IronMan Recap What You Need To Know From A New Mom And Fitness Professional

IronMan Recap What You Need To Know From A New Mom And Fitness Professional

IronMan race #3 is under my belt. Obviously the main question I get is “how do you feel?” … well I feel really good. Surprisingly good. 

Don’t get me wrong I’m not doing back flips or anything, but it is the best I have felt out of the three races. That right there is one of the biggest take aways for me. Clearly I my training was effective and I was prepared. 

Okay, let’s get into the thick of this recap. Here is what I have for you. First, I’m going to share an overview of race weekend. It’s broad, but I’m highlighting some key points. Then, I’m going to get very specific on race details (some of which may be a little much for some people). And I will wrap this all up with a review of my goals. 

So if there is something specific you want to know most … scroll to that section! 

RACE WEEK – IronMan Recap as a New Mom and Fitness Professional

​We left for Muncie on Thursday morning around 9 am. Nothing special about the drive. I felt the pull on my heart strings leaving my son, but he seemed to care less 😂 

We got to check-in and everything was peachy-keen. Timing chip, bib, swag, IronMan village stop … check, check, check, check. All that was left to do was get to our housing and get back to eating. 

Highlight moment 🌟 we were heading in the direction of our VRBO, which was selected because we wanted to be able to cook all of our meals, it’s saved a good chunk of change and gave us a common area to hang. We have 5 people staying. The home owner called and cancelled our reservation stating the house was “uninhabitable”. It’s 4:30 PM the Thursday before the race. Every hotel is sold out and we have nowhere to stay. 

Thanks to our friends and family who hopped on their phones/computers we were able to find one hotel that literally just had a cancellation. We were lucky to find a hotel and grateful to have somewhere to stay. But our entire plan had changed. 

Thursday night we ate at Olive Garden and tried to rework our plans. Unfortunately, Olive Garden didn’t sit well with ANY of us.  So we immediately realized we needed to make different food choices. 

Mike hadn’t left yet so I asked him to bring our Instant Pot so we could eat in. Best decision. And Kaite’s idea – I can’t take credit for it.  

Friday was low key, we checked our gear and bikes in. Then got lunch. Then went back for an athlete briefing. Except we went to the wrong place 😂 

RACE DAY OVERVIEW – IRONMAN RECAP

Saturday was race day so we spent Friday night stretching, foam rolling, using the theragun, hydrating, eating and further memorizing our race plans. 

Saturday we woke at 4:30 am and off the day went. We hit the water around 7:55 am. I finished around 8:20 am. We didn’t get back to the hotel until a little after 11 pm. Shower, organize, eat a little and to bed. 

Sunday was quick to get out of Muncie, but slow moving for me. Tight quads, fatigue and an odd feeling of hunger and fullness filled the day. 

The drive home was a cakewalk (for Mike). I was beyond excited to see Freddy, but he was more confused that we were home. All the change was rough on him. Which means with my wild emotions we (Freddy and I) both cried when he went to bed 😂

MY IRONMAN RECAP OF RACE SPECIFICS

For those of you who came here for the play by play of race day, let’s get after it. Check out this time breakdown. (These are rough estimates.)

  • 3:30 am I wake up and try to sleep more. 
  • 4:25 am alarm goes off.
  • 4:30 am banana and PB sandwich down, working on 32 ounces of Gatorade.
  • 5:00 am dressed, working mobility and reviewing race plan
  • 5:30 am drive to race site
  • 6:00 am adding fuel to our bikes and double checking gear bags.
  • 6:30 am eat half a PB sandwich, run race plan through head
  • 7:30 am take salt tabs finish Gatorade
  • 7:55 am in the water
  • 9:20 am out of the water and in transition
  • 9:30 am on bike course
  • 4:00 pm in transition
  • 4:10 pm on the run course
  • 8:30 pm finishing race

As you can see there is A LOT of time in there for thoughts, feelings and surprises. 

I would say the race went as hoped with a surprise or two on every leg. And, now a few days later, I can say I am 99% happy with how things went. 

IRONMAN RACE DAY SURPRISES

The lake water was 65.3°. Thats cold. Like real cold. I had never swam in water that cold. And boy was it shocking. I had to swim more than 100 meters before I could put my head in the water. I kept trying time after time and it literally felt like I was choking.

Mike, who somehow seems to know everything told me right before the race “the cold will take your breath away, don’t go out fast. That will make it worse. Stay calm and get comfortable slowly.” THANK GOODNESS he said that to me. Those words are what kept me moving forward the first 5 minutes. 

I never got warm. Literally getting out of the water after swimming 2.4 miles and I had not adjusted to the water temp. I had goosebumps and shivers on the bike.

I was also surprised by how badly I needed to pee while I was swimming. Luckily, this race had a very short beach run. Where you got out before getting back in to swim lap 2. Wadding back in gave me the perfect opportunity to pee. That was awesome. 

The start of my second lap I spent thinking … wow you have already peed once in the race. You have hydrated well, today is going to be better than the other two races. 

