Running - it's a mental game

So you all know that I love to run, running is my headspace, my time to think and my escape.  Everything changes and there has been a lot of change in my life but running has remained a constant and seen me through a lot of bad times.  But whilst running is my headspace and I am great at showing up and doing the work, on race day I can feel like an absolute imposter and can talk myself into a really dark place with a lot of negative self-talk instead of sitting back enjoying the moment knowing that I have put all the hard work in.  Once you listen to the negative voices it is a long way back – but how do you deal with those voices and what to do when your own worst enemy is in your head?

After a relatively disappointing (in my eyes) showing at the Liverpool Marathon last May I have spent a lot of time and effort working on my mental game – I have read books, listened to audio books and podcasts – mainly whilst on the treadmill (where else would I be!!), all with the aim of quieting that negative little voice in my head and finding some strategies to deal with my own self-doubt.

I went off to the Prague marathon at the beginning of May having missed loads of training due to injury and until the week before wasn’t sure that I would make the start, however, something was very different – I went with a completely different mental attitude – I guess having missed so much training meant that I wasn’t aiming for a PB and in fact my only aim was to finish pain free.  And with the pressure off I found myself enjoying the entire race (well maybe not the cobbles!).  26.2 miles is a long way to run and you always go through tough patches during the race but this time I was much more able to acknowledge it was tough and that everything was hurting and know that it would pass.

So some of that effort working on my mental game seems to have paid off – and it got me to thinking perhaps we could all do with a bit of therapy.  If you get injured you go see someone for treatment right away but no one talks about what to do to fix your mental game.  So I wanted to share with you some of the stuff I have been listening to and reading:

  • I really enjoyed Ant Middleton’s book “First Man In - Leading from the Front” – I listened to most of this whilst training on the treadmill in the hotel gym in Dubai – what a fantastic view from the gym that was.  I think listening to the book was the first time that it really sunk in that my mind really is my own worst enemy and made me understand that my legs will keep going long after my mind wants me to stop.  I also really got the idea of how to use pain to drive you forward – running marathons hurts but the ability to use the pain is a game-changer.

  • I have started listening to Jonathan Levitt’s “For the Long Run” podcast  I have followed Jonathan on Instagram for some time now and his podcasts are really great listens.  The episode with Emily Saul, in particular, was like a series of little lightbulb moments for me and some of those things I will talk about in a later post but one of the things she talked about was being able to recognize yourself for the badass that you are.  Most of us are just really bad at this, I am an awesome cheerleader for my kids, for my family and friends, for the kids I coach at school and for my colleagues – but for me not so much.  And then as I turned the corner onto the last 100m in Prague it hit me that I am pretty badass at what I do, and Emily was right once you recognize what a badass you are and become your own cheerleader your whole perspective will change!

Next stop, Ryan Hill’s “Run the Mile You are In.”  Any tips and suggestions on great reads gratefully received! And FYI just by getting your trainers on and getting out the door you are crushing it!!

Much love xx

Prague Marathon Weekender

Seriously where the does the time go – I cannot believe that this time last week we had just landed in Prague.  Honestly last Friday didn’t get off to the best start – we spent an hour talking-down a very tearful and stressed 11 year old before he would go into school – and then the fur baby chewed through the chord on my hairdryer.  Technically she did me a favour because having invested in a new hairdryer I now know how old and ineffective my old hairdryer was but I am not telling her that!!

Finally we made it to the airport and bought all the food for the flight – I hate to be without food!!!  Saturday was spent on a quick trip to the super well organized expo to collect our numbers and t-shirts, eating a lot and discussing what to wear for the race – the weather was quite a bit cooler than we had expected which gave us something to stress about!

I had a very clear idea of how I was going to run the race – I wanted to go out at a conservative pace that I knew I could stick with and keep to my nutrition plan.  I was also very clear with myself that if my back started really hurting (not the “it aches everywhere” because I am running a marathon but an actual injury pain) then I would pull up.  So after final kit discussions and breakfast it was time to drop our bags and get in our pens to start.

I have done a lot of reading and listening to audiobooks and podcasts over the last year – all aimed at upping my mental game when it comes to running – and it seems that some of that work is finally paying off.  I spent a lot of the race talking to myself about how I may feel tired but that would be normal given the lack of training and checking in with how I was feeling.  And I have to say that the whole race went brilliantly – there was no hitting the wall, no feeling like I couldn’t go on and more importantly no pain!

