Reflection

What does it really mean to use VISUALIZATION in your training?

You may have heard how elite athletes visualize their big races, and this sounds like a helpful practice in theory, right?

But when was the last time you visualized something? If anything, some runners will visualize a race the night before. But think about it - your body can’t do things it hasn’t practiced (and practiced and practiced), and neither can your brain. Unless we use visualization frequently and purposefully, we can’t actually reap the benefits.

Now you might be thinking - I just run for fun, I don’t need these fancy tricks! I’d disagree and ask you this - have you ever felt tired on a run and wanted to keep going? Have you ever been in the middle of something challenging at work and wished it didn’t have to be so painful? Visualization can change all of this. We can’t often change reality, but we can always change our thoughts about it.

Runs will always inevitably feel hard, work will always have challenges, so will life! What you can do is practice seeing yourself experiencing these moments and deciding how you want to feel and think about it. With enough time, patience, and practice, you can actually rewire your brain to see challenges in a new way. In whatever way you’d like to see them! Maybe you’ll start seeing challenges as opportunity, or as the part of the day where you’re expanding yourself, or as a meditative time where you surrender and go with the flow. It doesn’t matter what you pick, it matters that you recognize you have a choice.

Here’s how I suggest you start practicing visualization. Once you get the hang of visualizing your runs, you can use visualization for any aspect of your life.

1. Set aside 1 day a week where you will take 3-5 minutes to visualize an upcoming run. Pick a specific day - this could be an easy run, workout, long run, etc. You can use this for any type of workout day - including your easy days. Maybe for you, you need to practice going easy on those recovery days, so you will visualize yourself doing the smart thing and going easy enough.

2. Set a timer and close your eyes. I have some guided audios you can listen to here, or you can read the following and guide yourself through:

Start by thinking about how you’ll get ready for your run, think about what the weather might be like, then picture yourself warming up, and getting started. How might you feel during the run? If you’re feeling great - what will you say to yourself? If you’re feeling tired or sore - what will you say to yourself? What skills will you use to get yourself through the workout? How might you feel when it’s over? Picture the cool down and then continuing on with your day.

And repeat! The key with making this work is repetition, so keep going with the same visualization each time you practice, and eventually you can add a 2nd or 3rd day to your week.

Lastly remember - not every run is supposed to feel great, and in fact, probably half of your workout days will feel lackluster. That’s how training goes, and if you can reset your expectations to prepare for that, you’ll save yourself a lot of disappointment and frustration. Wouldn’t that be nice!

Yea, Yea, We're Sick of Hearing About Your Morning Routine

There's a LOT of talk about "morning routines" in the health and fitness world.

My guess is you’re sick of hearing about it, and I don’t blame you.

People are made to believe they need an hour to journal, meditate, play some mystical instrument, journal some more, chant, drink 300 oz of lemon water, and drink their bullet coffee before they do one lick of anything else with their day.

You don’t need to do any of this.

The purpose of a morning routine is for you to have time at the start of your day that fills YOU up.

So if you don’t like journaling or yoga, don’t do it. If you’ve been wondering what it’s like to journal, then give it a try. See how it makes YOU feel. Don’t rely on anyone else to prove to you that “it works,” because the only thing that works, is what works for you.

Here are some tips if you'd like to start a new routine or fine tune your morning habits: 

1. Start small - pick one or two things that take just 5-15 minutes. Yes, even just 5 minutes counts as a morning routine!

2. Pick something that makes you feel happy, at ease, and excited to be awake. Looking for ideas? 

3. Schedule this into your day or put a note up somewhere so you remember. Give yourself a cue, such as, “After I brush my teeth/After I start the coffee machine, then I do (my morning routine).”

4. Make sure you enjoy the routine and it's something that leaves you feeling happy to start the day! Give one routine a try for at least 2 weeks, ideally 3-4, before deciding to make big changes to it.

Let us know in the comments what kinds of things you start doing in the morning, it will be inspiration for the rest of us!

Is This A Good Time for Reflection and Goal Setting?

Most of us have put all plans “on hold” right now.

But what if this was actually an excellent time to reflect and set some goals - for your running, business, relationships, or life?

I can hear you starting to say, “Why set goals right now when the future is so unknown?”

really, the future is always unknown.

When you make a goal to run a race, you never know if you will get injured, have a work project come up that will change your plans, get the opportunity to go on a cool trip, or any other number of changes that could happen.