If you don’t know I was crippled by digestive issues and dehydration on the first two races. It was a huge goal of mine to NOT experience those symptoms again. 

And the next surprise came when I had to pee again after the second lap. I was a peeing machine! This had to be a good sign for my hydration levels going into the bike. 

Transition was fast and smooth. Best it has ever felt. Usually my hands are shaking and I feel flustered. This was just another day. I got out of there so smoothly. I was thrilled. 

SURPRISES ON THE BIKE – IRONMAN RECAP

The bike course was exhilarating. It started with rolling hills which is my absolute favorite. I knew it wasn’t going to last. That most of the course was flat, but I was determined to enjoy those hills! So I attacked them. 

I had so much incredible energy, excitement and happiness. Cloud 9 would be an understatement. 

After those rolling hills we turned into more of a headwind and flat course. I physically and mentally settled into a more appropriate pace and headspace. 

Unfortunately I was so amped up that I had been chugging Gatorade without regard. 32 ounces were already gone. 

I felt a burp coming on and let her rip. And out came Gatorade, peanut butter sandwich and salt. Woof. The good news was I felt fine and it was a rookie mistake that can be easily corrected. 

Eventually I came to one section of the course that was not well paved. It was as if the last step of paving hadn’t be done. Like those rumble patches on the side of highways to let you know you are out of your lane… not as bad, but constant vibrations. I had heard the course was beautiful and perfectly paved … clearly I have a different definition. 

Survived that section and I am working my way back up this long straight portion and I thought I felt a rain drop. I checked the time it was only 12:40. That can’t be rain. It wasn’t suppose to start until after 2 pm. 

It was rain. 

You can’t do a damn thing about it. I knew it was coming. I had just hoped to have more of the bike done before the rain hit. 

My emotions to this point had been pretty steady. I had a lot of self belief and a lot of focus on the finish line. 

It all came crashing down. I started to feel a desire to cry. Nothing hurt. I wasn’t behind on time. Everything was good. But I couldn’t shake this desire to cry.

And then, like a bag of bricks, I realized two things. 

  1. This was my last race for a very long time. Not ever. But we want more kids and this was one of the hardest things I’ve done. Preparing for an IronMan right after giving birth and finding balance between my family, my marriage, my career and my training.
  2. I immensely missed my son. The mom guilt had worked it’s way into my head and rooted itself. 

On top of all of this I had to pee. So badly I was convinced I should be able to stand up out of the saddle and pee. No such luck. I pulled my tears back. Calmed myself down so I wouldn’t look as hysterical and found the next Port-a-Jon. 

This peeing surprise was a good thing, but costly on time. I peed a second time later on. My bike computer said I averaged 17.2 MPH, that doesn’t account for stops. The IronMan tracker had me at 16.32. WTF. That’s just depressing. Why does it take so long to pee?!

Back to my realizations. 

I knew it would be harder than usual to train for an IronMan post baby, but I had no way of knowing just how hard. Because I hadn’t done it before. 

On the bike I knew that I didn’t want to do this again. Too work so incredibly hard and get myself race ready, race and then be done. The next time I race (any length) I want to be able to race multiple times. I want to continue to train myself to be better.

And for those of you that don’t know. I did my last IronMan in 2019. 3 weeks after that I was pregnant (intentionally). Physically the transformation from 2019-2021 has been wild and amazing in every way. 

Mentally it was a beast. 

So I have this itch that I can’t scratch. That I need more time and a different season of life for. And so the tears flowed off and on during the bike. 

Mix in the fact that I’m a new mom and I missed my son. That I felt selfish. That he didn’t understand what I was doing. After all, many adults don’t understand what I was doing. There was a cloud of guilt following me – it may as well have been the rain. 

I just cried. Tears of thankfulness for a beautiful baby boy. Tears of anguish knowing how hard it was to get where I am. And, of course, tears of fear. The run was still ahead and it held my primary goal for the day. 

A combination of I don’t want to do this anymore and this was your goal – to run the whole marathon – had a boxing match in my head.  As I finished the bike I was no closer to finding ground to stand on. 

IRONMAN RECAP – SURPRISES ON THE RUN COURSE

On the outside I was dancing around in transition. Tossing goldfish and catching them in my mouth. Singing to the music. Thinking maybe Kaite would get here soon and I could run with her. After 10 minutes of wasting time (this is coming back in the goals section) I headed out on the run. 

I spent 13 miles convincing myself to keep running. Trying to frame every step, aid station and landmark as positive progress. Unfortunately I also spent those 13 miles peeing myself. Why? I have no idea. 

I had already peed 5 times during the race. Most recently, I peed at transition from bike to run. It didn’t make any sense. And it took 13 miles and 2 more bathroom visits for it to finally stop. 

Was it being a new mom and pelvic floor weakness? Maybe it’s my nutrition? Could it be the warning sign of something major? 

Naturally, when you have nothing else to think about you go down some dark roads in your head. When I finally saw Mike I told him I couldn’t stop peeing myself. He said “just keep running”. And for some reason (as always) Mike’s calm, no frills demeanor did it’s job. If he wasn’t worried, I wouldn’t be worried. 

