Bravery is the capacity to perform properly even when scared half to death.
-- Omar N. Bradley

Wednesday, December 30, 2015

A small look back, a big leap forward...

Review your goals twice every day in order to be focused on achieving them. -- Les Brown

An important part of any focusing regimen is to set aside time at the end of the day - just before going to sleep - to acknowledge your successes, review your goals, focus on your successful future, and make specific plans for what you want to accomplish the next day. -- Jack Canfield

The object of a New Year is not that we should have a new year.  It is that we should have a new soul and a new nose; new feet, a new backbone, new ears, and new eyes.  Unless a particular man made New Year resolutions, he would make no resolutions.  Unless a man starts afresh about things, he will certainly do nothing effective. -- Gilbert K. Chesterton

Let's face it.  2015 was not a great year for me.  I'm ending the year with more fails than successes, more questions than answers, more things undone than completed, and more pounds on my hips than I started the year with.  In all of these things -- fails, questions, incompletes, and weight -- I think it's fair to say "less is more."  It's hard to acknowledge my successes from 2015, because I think that the year was spectacularly devoid of them...and so I think the best thing to do, as the year closes out, is to...let it go.  (Ha, you thought I was going to put in a Frozen video here, didn't you?  No, I would not torture you that way.)  Rather than looking backwards and dwelling on the things I have too much of (or even the things I had too little of, like success)...it's time to move forward.  So I've decided to start 2016 today.  A few days early.  Why not?  Calendars are so arbitrary.  :)

I usually make New Year's resolutions.  Why not?  Everyone does.  And everyone fails at them.  And so do I.  But I like the idea of a new me - starting afresh and focusing on my goals.  Of course, everyone does...that's the whole scam of New Year's resolutions, right?  We say we're going to lose weight, save money, be nicer, etc. etc. etc. for a day, or two, or even three...but then old habits kick back in and we go right back to the old us.  I've been reading a lot about habits and change.  I can't promise that I'll get this entirely right, but I think I have a plan to make some better New Year's resolutions...scratch that, some New Me resolutions.  I will set my resolutions in terms of goals, so they can be measured and reviewed.  I will make specific plans and set milestones so I can view progress.  I will acknowledge successes and I will try to understand failures and make adjustments to overcome them.  I will come into 2016 with new eyes and a new soul.  I'm starting afresh and I will be effective.

More about my New Me resolutions later...right now, I have to go run.  Success!

Friday, December 18, 2015

Heartbeat...

Repetition is based on body rhythms, so we identify with the heartbeat, or with walking, or with breathing. -- Karlheinz Stockhausen

Like I said, repetition in practice and hard work. -- Jerry Rice


This is my heartbeat song and I'm going to play it...

My new coach has me training with heart rate.  It's kind of been a crucible type moment, since it has revealed exactly how out of shape I am...either I have been this whole time and didn't know it or I've gone downhill very quickly.  Let's not speculate which it is.  Anyway, the bottom line is that, like I mentioned before, I have a long way to go.

When I first started training for triathlons, a million years ago (or maybe like seven), I used a HR plan...and I remember it was horrible.  I couldn't run and keep my heart rate any where near the zone it was supposed to be in , so I ran/walked or joggled or whatever.  But I kept at it, and eventually I lost weight and got faster and fitter.  And hopefully that's what will happen again, because yet again, my HR will not cooperate with running at any speed or for any distance.  I am hoping (and hopeful) that this will be like before -- that, if I keep at it and trust in the system, I will end up fitter and faster than before.  That's what needs to happen and I trust my coach.  So heart rate and joggle it is, for now.  And faster and fitter it will be.  :)


(Because leaving you with Kelly Clarkson's Heartbeat Song would be cruel and unusual punishment...)

Sunday, December 13, 2015

A Long Way to Go and a Short Time to Get There...

It's been a long slog back, and we've still got a long way to go. -- Ted Strickland

I've got a long way to go to being the ultimate best, but I think my time is now.  And I'm starting to enter my prime. -- Kevin Durant

I ran the Toys for Tots 5K today.  It was a long way off my 5K PR...and I know this, because I gathered up my past race info and PR data for my new coach.  So, right now more than other times, I am acutely aware of just how slow I am now in comparison to other points in my life.  And not just because I'm getting older, because 2014 was actually one of my two good recent years.


