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Risat

""everyone wants to prevail" 7 days until the "Ultimate Fitness Challenge" in Las Vegas. The training continues!"

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WTF Spring Challenge re-cap

Sunday, May 25th, 2008

I posted some other details in my journal, but had so much more to say.  My first thanks go out my family, they allow me to train and compete and are totally supporttive (well within reason, they reel me back when it become a bit too much, lol) and next I’d like to thank Alex Stewart, his training and nutrition plan brought me in extremely well for this competition and I can’t thank him enough for understanding that I choose to compete in multiple events and works to help me achieve my best performance level.So on to the competition…I posted video from last year, so if you are not familiar with what this competition is about, you can see what goes on.  Tampa was hot, upper 80s with near 100% humidity. We are out on a football field for the course and inside a gym for the other events.  Warm-ups started at 10am. We run, stretch and then hit the course for at least a one-touch on each obstacle. It can be a full workout even before the course is run, so its important to pace myself. I hadn’t been on the course since NOV, I was a little nervous, but once I started, well, it all came back to me.

The men ran first, I was placed in the middle of the group, so I watched as some of the better athletes competed…times posted were good, my only goal was to be as fast as I had been in the past, this was a practice for Vegas.  My turn came to run, Al blew his whistle, and I ran, I was up and over the wall in 6 secs, Al was starting to scream (it was my best wall), then came the running grid, the monkey bars (now Al was really excited - my upper body is so much stronger), my only error was the balance beam (will work on that) I took at least 5 steps, I can save valuable time if I just two step it, then the cargo net, everything was perfect, I placed that baton in the riser and I was ready to run the back half, Al was really screaming now, he said "just catch me" (he had already run the course with the other athletes at least 15 times by now) so I opened up, poured on the speed, three hurdles, a steeplebox, the under the over and I was gone…Al yelled out the time—-52.71!!!! That is almost 1.5 seconds better than my best time.  The rest of the athletes competed and we were done and ready to go inside for the fitness skills.

Box jumps were next, again my goal was to jump all 50, I did that..another PR, my time was 40.something (forgot to ask, lol), but it was a PR too). My feet slipped on the edge of the box at least 3 times so I know I can improve from that time, but I feel great that I jumped all 50.

I was in the middle of the group for all of the events except this one.  Because I am light and only have to bench 65 lbs, I was in the first group to go, so my rest time was less that others between events, but I pushed that out of my mind so I could bench.  I have to work on technique, but was able to rep out 38 times…I still have to improve by 12 more to get that all important number of 50, but I am really happy that I  was able to get back to the upper 30s this time.

Last event was shuttle run, I usually do very well in this event.  For whatever reason, I didn’t move the box so I could through with my right hand, ended up tossing with my left and missed three times, each time I have to make it up before I can go on, losing precious seconds…and I missed the last beanbag which added another 2 second fault at the end.

Events were over, it was time for awards.  This event lists the top 10 in the Obstacle Course, Fitness skills (bench, box and shuttle combined) and Dual Fitness (Course and skills combined).  The course was first, I placed 3d (my best placing), then skills - 8th (another best for me) and finally the started to call out Dual Fitness…..as the names and scores were called…..7, 6, 5….I couldn’t believe it….3d place! I stood next to excellent athletes, but I am almost 20 years older than they are!

When I ran my 5K the week before and reached a new PR, I was pleasantly surprised. I knew the work that I had been putting in was what contributed to that achievement.  Now I have confirmation that this training plan that I am on is right on target.  I achieved so many goals that I need to think about setting some new ones….any ideas?

So what am I doing now? Well I have a fitness competition in two weeks, so I am back to training for that, then following that its 5 short weeks ’til Vegas and the WTF World Challenge.  I will be profiled on www.myfitnesschannel.com in Vegas, we did interviews yesterday at the spring event, I’ll post a link when it is uploaded, they took a lot of video.  I am looking forward to my fitness event, but even more so, to Vegas.

It happened again

Saturday, May 17th, 2008

New 5K PR - 20:22 (7 sec better than my previous best)….and the course was hilly, as soon as I went up and down it was time to go back up and down again….all training I’ve been doing has contributed to this…..more updates to follow, but I feel pretty good.

Well it finally happened….

Wednesday, May 14th, 2008

I actually stopped traffic today.  I was walking to work, from a further parking lot than what I usually have to park in.  I was wearing my red print dress and heels (I’ve worn this dress before).  A car pulled over and the driver rolled the window down (thought he was asking for directions - and before you say it, I work an an military base, so safety is good)…He complemented me on my dress (yaaa right…), but stopped all the other cars behind him as we were all trying to get to work.

So for the first time in my life, I stopped traffic, lol…..

