Wednesday, December 26, 2007
The Day after Christmas
Saturday, December 22, 2007
Great ride!
Brian (here on the left) and I spiced the ride by climbing Deer Creek road again. It is a tough climb! The first two miles are just relentless and well above 10%. The views were great though and the ocean's blue was just perfect.
That is a sharp corner!!
Brian downhill
This morning (Sunday) two hour ride with 50 minutes in Zone 3. Great feeling after the first 30 minutes.
Friday, December 21, 2007
Back on track
Sunday, December 16, 2007
Good news, bad news...
The start of Deer Creek Canyon Road from the Pacific Coast Highway
The first miles are very steep
Today no hesitation though I am definitely sick and I do not feel like riding at all!
Friday, December 14, 2007
Old Punk
OK, now back to my training. Yesterday my 70 minute morning run (out at 5.45am as usual) was tough, the legs were stiff and it took me a while to warm them up. But I was rewarded by a beautiful sunrise on the bay of Los Angeles. After that the rest of the run was much easier! Run again at lunch time, 50 minutes this time (Zone 2 again). I felt much better even if the scenery was much less exciting: approximately 90 laps of my YMCA short indoor track.
Tuesday, December 11, 2007
Get a Brain!
The main one is the fact that you pay your coach to think for you and that is very comfortable! You outsource your brain (okay just the “triathlon lobe” of it) for a more effective one. The idea of course is to get better results because the brain you use is (hopefully) better at coaching than yours. But you also get a short term side benefit: you save a lot of energy and time not thinking about your training, not second-guessing your program and each workout. Should I run this morning? Or swim? Fast, slow? Oh I think I should have ridden! This recovery ride feels too easy should I do some intervals at the end? Should I try these 237.5 repeat sessions this anonymous guy mentioned on Slowtwitch last night? And what about squats?
The energy you save not asking all these questions to yourself is huge. Each workout is done in a much more efficient manner because you know it is what you are supposed to do. The ability to solely focus on doing the work is increased a lot. Just do the work stupid! When it hurts, well it is supposed to hurt; so enjoy the pain fully. When it‘s easy, don’t feel guilty.
Also in between workouts you can stop thinking about your training. Somebody did that for you, so you can take care of the rest of your life. Obviously, all that works if you trust your coach, understand and accept his “philosophy” and don’t question his program all the time. This trust has to be strong because I am sure there’re times when the body (and mind) feels like doing something very different than what is “recommended” by the coach.
Monday, December 10, 2007
"You are always capable of doing more"
Check the article at: http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/06/health/nutrition/06Best.html?_r=1&pagewanted=1&ei=5087&em&en=ca0897ba66f87fcf&ex=1197176400&oref=slogin
Sunday, December 9, 2007
Fire
The upper part of the canyon was not touched by the fire and the views on the ocean were great this morning.
Wednesday, December 5, 2007
Congratulations!
Perspective
Few weeks ago my parents spent two weeks in Laos and did a trek there. On a Sunday afternoon they were joined in their daily hike (about 5 hours) by a dozen of young children. The kids were leaving their small and isolated village to spend the week in a slightly more important one where was their school. They would sleep together in a small "cabin" and cook their own food. They even had a small garden to grow few vegetables. On Fridays afternoons they would walk back to their village to spend the week-end with their families...
Photo by Georges Laborie
I found this story very touching, of course the life of these kids is extremely far away from and harder than my own childhood or my kids' one. But in a way it is also uplifting and somewhat positive, as these kids go through all that... to go to school.
You said HTFU?...
Saturday, December 1, 2007
New Year resolutions... in December
Dream big...
My ultimate goal for next year is to have the privilege to wear a green swimcap and float in the Kona bay on October 11th at 7am... Qualify for the Ironman World Championship in Kona has been a dream for several years but never a clear goal. I want to try seriously this time. Will see what happens...
The races I will participate in will be:
- Half Ironman California in March because it is close to home and a good way to get a slot for a full Ironman race (hopefully Coeur d'Alene).
- Ironman Idaho in Coeur d'Alene in June (I competed there in 2003) with the hope of qualifying for Hawaii in my 40-45 age-group.
In fact the 2008 season officially started three weeks ago for me: full training mode under the guidance of a coach: Paulo Sousa. It is the first time I am going to train with the help of a "specialist" and I feel very lucky that Paulo accepted me in his group of athletes. I guess new goals deserved new means.
To be continued...