I stuck to my plan the entire time and whilst marathon number 7 was most definitely not my fastest marathon it ranks right up there in terms of enjoyment.  So much went right and I am absolutely buzzing with the result – nothing better than turning onto the home straight with 500 metres to go and realising you have actually got this!

So here are my takeaways from a successful weekend:

  • I know you will have heard this a million times but your mind REALLY is your own worst enemy and it will most definitely give up before your body – it has taken me a long time to really get this

  • Don’t let your mind wander to the “dark place” – you know the place that says “I can’t do this and I need to stop” – it is a tough road back from there

  • Counting in kilometres weirdly made it feel like I was getting done faster – I mean you would think that having 20 miles would sound better than 30 kilometres right but weirdly not!

  • Nutrition, nutrition, nutrition – when you get it right, you get it right!!  It is so easy to misjudge race nutrition or to think you will wait to take a gel because you are feeling good and then before you know it the wheels fall off.  This time I stuck religiously to my plan – first gel an hour in and then a gel every half hour after that and it just worked – they didn’t hand out gels in Prague so I carried my own which was actually less stressful than being reliant on gel stations

  • I think flexible race plans are the new me – it really made the whole thing a lot less nerve-wracking knowing that I had a backup plan if things started to go wrong or not the way I had planned

  • You know they always say marathon courses are flat – they rarely are (in racing if the course is said to be undulating it will feel like you have climbed mountains by the end!) – Prague is an exception to prove the rule, it really is flat and a great course but the cobbles are brutal!!  I am yet to live down the fact that I vetoed Copenhagen and Hamburg because of the cobbles!!

So all in all a really positive race weekend – and a huge confidence boost for Berlin later this year.

Last but most definitely not least huge shout out to my amazing running buddy who ran a blistering 4:07 in only her second marathon – that BQ is within touching distance!!  So proud to be on this crazy running journey with you – may there be many more miles, crazy race weekends and memories made!!

Next stop NYC!

Much love xx

I am not very good at being injured ....

I am not very good at being injured – fact!!  Luckily for those around me I have been away on work trips for most of the time that I have been injured so no one has really had to put up with my sulking!!

So here’s the thing – for so long now I have been in a whirlwind of training cycles from one race to the next.   I have talked before about how having a race scheduled in is a huge motivator for me – I love a plan and I love to tick off all those hard sessions and know what I am working so hard for.  I like to know that I am getting up and out of the door for a session at the crack of sparrows or pounding away on the treadmill long after the kids have gone to bed for a reason but it wasn’t always like that.

I ran my first marathon in 2003 – I swore I would never run another and it did take me 9 years before I ran my second.  In the time between my first and second marathons running was just something I did as exercise, something to get me out of the door.  I went back to running pretty quickly after each of the kids came along as a way to lose my pregnancy weight and to get some headspace.  Running was more time effective than going to the gym – lace up and head out for 30 minutes and that was all there was to it.

Since 2012 (the year I did my second marathon in London) I have done a further 5 marathons, and who knows how many half marathons.  I have trained long and hard for each marathon and this year was set to be no different – although this is the first year that I will be doing two marathons.

And then I got injured!  And it may have taken a while but I have learnt a couple of things during this period of enforced rest:

  • I really am not great at being injured – I know my buddy and I always say we are extremely lucky not to have gotten injured but I am not sure we realised how lucky we really were until we both got injured.  At first I was pretty adamant it was not a running related injury and determined to run through it which was the worst thing to do.  I finally saw the chiropractor and as soon as she said I could start running again I got straight back on plan and re-injured – cue another 5 days rest!!  So this week I have been very careful – stuck to the treadmill and kept it to easy runs – what can I say I am a slow learner!

  • I have worked really hard to take the positives out of this period – and one of those is that I really need to listen to my body a bit better.  I have also now realised that I need to pay more attention to stretching and strengthening – so pilates here I come!

  • But one of the biggest things to come out of being injured is remembering why I run – it isn’t all about the training plans and the medals.  Running has taken me on some amazing adventures and I have met some amazing friends on my running journey, running has been a constant for me whilst so much else has changed.  Running has been my headspace, my me time, my thinking time, my time when no one calls me Mum, time when I can work through so much – in short running makes me a better me.

So as my running buddy and I prepare to head off to Prague I know I have missed more training than for any other marathon and it has been a very different training cycle than we had envisaged.  The plan for the race is to enjoy it and have fun and remember that we are lucky that we get to run – and along the way remember why we run!!!

And then I promise to sign up to a pilates class when I am back!!

Jane xx