TV Commercial on VS

Sunday, May 11th, 2008

no one trains to fail
nobody prepares to lose
everyone wants to prevail
but first, you must compete
competition is passion
competition is focus
competition is adversity
competition is life
live to compete

Have you checked your shoes lately?

Friday, May 9th, 2008

While running and dodging cars on GA roads…I realized I needed a new pair of running shoes (my knees/shins tend to hurt when the shoes are blown….Have you checked yours lately?

Watch where you are going you bad, bad GA drivers!

Thursday, May 8th, 2008

Hey there, I am out on the road running and we are not sophisticated enough on the Southside ATL to have running paths so when you see someone running, don’t ignore me….SLOW DOWN! MOVE OVER if you can….I’ll feel safer, you’ll feel safer, its the best of both worlds! Besides I am tired of having to run off road, in the brush that the neighbors haven’t mown or possible twisting my ankle to avoid getting hit by YOU! I really stay in my lane, you don’t have to swerve closer, really you don’t. I promise I won’t jump out in from of you. I am just trying to train.

Yes, I know this site is all over the world, and the chance that anyone from GA, actually see’s me out running is very marginal, but if you drive on two lane roads in your home town (roads without sidewalks) and see someone running follow the advice above…

Thank you for your support.

Fixing your weakest link

Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

If you haven’t checked this website out before - www.active.com has some great info and they send out e-newsletters and they contrain links to some great info. I get the running (go figure), triathlon (in my dreams) and women’s e-newsletters.

This week in the triathlon edition there is a great article on fixing your weakest link, I have attached the entire article (for those interested), but thought it interesting that I could adapt this into my training.

1.  “Reverse engineering your ideal race”  - when I compete the obstacle course I can identify exactly where I made errors on the race (not the best time to realize this, but it helps for improvement the next time,. On my last go at the obstacle course, it was a combo of nutrition deficiences - I dieted too hard and a slight illness before the comp, and I knocked the bar off the “over” (penalty).  The nutrition was the biggest problem, I was just weak, this time I will not have that problem. Rested and ready, prepared for all the events…that is my mantra for this Spring Challenge.

2.  “Make your weakness a strength so that your strengths don’t look like weaknesses”

a.  it becomes a matter of conditioning - box jumps, box jumps, box jumps…..I was afraid and I am no more :)

b.  “do accumulative-fatigue training”…boy, you can bet I am fatigued…training in the AM, cardio in the PM…every muscle is being used, but you know what? I am strong, stronger than I thought I was…my training has been intense these past weeks, with one full week to go and then a partial week, this type of training has been challenging, eye-opening, injury free, but successful.

c.  “cadence” - this is easy…because I run, I really keep my cadence even, get the rhythm, keep everything even…box jumps even, bench press pace even,

3.  “The final element needed to help turn a weakness into strength is psychological: How do you view yourself in each of the disciplines? Many people can perform the training to address their weakness, yet they hold onto a past image of themselves not being good at a particular sport. Transform this image. Tell yourself over and over that you are a fast runner, cyclist and swimmer.”

That was directly from the article, it is soooo true…I am better than knocking off that bar, I am better than slipping on the balance beam (Vegas last year). I have run clean runs before I will again.  Coach Al always tells me (when I race a 5K) that I should run like a Kenyan, and I do say it to myself, I repeat that I am fast, strong (I do this as I pass mile 2 or 3)… I can train all I want, but I want to believe that I can improve, when the time comes, when I am at the starting line preparing to launch myself at the 10 foot wall…

That’s it. Read the article, see what you think…I plan on using this to help me focus.

 

Fixing your weakest link

Race faster with a balanced approach

 

By Mark Allen

 

April 16, 2008 — Several years ago (18 to be exact) I was at a crisis point in my triathlon career. I had raced the Ironman in Hawaii six times with disastrous results and was wondering if I had the strength; it took to have a great race on the Big Island. The story was different for me everywhere else. I could win at short distance, long distance and just about everything in between—everywhere but Kona. In Kona, my strengths turned to weaknesses, and the script of disaster played itself out with precision. My run, which had become a dependable weapon of choice when the pressure was on in any other race, was always the scene of my meltdown on the road of truth called the Queen K Highway.

 

Of the three sports that make up triathlon, we all have a hierarchy of which is our best and which is our least favorite, plus a plan for blending them together to make the whole enchilada look like we know what we are doing. For me, the swim was my weakest sport and the run my strongest, with the bike a close second depending on the course. My workouts reflected this hierarchy. I put time in at the pool, albeit begrudgingly. Cycling got a lot more of my attention simply because I enjoyed time in the saddle. But the run held a special place in my training schedule because I knew this was what had pulled me out of many desperate situations on race day and I wanted to make sure that it was always my trump card held in waiting, just in case. 