But I’ll be honest. After 13 miles of wondering the worst possible scenarios (insert thoughts of kidney complications) I was shocked at just how laid back he was. 

On I ran. Reminding myself that is never have to run these hills again. And that there was the biggest surprise of the day. And it was no one’s fault but my own. 

Unknowingly, I had picked a hilly run course to make my goal of running the entire marathon. Whoops. This is where I mentally lectured myself for not doing better research and not understanding the course better.

Nothing was going to make the hills go away. So I just kept putting one foot in front of the other. Starring at the ground. Not engaging other racers and just trying to believe in myself. 

Eventually, around mile 15-17 I became aware of how good I felt compared to past races. How strong I felt. How I had just ran all 17 miles without walking for more than 15 steps to sip some liquid. 

I didn’t feel hope or confirmation. But affirmation. My training was a success. The long hours, the grueling workouts, the compromises … it was all paying off. 

I was in single digits! Only 9 miles to go. The next 4 miles passed so quickly I would have sworn I was sprinting. 

The last five miles felt longer than the first 21 miles. As my quads tightened, I reminded myself to live in the moment. I tried to take in my surroundings. It was pitch black. All I could do was focus on the center line in the road. 

As I got within one mile of the finish line I couldn’t find a pep in my step. All I had was maintaining my slow and consistent pace. I was passed by 7 people. They finished minutes before me, but spent almost the entire marathon behind me. 

I can’t lie. That burned me a little. Again, I reminded myself to run my race. No one else’s. 

I saw that finishers shoot and the tears started to come back. I stared at the ground to try and keep my composure. I heard Mike, Bridget, Chad and Julia screaming my name. I looked up and saw nothing but joy on their faces. It was magical. Their emotions were absolutely beautiful. 

I crossed that finish line gave a solid breakfast club fist into the air and needed to find space. The volunteers were kind and worried. They could read my face. A woman fighting exhaustion and heavy emotions. 

Quickly I got my finisher medal, hat and t-shirt. I set out to find Mike. The minute I hugged him the flood gates opened and I couldn’t do a thing about it. He kept saying those better be happy tears. And I couldn’t explain. I couldn’t explain until the next day. 

IRONMAN RECAP GOALS

I went in with one clear and simple goal run the marathon. That’s it. My run experience on my first two races was so awful I knew that was the key to a better race for me. 

Then there was the goal of avoiding any GI issues. 

And of course, because everyone should set big goals, I wanted to beat my 2016 time. I really didn’t want to tell many people this goal. So I didn’t. 

Why didn’t I? Fear had some to do with it, but when I set my goals I didn’t even think it was realistic. I was so far away from any resemblance of “in-IronMan-shape” post baby that I couldn’t even entertain the idea … at least not out loud. 

It wasn’t until September that I actually thought it might be possible. I was having incredible training days. My running felt as strong as it ever has in my life. I was running times I had NEVER ran before. 

I now believed it was possible. But I still didn’t want to say it out loud. Running the entire marathon without GI issues would be so monumental I put my focus there. It grounded me mentally and emotionally as I prepared for race day. 

Then outside of goals… I had my own concerns. I barely swam in preparation for this race. I strength trained a ton and got in 10-12 open water swims. I never swam in a pool. I never did swim intervals. I didn’t have access or time. 

I knew weather would be a factor. We trained in some brutal wind this summer so I felt like I had done what I needed to be prepared. BUT, I just never risk riding in rain. So, how would it go? 

And I had recently found out the run course was hilly 😂 yes, I’m serious. The week before the race I finally figured that out. 

So now all my goals and concerns are out in the open. I’m 99% happy. I’m sure you can guess my 1% unhappiness. But, maybe it is different than what you think. 

MY THOUGHTS

I crushed the swim. It was < 3 minutes slower than my best time. And that year I swam 3 days a week, an hour each time. Not to mention, the water was freezing and it took a long time for me to put my head in the water. Clearly that’s a huge win to start the day off. 

The bike was positive because I was peeing. I was staying hydrated and I felt good. And as much as the wind and rain had impacted my performance they hadn’t ruined it. I had no GI issues and I was feeling strong physically going into the run. 

As I started the run I had a candle lit for a faster time. It was all coming together through the sweat, rain and tears. 

But as you know I didn’t hit my time. I couldn’t find it within myself to run faster. Every part of my body knew I could run this slow pace for the entire marathon and accomplish that goal. That main, priority goal. And I was worried about running too hard and giving into walking. 

So that 1% I’m not happy about isn’t that my time wasn’t faster. Yes, that’s the measurable outcome. But not my race regret.  

It’s that I lost the mental battle. My self-belief wavered enough that I am left with a “what if”. 

What if I did push my pace? 

My sore muscles and fatigue have passed. Only indications of an IronMan that remains are tan lines and chaffing 🙃 

Cheers,

Chellie

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IronMan Indiana Race Week Mental, Physical and Emotional Preparation

IronMan Indiana Race Week Mental, Physical and Emotional Preparation

It is officially race week! And as predicted there are some wild emotions going on. It’s kind of hard to put into words even though this is the third time. But I am going to try and give you an inside look at my IronMan race week mental, physical and emotional preparation.

