I am not so good at pushing through and holding on. When the pack runs/rides at a higher pace than I think I can hold, I drop back. I am saving myself....from what? I am not sure, but I think I am saving myself from a sure death.
However, this hinders me as an athlete. The safety of the splits I know I can hold...the familiarity of the paces I know so well... It is good, but then there is no BREAKTHROUGH.
Since I recognize this as a weakness of mine, I now look for times when I have allowed my comfort zone to dictate my training. On Tuesday, we were given a really tough set- well, tough for me (non-swimmer)for sure, and I think Steve would agree. Given the fact that we have both missed a good handful of swim sessions lately, it was a little scary when the main set was 1,900 of different distances on an very challenging pace. The only thing I could think to say was, "wow...we don't get to talk to each other today, do we?" There was maybe 5-10 seconds of planned rest between everything...the whole time...if that.
After the 7th whatever we were on, I heard that voice in my head. It said, YOU WILL NEVER BE ABLE TO HOLD THIS PACE THE WHOLE TIME. I wasn't even half way through and I panicked. I sat out the next 100- and the coach asked if something was wrong. I said- no...but I can't hold that pace! He couldn't understand why I would stop, when I had made every interval with time to spare- I hadn't even fallen behind yet!
I got back into the mix after that- realizing my mistake and held strong the rest of the time. Yes, I felt like throwing up the rest of the set- it was the first time I have ever been nauseous in the pool. But, when I finished the set (and I did...I made ever interval)- I just wished I had held on a little bit longer in the early part of the swim... it was like having an asterisk by my workout since I sat out one 100.
So, one of my overall athletic goals is to learn to push more in training- to trust the times coaches give me, even if I think they are ludicrous- and to not drop out of any set until I fall over or drown.
I am also happy to say I have been on my trainer 2 x this week. Monday it was miserable- I couldn't wait to get off. Tonight I enjoyed it just a little more...it reminded me of all of the IM training on the trainer and it was a little easier to stay on. I have really, really neglected my bikes and I am going to try to start making it up to them.
2 comments:
that mental thing is harder to get over than the actual going fast thing. i'm stuck behind that hurdle along with you!
i bet your slice misses you!
Wow! This is so ironic...I have the same problem in races and in work outs. My coach has told me more than once this season that I need to trust myself more and take more risks, but I'm scared to because I don't want to die after the first interval or mile. Let's work on this and try to be a little riskier and trust ourselves more!
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