 

So why was my run letting me down in the most important race of my season? Why is it difficult for a great swimmer, cyclist or runner to put together a fantastic triathlon based on his or her strength? The answer lies in the secret of what enables one to have a flawless race in the single sport called triathlon.

 

Reverse engineering your ideal race

 

This secret of a flawless race is not classified information. It is something that can be discovered if we look at the perfect race from the finish backwards. What does it take to run strong until the end? Most often, this happens when you are fresh after the bike and can exploit the skills you have as a runner. And how does one come off the bike fresh? Usually when you exit the water without being totally exhausted from the swim. And how does that happen?

 

By making sure you are rested and ready to go on race day. And how can you guarantee that you will be able to take advantage of being fresh for each of the three sports? This happens by making sure that you are strong in each discipline. But what if you are weak in one of the three? This is the question I intend to answer here.

 

If there is one golden rule in triathlon it is this: Make your weakness a strength so that your strengths don’t look like weaknesses. Look at my story. I was strongest on the run, but at the end of the day it was during the run where I fell apart in the Hawaii Ironman. And the reason was simple. I hadn’t developed my weaker sports to the point where I could take advantage of my running strength.

 

Making your swim a strength

 

The mantra here is mechanics, mechanics, mechanics. Have a coach look at your stroke over and over to give you advice. What you think you are doing with your body in the water is probably not what it looks like to the rest of the world, and a lifetime of lengths will not help you boost your swim in a race if your stroke mechanics are not solid. It only takes a small shift in swim technique to trim minutes off your swim times. Another benefit of improving technique and efficiency in the water is that it will help you accomplish the first goal of a triathlon: To come out of the water fresh.

 

If your stroke needs a complete remodel, you might consider taking a swim-technique seminar. One weekend working closely with people who are trained in teaching stroke mechanics can save you thousands of hours of frustration in the pool trying to do it on your own. Keep in mind that even the best swimmers are always working on their stroke. Here are a few drills you can do to keep refining your swimming:

 

One-arm freestyle, first with the other arm out front then with it to your side

Catch-up

Alternate breathing

Fingertip drag on the recovery

Roll drills trying to maximize time spent on each side (flat is the slowest position in the water)

Slow stroke, trying to minimize the number of strokes per lap

These are just a few drills to do in each workout before your main sets. 

 

After that, faster swimming becomes a matter of conditioning. Due to the low amount of muscle breakdown produced by swimming, you can actually schedule frequent over-distance workouts in the water to get your body used to swimming longer than your race-day distance. You can reap tremendous benefits in swim fitness by adding up to about 50 percent more distance to your workout than the distance of your race. So, for example, if you are doing an Ironman, having a handful of workouts that are around 6,000 yards will enable you to glide through the 2.4 miles of your race and exit the water with enough reserve to begin the bike fresh.

 

Making your bike a strength

 

The three main areas to consider with the bike are fit, power output, and cadence. Your position on the bike is perhaps the true foundation of good cycling. Look at the riders in the Tour de France. They all look like they were born on a bike. Going from a poor bike position to a good one can save you minutes without any more conditioning and will also help your body to be fresher simply because it is not fatiguing from an inefficient position.

 

Start with your seat position. It should be high enough so that if you put your heel (with your cycling shoe on) on the pedal, at the bottom of your pedal stroke your leg should be completely straight. This is a very general rule, but one that will start to get you in the right position.

 

Next, look at where your saddle is in relation to your bottom bracket. For triathletes, a good starting point is to have the tip of your saddle about two to five centimeters behind the center of your bottom bracket. Again, this is a general rule because saddles can have different-length tips. Also, the fore-aft position of your saddle is going to depend partially on your age and hip flexibility. In general, older riders are stiffer and they will lose power if they put their seat too far back. Younger riders can have a position with their seat farther back because of their inherent hip flexibility, and they will gain power from this. 

 

The third main point regarding bike position concerns stem length. When you are in the aero position, your upper arm should be roughly at the same angle as your forks or even a little steeper than the fork angle. If your stem is too long and it puts you too far back, your upper arms will be at a flatter angle than your forks. This will cause tension in the upper body and force a person to develop a hunch in the upper back, making his or her position less aero. Once the length of the stem is set, make sure the height of the stem is as low as you can go without producing discomfort in the aero position. What will give you the most aerodynamic position technically is not necessarily what will enable you to stay there for miles on end. And if you are not comfortable, your body will fatigue more quickly.

 

Next comes power output. This has two aspects: muscular strength and neuromotor patterning. Doing leg weights in the gym can develop the first. Leg extensions, leg curls, squats, lunges and leg presses are the main exercises that will help you apply force to the pedals. 

 

Developing the pathway from the brain to the muscle occurs when an activity is performed motion over and over and over. For cycling, this means time in the saddle. There are two ways to maximize neuromotor pathway development. One is with stationary bike training. Minute per minute, this is the most economical way to create muscle movement efficiency. This is a great bonus for those of you who spend winters training indoors. Using a stationary trainer will make you a very efficient cyclist. 

