How To Learn From Your Racing Failures

If you want to reframe racing failures as lessons learned then you should listen to this episode.Some endurance athletes say “failure is not an option”. If you’ve ever attempted to do a race or event that was slightly ambitious, I would argue that a failure is an option. In my head, I’ve redefined failure to mean all of the ways to not do something. Or in other words “lessons learned”.Every mistake, misstep and failing moment is a stride towards triumph.In this episode, I’ll show you a few race lessons I learned that will help you crush your next running or endurance event.I'm bringing in a previous guest and endurance sports enthusiast - J mike Remy or as he calls himself now "Remy B Reel". He will help me highlight some really interesting findings around my last few races. We did a live video event on his series "Adjust Adapt Achieve" a short time ago and I thought it would be cool to chop up the audio and re-hash it in a dynamic way that helps tell this story better.The 5 key takeaways from my convo with Remy were;Takeaway 1 - Reframing running my fastest 5k time to my best 5kHere I talk about the spectrum of what you have to work with. This spectrum is similar to the cards you're dealt or the crayon box colors you got. You just gotta work with what you have. Here's more on that.Takeaway 2 - The Twenty 1% changesHere I go deep on the nitty-gritty of the 1% changes and upgrades that I did months, weeks, and days before my race. Nutrition, sauna, dynamic warmup/drils/plyos, etc.Takeaway 3 - Addition and subtractionI know that sounds like word salad but stay with me on this.When you take things away you strip things down to it's core. I call this essentialism.My maximal brain tries to live a minimal life, so this was my take on it but through the lens of racingTakeaway 4 - Use Data - Then ignore it and trust the processUsing data, trusting it, but at the end of the day listening to your body because sometimes the data you give the algorithms is wrong. That's why coaches are important.The human touch is necessary with all machines, algorithms, data and formulas.Without the human, it's just data. with the human and the data/tech you become superhuman.Takeaway 5 - Running Virtuous CycleThis is my fun take on creating a model, frame and lens that can help us see things better in our training and specifically running.LinksAdjust Adapt Achieve with Remy B Reel (Youtube Live Video) - https://youtu.be/77K504FGRnAWar Juice- https://dlakecreates.com/drink-war-juice-race-faster/Sauna - https://runnersconnect.net/sauna-running-performance/Don't Cut Caffeine The Week Of a Race - https://www.caffeinebullet.com/post/should-you-cut-out-caffeine-before-a-raceDLake Creates - https://DLakecreates.comQuotables"Using data, trusting it But at the end of the day, listening to your own body.""If you're injury-free you can run more. If you run more you get faster." Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Join thousands of other committed runners listening to the most exciting run and endurance sports content on the internet.Hosted by Daren DLake (Creates) with sometimes co-host Mike Trees (aka Run.NRG on Instagram)We show smart runners how to perform 1% better daily in their training, racing, careers, and lives.The truth is, most running info is repetitive. So to make your life easy, we've spent the last 52+ years reading, watching, studying, talking to experts and doing as much as I could so you don’t have to make the same mistakes as us and be as dope as you can be.Daren is also a 10-Hour Ironman finishing triathlete and sub-3-hour marathon runner.Hit us up if you have any feedback, want to collaborate or just wanna tell me about your training. On Instagram @dlakecreates or [email protected] more? Be a part of the squad!Join 1,100 + unique “Master Of Some” community of committed runners and endurance athletes who share your interests and want to perform better as they age.BONUS: Sign up here for free to receive our free 6 Tips on how to run a fast 5k e-book right now. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.