Am I nervous? Yes.

Am I excited? Yes.

Am I confident about the race? Yes.

Do I feel comfortable going into the race? No.

For me being comfortable is it not always a good thing. After all and Iron Man isn’t a comfortable adventure. But, I said I feel confident. What I mean is that I am confident that I will put my best foot forward on race day. I’m confident that I trained hard and intentionally. And I am confident that I will get to that finish line.

 
In the past week I have had a lot of questions about how I am feeling, the race and training, I thought it would be fun to touch on some reoccurring topics and answer those questions. Especially, the ones I have heard more than once.
 
 

“What are your IronMan race week mental, physical, and emotional preparations?”

 
I am an early packer. That’s a big mental preparation for me. I give it a lot of heart and soul. I lay it out multiple times. I try stuff on. I pack and repack. It’s almost like training for me.
 
 
The more familiar I am with what I have the more confident I get. And this helps take up some of my free time from the drop in actual training hours during the tapper weeks.
 
 
Physical is really psychological. What do I need to do to feel good. For me that’s a lot of moderate intensity and short time workouts. Everything is 30-45 minutes with mobility snd stretching. Enough that I feel my body working, but not over working. That recovery is easy and I don’t make backward progress this close to the race.
 
 
To clarify, backward progress would be causing fatigue or injury this close to a race by over working.The workouts are really mentally comforting, there are not physiological adaptations to earn this week.
 
 
I meditate and take hot baths to keep my mind and self busy. It helps prepare my body for the race, but at this point much more of my mind.
 
 
Nutritionally has the biggest change I think. No alcohol, no cheese and the coffee is dropping. Why?
 
 
Alcohol is a toxin. So that will inhibit my recovery goals now and performance goals on race day.
 
 
Cheese and coffee both have a dramatic affect on me. Eliminating them to help ease the stress my digestion is under before and during the race.
 
 
And finally sleep. I try to sleep as much as possible I get into bed early or go by myself and meditate and stretch before bed because my mind tends to wander at this point.
 
I visualize a successful race and that generally settles my roaming mind so that I can tall asleep.
 

How do you get game day ready? How do you not psych yourself out?

I felt like these questions went with my race week mental, physical and emotional preparation. Everything I have don’t in training is what has physically prepared me. I have been working on my mental game during training, but I find those results don’t show until race day. No matter who you are.

Outside of obsessive packing, eating, stretching and sleeping there is nothing left to get game day ready. But there is always the opportunity to psych yourself out. My focus has to stay on me succeeding – at the race and at my goals. I have to make that the priority this week and do things that support it. And perhaps more importantly DON’T do things that won’t support my goals.

 

“Do you feel like you have to have a clean house, checked-off to-do list, and everything wrapped up before leaving?”

This question was clearly asked by someone who knows me well. 1000% I need to have all my t’s crossed and my i’s dotted.
 
 
I know that it is difficult for me to relax when I am anticipating the race. My mind generally starts to wonder and think of the million other things I could do instead of relaxing.
 
 
To help with this I try 2 approaches. 1 – get as much shit done ahead of time and schedule the other things. So anything I don’t do, but I want to do I set a date for it. That helps me “be at peace” with it not being done and keeps it from being a distraction.
 
 
2 – I continuously preach to myself “live in the moment”. Enjoy the fact that this rest is mandated. Enjoy how freaking hard you’ve worked for this rest. Trust that this moment now will pay dividends on race day. Remember that these are memories too.  And, perhaps most important is the concept that being busy and getting things done isn’t a measure of success or self value. Embracing that allows me to live in the moment and allow race day to be my success story.
 
 
Side Note – you know I’m writing this article with excitement to cross it off my list before I leave!
 
 

“Do you have any IronMan pre-race rituals?”

I don’t have anything crazy. ?I have a clear plan I follow that I don’t like to deviate from, perhaps that is part of a ritual But I would say my visualization is the most ritualistic activity that I do. It has been going on throughout training, but this week and race day is my main focus.
 
 
I really enjoy getting to the venue and being able to put landmarks in my head and make the visualization more realistic. I’ll be running the course and transitions through my head continuously race morning.
 
 

What are you most excited for during the race? What are you looking forward to after the race?

There is nothing like the anticipation and anxiety I feel standing in line for the swim. Nerves are jumping out of my throat, my body wants to attack the challenge and my mind is trying to hold everything together. It sounds wild and it is.But that feeling is incredible.
 
 
 
I am excited to see how these legs do on the run. I have made it a big goal to run the entire marathon – something I haven’t accomplished before. And I am hoping my nutritional changes will get me there.
 
 
 
And if you have been following my training then you know that I did not train in a traditional manner, so I am damn excited to see what I can do.
 
 
 
I am hoping, with tightly crossed fingers, not feel like death. I have this crappy memory of the hell I was in after finishing IronMan Chattanooga and all I care about is not feeling that way. Oh, and a shower. Nothing compares to a shower after the race.
 
