Tuesday, August 16, 2011

5 Mental Race Day Tactics to Turn You Into A Triathlon Ninja

A triathlon ninja is smart and sleek, and sometimes wears a sexy black compression bandana under their bike helmet*


A triathlon ninja is calm and cool under pressure, and can do impressive things like count how many gels they've had in the past 2 hours.


A triathlon ninja sneaks up barely noticed, usually late in the race when everyone else is fading, and whoosh! turns up the heat and burns streaks of speed in the pavement.


*performance enhancing benefits not proven by research.


Are you a triathlon ninja? Do you want to be one?


In this article, you'll learn five race day mental tactics that allow you to become a triathlon ninja, and use your ninja superpowers to push your body outside your comfort zone, physically beyond what you believe to be possible, and into a new level of personal achievement. Sweet. Are you ready grasshopper?


Triathlon Ninja Race Day Mental Tactic #1: Break Up.


While your subconscious mind can grasp the concept continuously swimming, cycling and running from point A to point B, or even of traversing 140.6 miles in a single day, your conscious mind (the part that actually dictates your race day decisions) is easily distracted.


For a triathlon ninja, this distraction can be a good thing, because you can feed your conscious mind tiny intermediate goals to break things up. Rather than having to making it to the finish line, you convince your body to make it to the next buoy, the next telephone pole, or the next aid station.


I personally divide most triathlons into much more than 3 separate events (swim, bike, run) and instead typically categorize 6-12 separate "sections" of the race on paper, then study that paper going into the race.


Got it? OK, you've got Step 1 of 5 (see you're already learning how to break things up).


Triathlon Ninja Race Day Mental Tactic #2: Dig Deep.


There's very little you'll experience in a race that you haven't already experienced in training. You just have to remember to dig deep enough during the race to call on those times in training when you headed out the door to run in torrential rain, rode your bike 30 miles on half-inflated tires, or finished off 1500 meters of a swim while resisting the compelling urge to rush to the bathroom and take a dump.


During a race, the slight discomfort that we put up with in training can sometimes mentally or physically derail us. So when the going gets tough, think back to the hardest part of your training, including somehow getting your heart rate near maximum at 5am in the morning, and draw on those episodes during the race.


Want practice? Compare getting through this article to reading Moby Dick in high school and you¹re well on your way to become a triathlon ninja.


Triathlon Ninja Race Day Mental Tactic #3: Ask Why


A triathlon ninja knows their motivation for doing triathlons.


Some people do triathlons to live a long time so they can see their grandkids.


Some people do triathlons because they were never any good at sports and this lets them be an athlete.


Some people do triathlons because it makes them look good naked.


Regardless of what your motivation is, you need to identify it and know why you do triathlon.


Then, when you're riding up the steepest hill of the race, ready to fall off your bike and puke, you can remember that the whole reason you're doing this is so that you look sexy for your tropical vacation in 2 weeks. Or whatever motivates your ninja heart.


Triathlon Ninja Race Day Mental Tactic #4: Harness Energy


You've probably seen the video game or movie where the superhuman being clutches two hands to their chest, creates a giant ball of fiery energy then releases the burning orb into a crowd of fierce opponents, dispersing the enemy like rag dolls.


A triathlon ninja has those same superpowers.


When you go running up the beach from the swim, harness the energy of the screaming crowds. Feel it. Use it.


When you ride through the aid station, feel the positive energy emanating from the generous volunteers, and use that too.


And as you run, try to smile. This smiling strategy helps significantly­, because people smile right back at you and cheer you on (whereas nobody really claps much for the triathlete who looks like they're on Planet Hell).


So yes, I'm the guy at the race who's doing the rock star pump-up-the-crowd hand waving as I ride out of transition ­ and yes, that's kinda hard to do when your heart is pumping out your throat, but it's worth the effort when you ride back into transition and those same people give you that energy right back.


Triathlon Ninja Race Day Mental Tactic #5: See Success


Close your eyes.


Can you imagine the feel of the water in your hand during the swim, the air blowing by your cheeks on the bike, and the slap of your foot against the pavement on the run?


If not, you may need triathlon ninja practice.


The best athletes on the planet regularly engage in visualization, in which they close their eyes and imagine everything happening perfectly. This takes practice and imagination, but your mind can be trained to visualize powerfully.


Start with small things, like closing your eyes and feeling the sand on the beach under your feet before the race starts.


Then progress to more complex visualization, such as seeing and feeling yourself successfully snag a water bottle as you fly by an aid station on your bike. If you're really good, you can imagine yourself brining that aid station water bottle to your mouth and feeling the cool water refresh you. And you know you need a little more practice, or an Alzheimer's screening, if you're having a hard time mentally recalling what an aid station actually looks like.


So what do you think? Can you be a triathlon ninja? You bet you can. Remember!


Break up.


Dig deep.


Ask why.


Harness energy.


See success.


I'll see you at the races. I'll be the guy with the compression bandana.


Get even more information on this hot topic over at http://www.bengreenfieldfitness.com/, where you can grab a free book from author Ben Greenfield, jam-packed with over 75 pages of fitness, nutrition and human performance content. You'll also get instant access to a free weekly audio podcast, videos, free iPhone app and more!

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