Believe it or
not, the laws of physics, chemistry, mechanics and biology do relate to you,
too. Attempting to avoid them, believing that you’re too, err, special, or
regularly cutting-corners or cheating, only lead down five paths: fatigue,
ill-health, injury, guilt and shame.
Learn to listen to your body. Heed the signs from Mother Nature and her brother, Time. Your body has an infinite wisdom, yet you need to give yourself permission to listen, hear, and act accordingly...
·
Too little respect for Mother
Nature:
Get out: accept that her
3.5 billion years of experience carries a little more weight than yours. Learn
to listen for her signs, hear them, and act upon them. Better now than later,
too
Prevention: read about and
listen to the experience of others, and the expertise of professionals. Learn
from your errors, and don’t make them mistakes. Aim to train regularly and
consistently and not merely to record numbers
·
Too little respect for ‘listening to your body’. Learn and know
what to listen for
Get out: that raised
resting and easy-session heart rate and perceived effort, heavy legs and
inertia to get out of bed may be saying, “ease up today, champ”. Respect that.
Prevention: that tender,
sore, red, inflamed spot by a bone, tendon or joint that persists or get’s
worse upon getting out of bed, warming up, or when you’ve cooled down is
telling you something more serious. Respect it even more
·
Too little understanding of
“pain”. What we experience in long or hard races is ‘Self Induced Discomfort’. It’s not true pain or suffering.
Understand and respect the differences and train to physically and mentally
reduce or cope better with SID, and
minimize pain.
Get out: pain is Mother
Nature’s warning sign that something is not right – that damage is about to be
done, or has been done.
Prevention: minor injuries
come with the territory if you train and race hard. Overuse, chronic and
recurring injuries aren’t a badge-of-honor. Prevent them through improving your
mechanics and technique, and through progressive cyclic, varied and
individualised training
·
Too little injury prevention
training. Most injuries can be prevented.
Get out: pay attention to
little niggles, sore spots, a sore-throat fatigue , and dodgy mechanics and/or
poor technique. A few lighter days now may save you missed weeks or months of
training later
Prevention: get a video analysis of your swimming and running mechanics and technique.
Perform a functional strength assessment too. Emphasize alleviating deficits,
anomalies and imbalances. Use targeted and specific strength and mobility
training on a regular basis
· Too little respect for Time. Remember…planning, patience, persistence and power produce performance. Patience and persistence pay respect to Time:
Prevention: ‘Stacking’ or accumulating sessions over time (not all the time) is what brings success. Persistence provides performance. It will take at least 6-8 years to realize your potential.
·
Too light and too lean. Optimal
body weight and body composition for performance and health aren’t the same
things:
Get out: avoid the trap –
too light and too lean is not necessarily better
Prevention: record and log
your body weight and body-fat (and strength or power) in a standardized manner.
Graph them alongside consistent training blocks and race-results. Associate
both to find what works best for you
·
Too much dwelling on a poor
session or poor race
Get out: value that no one
session or race will make you, but they do have the potential to break you.
Prevention: Review,
re-work and move on
·
Too much reliance upon
technology and toys:
Get out: leave the gadgets
and toys at home occasionally. Learn their shortcomings too – look-up “cardiac
drift”
Prevention: re-learn and
appreciate how and why there’s merit in simply going for a swim, a bike and a
run without measuring it. Learn more about feel and be dictated less by numbers
for, in the heat of competition and racing, your body dictates what you do -not
prescribed numbers
·
Too much reliance upon synthetic
foods and nutrients. Gels, powders and supplements are not major food groups,
macronutrients nor micronutrients.
Get out: go to the
fresh-food stands of the local market more often than you go to your local sports-store
or cycle-shop. Differentiate between day-to-day real food and race-relevant
“nutrition” that works best for you
Prevention: visit your
sports-medicine specialist and discuss relevant performance- and health-related
blood, urine and saliva tests to provide a baseline on various elements such as
iron, other minerals, antioxidant status, hormone balance, blood glucose and
cholesterol. Follow up with a visit to a registered dietitian or nutritionist
and work out a plan. Work that plan too.
How well do you listen?
What do you hear?