 

Race day goals?

Big goal is to live in the moment and soak it all in. Not always easy for me. But having a baby has made me much better at it.
 
 
 
I will run the entire marathon.
 
 
 
12 hour finish. Anywhere in the 12s would make me happy. For reference my best was Madison 2016 at 13:06.
 
 

What do you think about during the race?

It is different for each leg of the race.
 
 
 
Swim – I am filled with positivity because the day has started. My thoughts are uplifting and full of hope. I generally settle all my nerves in the swim because I try to set a tempo for the day.
 
 
 
Bike – loop 1 I am practicing patience so I am very invested in my technique, my nutrition and my plan. Loop 2 I give myself more freedom to attack the bike which allows my mind to wander. My thoughts aren’t as positive, more challenging. I am trying to mentally inspire myself to do more and be more. And of course the constant thought of crossing that finish line enters into my head 1,352 times.
 
 
 
Run – this is the hardest for me mentally.I let my mind go to absolutely anything to help distract myself. I consistently do mental checks on my running form and go back to my random thoughts. Overall, this is this time is filled with inspiring (for me) negative self-talk.
 
 
Don’t come at me over this. I know it is not the “ideal” mentality and that it isn’t “healthy” for everyone. Which is why I am not recommending you or anyone use negative self-talk. I am simply being honest. The things I tell myself aren’t out of hate, they serve as reminders for what is on the line. And that in return gets my ass moving.
 
 
 

How do you troubleshoot during the race if something isn’t going right/you aren’t on pace/you get a blister/you all of a sudden have to poop?

This one made me laugh. There is literally nothing you can do. Those bumps are going to be in the road. You can try to prepare for them, but ultimately you are just triaging what comes up.
 
 
Something isn’t going to go right. That’s the nature of this type of a race. It is far too long for everything to go right. In Chattanooga I miscounted ALL of the swim buoys. So I thought I should be hitting the final buoy and I was just hitting half way. That was a mind bend. Yes, I have learned from that and I triple check all course information.  And in Madison my chain fell off my bike after Barlow and I had to chase Jo back down to keep our goal of finishing together.
 
 
You aren’t on pace. The answer no one wants to hear is that they fucked up. If you aren’t on pace something happened. It could be in your control or it could be out of your control. Most of the time it is in your control – training preparations, food/hydration, rest, sleep, realistic goals. And I am not bashing other people. I know this from personal experience. Endurance racing is humbling at every level.
 
 
Blister/Urge to Poop. Good news is that there are a lot of port-a-johns on the course. So you should be safe to get into one. Now if it is digestive distress going on and mother nature can’t wait you may poop yourself. While I have been close, it has never happened.
 
 
What I tell myself in those close calls is … you aren’t first and you won’t be the last. There is no point in dwelling on it now. You have to focus on the race. Clean yourself up at the next port-a-john.
 
 
And for blisters and other incidents they have stuff at aid stations that can be of help. But most athletes carry things they know they might need like bandaids because they got blisters a lot in training. Others put it all in their special needs bags. Those are bags that are available to athletes ONLY halfway through the bike and halfway through the run.
 
 
People put crazy shit in there. Cans of soup, brand new shoes and emergency items like band aids.
 
 

How do you reach deep to get that extra burst when you think you can’t do it anymore?

Mental. Mental. Mental.
 
 
I have never been on the wire in a race. Meaning I haven’t been so close to a cut off time that I had to keep going or I wouldn’t make it. That is good and bad. Good because that means I am racing strong. Bad because it means it is easy to just slow down.
 
 
I have focused this training cycle on the mantra “you don’t get to do that mile again”. Essentially, I don’t want to look back at any part of the race and think could I have or should I have done that differently.
 
 
If I choose to slow down on the bike, it should be because I am over working and it isn’t sustainable. Because I will never be able to do that mile over or “make-up” for the slow down. This is a race leaving it all on the course is what I am here to do.
 
 

How do you feel when you cross the finish line? What do you do to recover immediately after?

Crossing the finish line is more than euphoric. It is also a little sad for me. I am elated to be done and to have become an IronMan again. But it is also over. I love the discipline required to train for an IronMan – it brings out the best in me. So the celebration is always bitter sweet. Until I pick that next race 🙂

I hope I have a better answer for you guys on recovery after the race. In the past I have been wrecked. Madison took its tool on my digestion and my knees. I couldn’t even stand up off the curb they hurt so bad. Chattanooga I was incredibly dehydrated (heat and digestion issues) I was in the dumps for two days following the race. The only consistency between the two races is that I wanted to hug Mike (and cry) and take a shower.

As I said before, I hope to have a much different race experience this time and that means a much different post-race experience. Stay tuned!

If you made it to the end here, they you either are a good friend of mine (I love you) or you are really interested in IronMan. Either way, welcome to my little IM racing community 🙂 Comment or connect with me on Instagram!

Cheers,

Chellie

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Mental Challenges of Training for an IronMan As a Mom

Mental Challenges of Training for an IronMan As a Mom

Last week was the hardest week of training for me. But probably not how you are thinking. The mental challenge of training for an IronMan is the most significant part for me and doing it as a new mom has been wild.

