Biked - some more
Ran - some more but less
Time - a decent bit
Over the past two weeks it seems like I've really let myself go. No blogging, no video-making...no nothin'. But today that is changing. I was reminded the other night by Jenny Leiser - pro triathlete - about what having an "elite" attitude can do to change your performances and this post itself (i.e. actually writing it) was galvanized by me losing the final sprint last night.
I love sprinting on my bicycle. There is no denying that. The sheer max output of watts for 5-10s is beyond exhilarating. I think part of the appeal also comes from "realizing" the end-game of a tactical plan. Sitting in, sitting in, sitting in...UNLEASH. It's all about timing. Knowing when your opponents are at their weakest, at their strongest, most vulnerable, etc. It is unlike anything in triathlon, really.
Triathlete, on the front. |
One thing that's unique - insofar as this conversation applies to yours truly anyway - is the mental approach to sprinting. I would imagine that most cyclists of a triathlon bent think of sprinting as "unnecessary," "stupid," "painful," "sucky," etc. They are not wrong, necessarily. If you start going for county signs in your triathlon races you are asking for trouble later on in the race... BUT, talk to any cyclist that is also a "sprinter" and you will find their mindset differs quite a bit.
Triathlete, on the front. |
Too much laughing, not enough sprinting! |
Triathlete, on the front. |
You can FEEL the tension in a bike pack with 5-10 minutes to go in a race. It's palpable. On race morning in triathlons there is a lot sad faces, tired faces...and only a little bit of excitement. That is - in no small part - due to the fact that triathlons "start" at 5:30 in the morning (in terms of getting ready) whereas bike racers get to sleep in, lounge around, and race in the middle of the day.
The excitement is...palpable. |
But what keeps us from having that CONFIDENCE with regard to all facets of our workouts. Why do I feel the need to complain all the time and feel resigned about doing workouts? Why don't I get excited for all of them?? I am #blessed to be able to compete at exercising at the level I am, but that doesn't automatically make me love it.
Should it? Should I (we) love every workout? Love every race? Approach everything like nobody is going to be better than us? The rational part of me realizes how ridiculous and impossible that is. I am a smart guy, I cannot convince myself that I am the best at exercising. Not to any degree. But I CAN convince myself that I WILL out-sprint you. Even if I don't always. Why the disconnect?
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