackle this challenge well past retirement age.  They are showing us the way to age with strength, joy, fitness and peace. 
  • APPRECIATION.  As Birke skiers pursue the Birchleggings Award (given to those who finish 20 Birkies), inevitably we lose some of our skiing friends to deteriorating health and even death.  We've also seen friends come back from cancer and traumatic accidents to race again.  As we all do the math - estimating how old we may be when we get that 20 or 30 year award, we realize how precarious our goals are.  I think we all race as if it might be our last Birkie - appreciating our good health and good fortune to once again toe the crowded starting line.
  • For the FITNESS from it.  When training for a spring marathon or Ironman, it can be difficult to fit in race experiences.  Saturday, I raced HARD for 3 hours and 44 minutes.  Although stiff and tired, the low impact nature of the race means that I'll be able to rev back up my IM training after 2-3 days of recovery workouts. 
Don't forget to fit fun into your 2010 season.  It doesn't all need to be about specific training for your "A" race - unless you are working towards a national class or world class goal.  For the rest of us, we can train specifically for our "A" races 90% of the time and still fit in other sports that make it fun and bring us indirect fitness from another angle.
Don't forget JOY, APPRECIATION and FUN.  Without those, how can you possibly be fast?