Physically I was fine. I mean sure i was tired. But last week I had one question on my mind.

What in the literal fuck am I doing?

This wave of emotion came over me. It wasn’t doubt, it wasn’t fear … it was time.

All this precious time I was spending training. Spending away from Freddy and Mike. And, well, maybe it was a bit of jealousy.

MANAGING THE MENTAL CHALLENGES OF TRAINING FOR AN IRONMAN

Jealousy is just ugly. It happens to us all, but it is still ugly. I can be the most competitive person in the room and stand out for being obnoxious, head strong, stubborn … but every time I realize my emotions are being driven by jealousy I shiver.

A chill actually goes up my spine.

Simply put, jealousy is a quality that I can’t stand. And when I feel jealousy creeping it’s ugly head into my life I try my best to turn it into respect and inspiration. The key here is to realize that your emotions are being drive by jealousy.

Unfortunately for me it took ALL week to put my finger on it.

I battled through shitty workouts and crappy feelings. Ignoring my desire to quit. And trying my best to remember why I signed up for this race.

MOMMA RAISED NO QUITTER.

While I embrace this mantra, I hate it. Because knowing when to stop and quitting get lumped together. I have worked really hard my whole life to learn when it is the right time to stop. I have gotten it wrong too many times to even begin to count.

With my stubborn personality battling these sneaky feelings of jealousy I tried to find solid mental ground to stand on.

I rode my bike inside instead of outside because that was easier. I demanded the bare minimum from myself. The house got messy. I asked for more help from my family. And I had numerous sassy and exploitive filled conversations with myself.

In the end, I gave myself grace.

Not because I’m some magical human that always ends on their feet like cats. But because I realized I was destroying my own goals. Complete and utter self-sabotage when I was less than 7 weeks out from my goal.

Believe me when I say this… I did not make this realization of self-sabotage and instantly become reinvigorated. I first had to be annoyed with myself. My jealousy turned into a bit of anger towards myself, which turned into energy I poured into my workouts.

After a few workouts I felt the stress, jealousy, anger lift.

My mental feet were back on the ground.

GET OUT OF YOUR OWN WAY

My story isn’t new. Jealousy has been knocking hardworking people down for centuries. But there is a broader message here that I live by. Sometimes the hardest thing we must do is get out of our own way.

Self-sabotage. Fear of failure. Excuses. There are a lot of ways we hold ourselves back. But with time spent in reflection or even simply with our own thoughts we can get out of own way and find balance and even the success we work for.

One of the biggest challenges I have faced is getting in all my workouts. And I know that I am not alone in that. It is a common theme for every person trying to train for an IronMan and have a job, family, hobby or any interest in life.

If you are really going to “get out of your own way” leaving the excuse of scheduling behind is necessary. I have shared a few of my training strategies in past blogs. If you feel overwhelmed by run training or just don’t like running long distances read my post How to Use Interval Training for A Successful IronMan Run.

And if you are struggling with getting into the pool to train for the swim read IronMan Strength Training for the Swim

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MASTERING THE MENTAL CHALLENGES OF TRAINING FOR AN IRONMAN

Frankly, you don’t do an IronMan alone. You may think you train and race alone, but really you are surrounded by people who want you to succeed. They want you to cross that finish line.

I have found it very helpful to use the enneagram personality assessment to better understand myself, the motivation behind my decisions and goals and my approach to training. You can read more about it in this post Enneagram Types and Exercise: Finding What Your Type Means for Your Workout

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LEAN ON YOUR SUPPORT NETWORK.

I spent Sunday planning every workout and every task this week. Getting my support network involved everywhere I could. To help me succeed.

Yes, I do have to give up some time with Freddy. But that means he gets more time with Mike and our family/friends. That is never a bad thing.

Parent guilt is a real thing I’m finding out. But IronMan helps me keep an identity I had before having Freddy. It helps me remember that having a child doesn’t mean giving up your goals or passions. And most importantly it helps me remember that life is hard.

NONE OF IT WILL BE EASY.

I’ve never had an easy workout. But I have had ones that felt incredible. That built me up. And isn’t that what life is?

Opportunities exist every day that won’t be easy. Some will make you feel incredible, and others will just be hard. But both will mold you. Both will help build your character, your you-ness.

If you have a bad week at training/work/school, maybe, just maybe, you need to get out of your own way.

Cheers to 7 more brutal weeks and 1 absolutely magical and unforgiving day!

 

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IronMan Strength Training for the Swim

IronMan Strength Training for the Swim

When I signed up for this IronMan race, I knew things would be different. I had just had a baby, we own a business and my husband’s favorite activity is golf. All of those equal time. That means I had to get creative with my training, especially with the swim.

Plain and simple between access and schedule getting into a pool has been very difficult. Thankfully. I have found 1 day a week to get out for an open water swim.

And that was a huge challenge. I needed someone to swim with – buddy system and our week-by-week schedules had to work. Which wasn’t easy when my training partner has 4 kids and a business herself.  Luckily, I have a few other friends that love to swim.

