Hi, Friends & Fellow Runners:
In running as in life, success is often nothing
more or less than an ongoing process of setting and achieving ever more
challenging goals. And the key to making
that process as effective as it can be lies in how we structure in our mind’s
eye the aims and aspirations that are important to us. We should think of the acronym SMART and thereby
increase significantly our chances of achieving objectives by making them Specific,
Measurable, Achievable, Relevant and Time-based.
How about this as an example of a Specific
goal: I will qualify for Boston 2015 when I run the Goodlife Toronto Marathon
on May 4, 2014. We should
appreciate that a goal like that is more powerful and will provide more
motivation and direction than something as amorphous as merely telling ourself
that someday, God willing, we will make it to Boston. Count on it, whenever we refer to a goal with
one or another variation of the words, “One of these days, I’m going to....” we
can be pretty sure that it will remain permanently out of reach. The fact is, unless a goal comes packaged in
a plan and a heavy layer of commitment, it remains just an unrealized dream.
Measurable – After we’ve set a specific goal with a precise end date, we must
begin tracking our progress toward achieving it. John L. Parker Jr., who wrote a 30-year-old
book called Once a Runner – a book
that’s become a cult classic and sold recently on eBay for $300 --has made the
following observation: “When you‘re a runner in training – and
you’re doing it right --you are constantly in the process of ascending; you are
better today than you were yesterday, and you will be better still tomorrow,
next week and the weeks after that.”
Recording that progress on our computer or Day-Timer means that we can actually
see how our body is improving in endurance and speed over time. That knowledge and the satisfaction it brings
are supreme motivators, and when there’s enough motivation to run, there will
always be enough time to run. Equally
significant, measuring our progress gives us the confidence we need to succeed. Once we begin closing in on whatever goal we’ve
set for ourself, a hope will gradually transform itself into an expectation. Then our race will become simply a celebration
of our training.
Achievable -- We must believe in our ability to reach the summit of whatever
mountain we’re trying to climb -- which is just another way of saying we must
believe in ourself. Here it’s important
to note that becoming a steadily better runner is rarely, if ever, a matter of
DNA, natural talent or innate ability.
Rather, it’s simply a case of how much time we’re willing to devote to a
form of training called “deliberate practice.”
This is a term coined by psychologists to describe a goal-oriented,
results-driven approach that involves a constant monitoring of progress over
weeks, months and years, coupled with appropriate adjustments. So perhaps for one of the few times in our
life, we should focus on our potential rather than our limitations. Then the only questions we have to ask ourself
are: How badly do I want this, and how long
and hard am I prepared to work to achieve it? And if an 82-year-old runner named Ed
Whitlock, from Milton, Ontario, is still able to run a 3:41 marathon, who’s to
say what our limitations are?
Relevant
-- Now we come to the matter of establishing priorities, of putting first
things first. How important is running
to us? Is it important enough to cut
seriously into our couch-sitting time, or get us up a half-hour earlier than
usual on some mornings, or otherwise persuade us to consistently carve out the
time necessary to log the weekly mileage that our training demands? If the answers to such questions are yes, yes
and yes, then nothing’s impossible and the impossible’s nothing as far as we
and running are concerned. Always when
we’re running on a regular basis, and especially when we’re preparing for a
specific race, we find ourself making choices.
At one extreme, we may simply opt to put running on the back shelf of
our mind – at least temporarily -- and allow our target race to stand as a
symbol for another of the countless objectives we’ve set over the years and
failed to achieve. At the other extreme,
we’ll run that race, finish it in a time that makes us proud, and experience
one of the most memorable days of our sporting life. And if those special moments in time aren’t
enough to convince you to stick with running as a permanent part of an active
lifestyle, consider the growing body of research establishing that runners live
longer than non-runners, enjoy a better quality of life, and do a more
effective job of fending off Alzheimer’s.
Now there’s a triple-win that’s hard to beat. Appreciate that and you’ll understand why it’s
been said that we don’t stop running because we get old; rather, we get old
because we stop running.
Time-based – We should always put a deadline on the achievement of whatever significant
goal we may have set for ourself. If we
make that date sacrosanct in our mind, it will keep us moving in the right
direction at a speed that spells progress and avoids injury.
That’s
all for now, people. Stay well and,
above all, keep moving.
Coach
Stephen
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