Race More, Burn Out Less
Last week, two separate clients faced wanting to race a race…but not wanting to.
One was burned out and the other was worried about getting there.
Two different runners, two different races, two different race schedules, same assumption: you have to race races.
This may not seem like a big deal, but it shows up when you feel compelled to run a race as fast as you can because you have to get the best time or place as high you can…no matter what.
Because it’s a race and that’s what you’re supposed to do.
They assumed - like I used to - that you have to race every race.
But believing you have to all-out ‘race’ all your races actually limits you.
Pressuring yourself to race your all every time means you have to either limit the amount you race, or risk burnout, DNFs, and losing the love of it.
If that’s you, try on the idea that races can serve other purposes than “performance” where, as one fabulous client put it, “You don’t have to puke your guts out at the finish line.”
For example, you can use smaller races at moderate as part of your training plan for bigger overall race goals to:
Get a key long run done in a structured, supported environment
Get practice running in a race situation
Try out new food, hydration and pacing strategies
You can also use races to simply:
Get out the door and do bigger miles when it’s hard to
Jump start motivation
Ease back into running after a hiatus or injury
Energize yourself by seeing a new course (change up your environment)
Share the experience with friends and make new ones
But there’s one caution. If you’re used to racing for time or place, running a race at a more casual pace while everyone passes you, might be uncomfortable at first.
That doesn’t mean it’s wrong - that means it’s unfamiliar.
What will everyone think if you don’t race as fast as you can?
Or finish last?
It takes mental strength to stick to your game plan and run the race your way, for your reasons.
And without needing to justify it to everyone.
You have to care more about doing your own thing than you care about what other people will think about you.
It helps to remember you can’t control what they think and they’ll think whatever they want, no matter how well you do.
It also helps to know you can run a race for other purposes AND still run a fast time. You don’t have to decide between the two.
For example, you can share miles with friends, experience a new course, practice your race skills - AND run fast - when you want to, not because you have to.
So don’t let the assumption that you have to seriously race every race hold you back from running the races you want.
This is one among many limiting blocks I see holding runners back from running the races they want, trying new challenges, and seeing what they can really do.
One of the blocks I help clients remove from the unwritten rule book in their heads.
I can help you clear away blocks like this too.
If you’re curious about coaching with me, click on this link to schedule a consult call and let’s see if we’re a good fit.