I knew that swimming once a week wasn’t going to be enough. I wouldn’t be able to be confident and comfortable during the race or with my results. I knew I would be left with the feeling of what if I had swum more?

So, I got creative.

I focused on strength training in high reps and focusing on the main muscles in swimming. I combined those with running intervals. And I crushed as many rounds as I could within an hour.

Then because I wasn’t loving my feeling in the water, I did more. I started to add more strength training and this time combined it with biking.

Let me break this down more.

MY IRONMAN STRENGTH TRAINING FOR THE SWIM

2 workouts a week I focus on sprint intervals for either the bike or run. And instead of just walking/resting between intervals I strength train specifically swimming.

How long are your workouts?

1 hour.

Babies, family, and a marriage take time. Running, growing, and supporting a business takes time. Training for an IronMan and playing golf take time.

When I could be at the gym for an undefined amount of time I would have to guess my workouts were never shorter than 2 hours. And looking back on that, it was a mistake.

In retrospect, could call much of that wasted time, or over training. Or just busy work that didn’t mean anything.

What movements do I use?

I follow the same progression for all of my training – range of motion first, stability second, and strength third. Depending where I am in terms of physical shape and in my training cycle I am focusing on one or all three of those steps.

Since I am nearing the end of a training cycle I am starting to feel the build up of all my workouts. I start to really value my mobility work as a way to protect the progress I have made.

Muscularly, I work to maintain stability at my shoulders and core. I heavily target back and triceps and do as much single sided movements as possible. Either within a workout or alternating workouts I would vary the muscle contraction.

There isn’t a strength workout that I do that doesn’t include core. For swimming specifically, I love exercises that focus on stability with limb movement in a variety of body positions and planes of movement.

A few of my most used swim strength training exercises:
  • Side Plank Variations: rotations, forward presses, leg raises, etc.
  • Deadbug variations: varying loads and angles.
  • Rollout Variations: ab wheel, single arm TRX, plank walk outs.

WHY IS STRENGTH TRAINING IMPORTANT FOR THE IRONMAN SWIM

In my opinion, when you are training for an endurance event like an IronMan your strength program should prioritize offsetting the impact of sport-based training.

In the simplest way, that means doing the opposite of what you do most.

Swimming is a huge frontal load on the body. Training my back and entire posterior chain is what helps keep my body balanced. I follow the same approach as I strength train to offset the miles of biking and running.

Thankfully, an argument can be made that training the entire posterior chain should be the number one priority for triathletes. From the perspective of maintaining balance in the body and improving performance.

You can read more about Injury Prevention While Training For An IronMan In 2021 in my recent blog. I chatted with my friend, training partner and physical therapist about the balance between training and health.

CAN STRENGTH TRAINING REPLACE SWIMMING?

Absolutely not. If I could get into the pool 1-2 days a week I would. But my life, right now, doesn’t allow it.

In my workouts I am looking to challenge my lactate threshold. You can read more about that in this article How to Use Interval Training for A Successful IronMan Run.

The biggest thing I am missing is the breathing. I’m serious. Running, biking, lifting I can breathe whenever I want. The air is always accessible. Swimming is different.

Swimming demands that you work to condition your body to become as efficient as possible on a specific amount of air. I may be getting stronger and improving my fitness, but that does not mean I will be conditioned my best for swimming.

I know my results would be best if these strength workouts were combined with increased swimming. But I can feel things starting to fall into place.

MY IRONMAN SWIM STRENGTH WORKOUT

Here is my most recent strength workout:

  • Seated Cable Row 15
  • Hand on top of Hand Pull Down 10/10
  • Side Plank Rotations 15/15
  • ½ mile up tempo run

Repeat 6-8 times

It might look redundant, but what is endurance racing if not redundant?

If you are struggling with your swim training I hope this helps. And remember to take time and recover. I reviewed my 5 Best Exercise Recovery Tools in this blog. Take look at Easy Green Smoothie With Protein To Keep You Full for my go to smoothie recipe. I drink this any time of the day!

Cheers to another week closer to IronMan Indiana!

 

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How To Do A Half IronMan Distance On Your Own: What I learned

How To Do A Half IronMan Distance On Your Own: What I learned

As part of my training, I always include a Half IronMan distance race. With limited race availability and the new mom schedule I decided to hit the distances on my own. Well with my training partner, but not as part of an event or a sanctioned IM event.

It was a bit unconventional. We would have preferred to have all the events in the same day, but logistically it had proved to be difficult.

First, we needed to find a place to swim in a good location. Second, we needed to be able to swim early enough to get out on the roads early and bike. We both hate biking when traffic starts to pick-up. Especially with this being a holiday weekend our concerns were higher. (Happy Fourth of July!)

Ultimately, we decided to swim late on Friday. Bike at 5:15 am on Saturday and run immediately after. We took time to plan our routes and ask friends and family to put out water/Gatorade/snacks to help us stay hydrated and fueled.