 

The second technique is to do accumulative-fatigue training. What this means in simple terms is to do back-to-back endurance rides. Pick a few weeks when you have extra time and do longer rides on two or three consecutive days. There is a fatigue that starts to set in on the second and third day that requires your muscles to become more efficient. This sounds kind of like stage riding in the world of cycling, and it is. This develops the muscle patterning efficiency that will get you off the bike fresh and ready to run well in a triathlon.

 

The final issue is cadence. Most triathletes turn the gears at about 80-85 rpm. Most cyclists turn their gears at around 90-95 rpm. Become a cyclist. Use a cadence monitor if you don’t already have one. Even after one week of training at a slightly higher cadence you will notice a dramatic difference in your ability to turn over the pedals.

 

Making your run a strength

 

In the sport of triathlon, running suffers from a similar problem as cycling. Most triathletes run at too low a cadence. A low cadence causes one to overstride, which is tantamount to putting on the brakes with every single step. If you overstride, your foot is extending too far in front of your body, slowing your momentum down until your body gets back over and in front of the planted foot. You can guess how this will affect your run speed, especially when you fatigue and your overall speed slows in the race. 

 

Starting today, run like a runner. This means, as with cycling, that you run with a turnover of about 90-95 rpm (counted on one side). If you have been overstriding, this will require you to shorten up the extension of your leading foot so it hits the ground almost directly under the center line of your body’s momentum. It may feel like you are running with a choppy style at first, but over time you will find the correct stride length that maximizes your turnover. 

 

This is something that should be practiced in every single run that you do, even on your easier recovery runs. Every run is a chance to pattern in a faster turnover rate. This is the most efficient way of running, so the point where you begin to fatigue will be pushed much farther out in the race. 

 

A good place to practice this cadence format is in a short running race. Enter a few local 5K and 10K races over the off-season and practice running quickly at this higher cadence.

 

 

Training the brain

 

The final element needed to help turn a weakness into strength is psychological: How do you view yourself in each of the three disciplines of a triathlon? Many people can perform the training to address their weakness, yet they hold onto a past image of themselves not being good at a particular sport. Transform this image. Tell yourself over and over that you are a fast runner, cyclist and swimmer.

 

While it’s unlikely that any one of us will become the next Ian Thorpe, Lance Armstrong or Joan Benoit, we can take the images of how the best in each sport moves and see ourselves moving with that same grace. Watch world-class competitions in each of the single sports. See how these athletes move their bodies. Now feel that same efficiency inside your own body. It doesn’t matter if you actually look like that when you swim, bike and run. It does make a difference in your efficiency, however, when you feel that same motion happening in your movements. This is what will take the technical training and bring it to life in your racing so your weaknesses become strengths and your strengths continue to be something you can count on.

 

A Haiku

Monday, May 5th, 2008

ozone high, wind blows

cars coming, dogs chasing me

despite all I run

I’ve been thinking today…..

Friday, May 2nd, 2008

"If you do what you’ve always done, you’ll get what you’ve always got." 

1. Learn how to do something well.  Being good at something boosts your confidence and is fun.
2. Realize being shy is OK.  Half of us are extroverts and half introverts. There are advantages to both so be proud to be as you are.
3. Beauty does not bring happiness.  However, happiness and confidence do bring attractiveness. Learn how to make the most of your good points and enjoy them.
4. Set realistic standards for yourself.  Perfectionism undermines your pleasure in your achievements. Too low standards give little sense of achievement.
5. Deal with your problems.  Unresolved issues undermine your confidence. Decide what needs to be done, do it and move on.
6. Do not criticize yourself.  Over time, the bad things you say about yourself make you feel bad. Replace negative sayings with positive or neutral ones.
7. Recognize your wants.  Recognize that what you want is as important as what others want. Ask for what you want and compromise gracefully if necessary.
8. Accept help.  Asking for, and accepting, help is a normal adult behavior. It shows strength, not weakness.
9. Embrace relationships of quality.  The quality of your relationships has a profound affect on your self-esteem. Avoid people who put your down or complain a lot. Find new upbeat companions who are enjoying their lives, as their attitude will rub off on you.
10. Smile and stand tall.  Behave the way you want to feel. Your facial expression and body posture do affect your emotions.

 

Yes I am at it again

Thursday, May 1st, 2008

3 weeks til the WTF Spring Challenge! You can check out my journal for workout and nutrition. Working really hard right now on many things including the dreaded box jumps. I have lots planned, hope to write some if it down and check in on all my friends, supporting them as much as they support me. 

I hope you like my little cartoon…..I think it sums up me pretty well, but I’m working on it!



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