All I can really say is that I have a long way to go...and a short time to get there, if I want to accomplish my goals for 2016.  (You may be saying to yourself - hey, that phrase sounds so familiar...but why?  From Smokey and the Bandit, of course, and that great song from Jerry Reed.  Click the video - you know you want to.)


Anyway, I am viewing today's race as a baseline.  A good place to start from.  I gave it a good effort and I see how far I need to go to get back to my happy place.  I have a new coach who wants to help me get there.  And I have the willpower to make it happen.

Tuesday, December 8, 2015

Dear Santa...

Believe in love.  Believe in magic.  Hell, believe in Santa Claus.  Believe in others.  Believe in yourself.   Believe in your dreams.  If you don't, who will? -- Jon Bon Jovi

Dear Santa,

It's been a long time since I have written you a letter.  I hope you are doing well. How's the missus?  And the elves?  Anyway, I know you're busy, so I'll get straight to the point.

I've been very good this year.  :)  OK, maybe not "very good."  But I haven't been terrible.  So I think I probably deserve something I want for Christmas.  This year, I'd like you to bring me a new coach.  I liked my old coach...but she's retiring and so I need a new one.  I've been interviewing new coaches, but it's hard and I don't like it.  (Oh, full disclosure - I may have had an e-mail mishap where I sent critical comments about one program back _to that coach_ rather than to my husband...ooops.  OK, I can see why you might see that as naughty behavior, but really, it's just because I was in a hurry and careless...not intentionally naughty.)

I can't really circle the coach I want in a catalog - do kids even still do that?  My kids e-mailed me their Christmas lists...along with helpful links to online stores.  Is that what kids do nowadays?  I guess pretty soon they'll just send their Christmas lists to you telepathically.  Or maybe you'll read their minds?  Creepy.  Anyway, I'm old school...so I'll just tell you what I'm looking for and I trust you and the elves to get it right.  :)  It's not like I'm asking for a pony or anything.

I want a triathlon coach who is nice, but not too nice.  I want someone who will be supportive and encouraging, but who will also make me work harder than I imagined possible.  I am a little lazy and not prone to push myself, but I will if someone else tells me to.  But I'm also a little anxious and doubtful, so I need someone who will believe in me until I can believe in myself.  I used to have more mojo and moxie when it came to this triathlon stuff, but I've kind of lost it and I'm looking for it again and I think it's important for me to have a coach help me do that.

I want a triathlon coach who can work with slow people, but will work to make me faster.  I'm slow right now - I get that.  But I don't want to be slow.  I want to be faster, and I'm (mostly) willing to work hard to get faster.  I don't want a coach who believes I'm too slow for them.  Or that dumbs things down because I'm slow.  I want someone who is invested in my success, both to finish the long distances and speed up my slowness.  (Even though I'm old.)

I want a triathlon coach who can rearrange my schedule (or at the very least put up with my rearrangements of their hard work) when job or kid drama comes up.  I want a triathlon coach who works with my personal quirks...I don't like to ride outside when it's cold (and cold is a subjective, warm temperature).  I like to run races occasionally, either with my daughter or just because it's fun.  I like to eat a lot and I like to drink wine.  I am a back of the pack runner/racer - and I aspire to back of the middle of the pack, or even middle of the pack.  That's it.  I like to train on weird days because my schedule is actually more flexible during the week than the weekend.   I appear to attract weird injuries - hypothermia, anyone?  I hate swimming by myself.  I started lifting weights in the off season and I kind of like it.  Did I mention I like to eat a lot and I like to drink wine?

Now, don't get me wrong.  I'm not high maintenance.  I mostly listen.  :)  I generally put in my best effort, as written.  :)  But I'm a mom and wife and full-time professor.  And sometimes there is life.  On the other hand, triathlon is a big part of that life and it matters a lot to me, which is why I want a new coach for Christmas, because I'll miss my old coach and I'm not sure I can do this on my own.

One of my daughters thought if you list only one thing on your Christmas list then you'll definitely get it.  So I'm just going to ask for a coach.  And I know you'll deliver, because I believe in you and I know you want me to believe in me.  And I promise I'll be good next year.  :-)

Merry Christmas & have a safe trip on Christmas Eve!