Right now athletes everywhere are asking themselves, “If not for the competition, why bother?”

If you haven’t already, ask yourself this question. Underneath the finish lines, PRs, and post-race celebrations, why do you really run?

With that, we invite you to use our go-to practices for reflecting on your past year of training and setting goals for the year ahead with our free workbook below.

Remember, goal setting isn’t just for January 1st. We have the opportunity to reset any month, day, time, and place that we choose.

Runner's News Round Up

This week, we’ve been thinking about the mental side of athletics, how we (do or do not) structure our days, and impending shifts in the sport of track and field. 

Mindset & Sport 

Why Optimism doesn’t mean “not being realistic,” and how you can start to change some of your pessimistic thought patterns. 

How a Growth Mindset can enhance your experience and performance as a runner. 

Chamique Holdsclaw, Women’s Basketball Hall of Famer, is hosting a new podcast called Tremendous Upside, where she interviews athletes about their challenges with mental health.   

Life Design 

Why does it seem every piece of advice is contradictory? And what you can do when you have no idea which voice is the right one to listen to. 

Deep down I think we all know it’s true, but often need to be reminded that life is not meant to be optimized or perfected. The human experience is messy and that’s okay.  

Speaking of messy, Madeleine Dore is a podcast host, writer, and creative community builder, and she shared some refreshing thoughts on creative routines in this interview

Mindset & Nutrition 

What is Intuitive Eating and How Runners Can Try It

Running Culture 

Sally Bergeson, Sarah Lesko, and Lauren Fleshman (pictured above) recorded a conversation about sponsorships in track and field - discussing the realities of it and their hopes for seeing it evolve. 

This article about how Love Languages Can Apply in the Workplace got us thinking about how coaches could use these “languages” to look at their team dynamics. 

 

Pause for Reflection: Gratitude

There have been countless studies showing how gratitude is linked to overall happiness, so this one’s a no-brainer. 

Write down three things you are grateful for (people, places, experiences, qualities about yourself, things...). Describe them in detail and why you are grateful for them. Maybe even consider sharing your gratitude with the people who would appreciate that.

How to Keep & Analyze Your Own Health Log

If you’ve ever thought about working with a nutritionist or health coach, you may be familiar with the idea of a “health log” or “food log.” As much as we’d love for people to look at us and magically tell us the answers to all our problems, that’s not how it works.

Using a health log can be very helpful if you’re trying to optimize your energy levels throughout the day, increase your athletic performance, figure out the source of your indigestion, or solve any other number of health questions.

The good news is you can try to DIY some of this work yourself! We’ve made a free health log with detailed instructions to guide you towards a thorough understanding of your own health.

Here’s the basic gist of it:

  1. Record key health metrics for a 4-7 day period

  2. Look through this information for patterns

  3. Try one tweak at a time to your habits or routines

  4. Reassess and perhaps repeat this process

Tend Core Principle: Grow Within

Setting a goal and putting in work to reach it every day is a gift.

The path to our own success is not meant to be linear, and when we can embrace this we can find joy and flow in the process.

Athletic training provides an incredible opportunity to be reflective in all areas of life - relationships, work, hobbies, personal development...

All our athletes at Tend Athletics are supported as they go through the messy work of organizing their life to support their training, adjusting plans with purpose, and finding opportunities for growth amidst setbacks. All of these lessons can be learned in sport, and outside of it.

You may want to develop or deepen a meditation practice, begin journaling, build structures in your day to keep your energy and focus high, or find ways to appreciate your training instead of dreading it.

We take a holistic approach to coaching that is in reality a combination of running, life, nutrition and health coaching. We can’t imagine it any other way because if you’re not training the whole person, then who are you really training?

Pause for Reflection: Plans

What goal do you have right now that needs a plan, or perhaps a reassessment of your current plan to reach it?

This could be any goal large or small - such as the goals of having a clean house, PRing in your next race, seeing friends more, cooking for yourself, or getting a promotion at work.

  • What 1-3 actions can you take to reach this goal today?

  • What 1-3 actions can you take in the next week?

  • What 1-3 actions can you take in the next month?

  • What support will help you reach this goal? Plan for how and when you will ask for this support, reminding yourself that no one ... NO ONE ... accomplishes their goals alone. Not even Beyonce, and not even you. What a relief!