WHAT TO CONSIDER WHEN DOING A HALF IRONMAN DISTANCE ON YOUR OWN

You have no built in race support doing a half IM distance on your own. My three main take aways are:

  • Over plan your support.
  • Keep routes close to said support.
  • And don’t be a hero.

Read on for more details.

If you are looking for some more information on training workouts take a look at How To Use Interval Training for A Successful IronMan Run and IronMan Strength Training for the Swim.

HOW TO DO A HALF IRONMAN DISTANCE ON YOUR OWN

The swim went off without a hitch. Calm waters. Easy swimming and no distractions. Which is 100% the opposite of a real race. Generally, you get kicked, slapped, and swam into a few times.

It was a weird feeling to drive home from the swim and think that we have done 1/3 of the events. But welcome at the same time. Very good vibes going to bed as the largest portion still waited ahead.

Saturday’s start was filled with hope. We were concerned about high temps and having access to water when we needed it. But we spent so much time planning we felt confident.

Both of our waters were gone at the first water refill, and we thought – that’s perfect. With confidence we carried on with the rest of the bike.

Slowly I started to feel the fatigue. The heat was playing a factor and my stomach was starting to react. I could feel my intestines doing back flips as we biked.

This was when I made the decision to ignore it. I told myself it was nothing. That it was just my dinner last night and things were going to be fine. And then the truth slapped me in the face.

Every time I tried to eat or drink I was overwhelmed with nausea. All I could think was HOW COULD THIS BE HAPPENING AGAIN? Flashbacks to my last full IM were starting to run through my head. Cue me vomiting on myself at miles 65 and 80.

I tried to focus on finishing the bike. Envision success, not failure.

It took 30 minutes longer than anticipated with bathroom breaks and water stops. That was a hit mentally.

WHERE IT ALL WENT WRONG

I changed my shoes and set out on the pre-planned route for running. It was a route that was new to me, but I had hoped it would help the miles pass quickly.

I decided to add a few miles on to the front end of the route since Kaite would be running from her house to mine. To me this was the best way to ensure I would be able to stay on the right route. Let Kaite run ahead of me and catch up to her.

I was almost 2 miles into my run when I saw her two blocks up at the water stop at my house. I went to finish the last ¼ mile out and back before I grabbed water and ran her down.

That was the beginning of the end. I never saw her again.

I made so many wrong turns I could never find her. I ran 7 miles in the blistering heat without water. Whatever positivity didn’t die on the bike died right there on the run.

Those 7 miles were full of frustration, body chills, exhaustion, nausea, and pure anger. As I approached the water station at my house all I could think about was holy shit there are 4 miles left to run.

The mental debate began. How bad are my symptoms and how necessary are these last 4 miles?

If you are squeamish, I would scroll down to the end.

DECISION TIME

As I came to a stop at the water station, I got my answer. I peed myself. And it wasn’t something I could stop. Yes, I recognized this was bad, but what I couldn’t decide is how bad is it really.

Thinking to myself, that’s not a good sign, I laid down in the shade and continued the mental debate. I started to feel better. 4 miles didn’t seem impossible.

I would give 1 mile a chance. Run ½ mile down and back. Those first few steps I was renewed with energy. ½ mile later my body chills were renewed too 

I got back laid in the shade. Then felt better and what do you know? The same exact thing happened. I threw in the towel.

11 miles done.

BIGGEST TAKE AWAYS FROM DOING A HALF IRONMAN DISTANCE ON YOUR OWN

So should I call that a failure? Were those two miles going to be the difference maker in my performance in October?

Nope. No. Absolutely not.

I know I made the right call. Mike also gave me some affirmation when I was inside talking about going back out. He “subtly” told me that it would be stupid to go back with those symptoms.

A killer headache and a few too many trips to the bathroom also told me I had made the right choice.

So, doing a half IM distance race on your own is hard. I mean it is hard to begin with and then to try and plan all the support you need and the best route just makes it more complicated.

I like to think that I could do this a million times better now. But I would still prefer to sign-up for a race next time.

If you feel the need to do your own half IM distance race/event, then consider these factors –

  • Drive all routes beforehand. Don’t leave any second guessing to the event day.
  • Plan your support as close to the same interval distances as a normal race.
  • Keep your phone with you.

 

Creating Brand Loyalty as Trainer

Creating Brand Loyalty as Trainer

Standing out in the market is important. And offering a competitive service and price are effective at capturing customer’s attention. But taking that attention and turning it into repeat clients with brand loyalty is critical to your long-term success. So let's...

read more
30 Minute Workout Program

30 Minute Workout Program

I have a great workout program for you. You can scroll down if you aren't interested in why I made this program. But it you are let's have a quick chat. Why is it easier to skip a workout than to actually do the workout? In my opinion it has a lot to do with how you...

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3 Ways to Gauge Success As A Trainer

3 Ways to Gauge Success As A Trainer

Whether you work at a gym or you’re an owner reflecting and evaluating your performance as a personal trainer is a necessary component to growth and long-term success. Here are 3 ways to gauge your business success as a personal trainer: Client Retention Client...

read more
fitness articles
lifestyle articles
nutrition articles
golf articles

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We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites.