Badwater is the world’s toughest race. The ultramarathon passes through Highway 190, which might as well be the Highway to Hell. The road gets so hot runners have to stay on the white stripe to prevent their shoes’ soles from melting.
The book then documented Jurek’s internal dialogue:
“There’s no way, Scott told himself. You’re done. You’d have to do something totally sick to win this thing now.After 10 minutes of lying on the road “like a corpse,” Jurek got up and won Badwater, setting a new record by finishing in 24 hours and 36 minutes.
Sick like what?
Like starting all over again. Like pretending you just woke up from a great night’s sleep and the race hasn’t even started yet. You’d have to run that next 80 miles as fast as you’ve ever run 80 miles in your life.”
The mind, ultra-runner Jonel Mendoza said in his talk to Cebu runners earlier this year, is a powerful thing. If you think it, you can probably do it.
Never mind the heart or the lungs (just yet). These two organs are generally able to immediately adapt to the added stress of running. Tufts University Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy associate professor Miriam Nelson says your body immediately adapts to the stress and makes your organs and muscles fitter.
When starting out to run, don’t dwell too much on pace or finish times just yet.
Instead, strengthen your mind.
Before even lacing up your shoes, prepare your mind. Tell yourself, “Tomorrow, I will run. I know I will be groggy as I reach for the alarm clock but I will force myself out my bed, change into my running gear, get out the door and run!”
And when you run, push yourself to your mental limits. Will yourself to continue running.
It’s a trick even the top runners resort. Top American long-distance runner Kara Goucher says that she does “a lot of dreaming” when she runs.
“I can’t tell you how many state championships I won in my mind back in high school, how many NCAA titles I won in my fantasies at the University of Colorado, and how many Olympic medals and major marathons I’ve won in my head in the past few years,” she said.
It’s also something the head coach of Team Running USA drills into his athletes.
“Act as if you already are,” Terence Mahon is quoted as saying by the Runner’s World, “This is one of the many mantras that we employ when it comes time to go after a goal that is beyond what has already been accomplished.”
“Breaking new ground physically requires you to first break that mental barrier so that it can come into being.”
Jonel is right. The mind, indeed, is a powerful thing.
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