Give Your Balls a Tug….That’s What She Said!…No, Really, She Said That.

Last post on pre-race nervousness.  Promise

I did not sleep well last night. Not even a little. I woke up this morning stressed to the hilt about tomorrow’s 70.3.

I have spent weeks telling myself this is just a supported training day. I have said I don’t care about my time. I have said I am not trying to PR. I have said I have trained well, have a better fueling strategy, have a pacing plan, and the weather is going to be much better than the 85-degree death march I experienced riding the course.

Apparently, my Chimp brain did not receive the memo.

Fortunately, three things pulled me out of my mood.

First, coffee on the back deck. It was sunny and mild. The backyard was full of flowers and plants. Birds were out. It was one of those mornings where you think, “Oh yeah, the world is actually a pretty nice place.”

Second, while reading the newspaper, I came across a quote from the late artist David Hockney:

“The world is very beautiful if you look at it but most people don’t look very much, do they? They scan the ground in front of them so they can walk, but they don’t really look at things incredibly well, with an intensity….I do.”

That hit me.

Sure, it was reminiscent of the famous quote from Ferris Bueller’s Day Off:

“Life moves pretty fast. If you don’t stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.”

Tomorrow, I am going to look around.

I am going to notice the river. I am going to notice the wooded areas and the farm fields. I am going to appreciate being outside on a day when I am healthy enough to swim, bike, and run for hours.

I am not going to spend the entire race thinking, “This sucks. I hurt. Everyone is passing me.”

Because yes, everyone will probably pass me.

I will come out of the water near the front and then spend the next several hours being passed by people who are better cyclists and runners. That has always bothered me. Tomorrow I will try to look at it differently.

Look at all these people doing something difficult. Look at all these people pushing themselves. Look at all the family members and friends standing around all day cheering for someone they love.

And yes, to be completely honest, there may be moments where I think, “Damn, those are some nice legs.” I am only human, and triathlon women are hot.

The third thing that helped was asking my wife for her opinion. And if you know anything about my wife, asking her opinion means you are definitely going to get it.

Her message was essentially:

“Give your balls a tug.”

A very sophisticated psychological intervention. Part of it was simply: stop navel-gazing. Do the thing. If it goes well, great. If it goes badly, nobody cares.

The other part was her reminding me of everything I have and everything I have done. It was a little bit of Clarence showing George Bailey what his life means in It’s a Wonderful Life.

It still came with “give your balls a tug,” but the message was the same.

She also reminded me of all the parts of tomorrow that have nothing to do with the race.

I get to drive to Rockford with my daughter, who is excited to go to the expo and watch me race. I get to have dinner with my wife and daughter at a restaurant I used to go to as a child. I get to sit in a hotel room watching bad television with them. Tomorrow night, regardless of my time, I get to have deep-dish pizza with my family and then go home and watch hockey with my wife and son.

That sounds like a pretty damn good day.

So I am in a much better place now. I have rested. I have trained. I have a nutrition and hydration plan. I have a pacing strategy. The weather looks cool, which is huge because I hate racing in the heat.

It will be what it will be.

My bad mood will not make me faster. It will not make me stronger. It will not make the race hurt less.

Which brings me to the final quote that keeps coming to mind. In Bridge of Spies, when James Donovan asks Rudolf Abel whether he is worried that the Soviets will shoot him when he is returned, Abel responds:

“Would it help?”

Exactly. Worrying won’t help.  Being anxious won’t help.  As they say, the hay is in the barn.  I have my race pace plan, my nutrition dialed in, and I did what I needed to do.

Tomorrow, I will swim, bike, and run.

I will suffer some.

I will probably complain.

I will definitely look around.

And I will try to remember that I am very lucky to be there.



Morning Music…

The LeRoi Brothers — D.W.I.




My Bhagavad-Gita Moment Before a 70.3…

It feels somewhat absurd to be sitting at a coffee shop reading the Bhagavad-Gita and thinking, “You know what? This ancient spiritual wisdom about duty, suffering, and the human condition really applies to me and my recreational triathlon.”

To be clear, Arjuna was standing on a battlefield, looking across at relatives, teachers, and friends, facing a conflict that would shape the future of a kingdom.

I am looking at a race course in Rockford and thinking, “That run is going to be really unpleasant.”

The stakes are not exactly the same. And yet, the deeper problem is surprisingly familiar.

For the last two weeks, I have been anxious about this race. Not because I have not trained. I have completed several 70.3 races. I have ridden the course twice. I have swum the distance. I have put in the hours.

The truth is simpler: I am afraid of suffering.

Not the dramatic movie-soundtrack kind of suffering. The very ordinary kind that arrives around mile eight and a half of a half-marathon when your legs begin negotiating a ceasefire, your brain starts offering very reasonable arguments for stopping, and every person who passes you seems to be having a wonderful day.

(They are probably not.)

The Bhagavad-Gita has a remarkably practical answer.

Krishna tells Arjuna:

“You have a right to your actions, but not to the fruits of your actions.”

In other words, focus on what is yours to control and release what is not.

I control:

  • My preparation.
  • My pacing.
  • My fueling.
  • My attitude.
  • My next stroke, pedal stroke, and step.

I do not control:

  • My finishing time.
  • My place in my age group.
  • The weather.
  • Whether someone who looks like he was built in a laboratory specifically for endurance sports goes flying past me on the run.
  • Whether the race decides to hand me a difficult day.

My anxiety has spent a lot of time camping out in that second list. I have been suffering Sunday’s pain for the last two weeks. That seems like a poor bargain.

The Gita also describes the ideal of the “steady person” – someone who remains balanced in success and failure, pleasure and pain, praise and criticism. That does not mean a steady person never hurts. A steady person in a 70.3 does not float through the run saying, “This is delightful. I hope it lasts forever.”

A steady person says:

“This is the hard part. I knew it was coming. I am still here.”

And maybe that is the real challenge of this race.

Not whether I can finish. I have done that before.

Not whether I can run every mile with a smile on my face. That would frankly be suspicious.

The challenge is whether I can take all those books I have been reading this year and actually use them.

  • Epictetus tells me to focus on what I control.
  • Kant tells me to do my duty.
  • Emerson tells me to trust myself.
  • And now the Bhagavad-Gita tells me to act without attachment to the outcome.

It would be a shame to spend the last few months reading the Harvard Classics only to ignore them when I need them most. So on Sunday, when the discomfort arrives—and I have no doubt it will—I want to remember a very ancient lesson applied to a very modern problem.

One stroke.

One pedal stroke.

One step.

Do the work.

Let go of the outcome.



Morning Music…

Tom Jones – Treat Her Right




Why Am I Panicking?

In three days, I’ll be standing on a riverbank in Rockford waiting for the start of a 70.3 triathlon. And despite telling everyone that this is just a training day, I’m low-grade panicking.

The weird thing is I know I can do it. My training plan actually called for an Olympic-distance race next week, but I couldn’t find one that fit my schedule, so the Rockford 70.3 looked interesting. So I signed up. As one does.

Objectively, I have the fitness. I’ve ridden the actual bike course twice. I’ve run 9 miles several times. I’ve easily swum the 1.2-mile distance. Putting all three together on the same day is different, but it’s not like I’m attempting something I haven’t done before. That’s what makes the anxiety so annoying. It’s not based on reality.

Part of it is that I keep reminding myself this isn’t really a race. It’s a supported training day. I don’t care about my finish time. I know I won’t PR. Looking at my old PR actually makes me laugh. Every time I see it I think, “Who the hell was that guy?” I’d be thrilled if I finished within an hour of that time.

But no matter how much I tell myself it’s just a training day, I know what’s going to happen. I’ll get out of the water feeling pretty good. I’m a decent swimmer and will probably come out in the top 15-20% of the field. Then the bike starts, and the passing starts. And it never stops.

I’ve written about this before, but it’s one of the things I dislike most about triathlon. The people who finish behind me come out of the water behind me. The people who finish ahead of me spend the next five or six hours riding and running past me. I almost never pass anyone. It’s surprisingly discouraging. I know it shouldn’t matter, but after the hundredth person blows by you on the bike, it’s hard not to feel like you’re doing something wrong.

The other thing I’m wrestling with is that I don’t actually like racing. I love training. I love the structure. I love checking off workouts. I love seeing my fitness improve. I love losing a few pounds and feeling healthier. But racing? I hate racing.

In hockey, baseball, basketball, golf, whatever, you practice and then you get to play the game. The game is the reward. Endurance sports are weird. You train for months and then your reward is doing the exact same thing, only harder and longer. There isn’t really a game. There’s just suffering.

And I’ve already done it. I’ve finished marathons. I’ve finished 70.3s. I’ve finished Ironmans. I don’t get the excitement of doing something for the first time. Which raises a legitimate question: why am I doing this again?

A friend of mine recently told my wife, after hearing I’d signed up for Rockford and Ironman Wisconsin, “He just doesn’t know when to come in out of the rain.” That one hit me pretty hard because it’s true. Apparently, I don’t know when to stop doing things I don’t like doing.

The encouraging thing is that I’m trying something new this time. Actually, I’m trying something that most people have been doing all along. I’m fueling. I’m hydrating. I’m pacing.

Looking back, my old race nutrition strategy was basically criminal negligence. On Ironman bike rides, I’d have two water bottles for over seven hours. Two. I’d eat half a sub sandwich at some point. Then I’d mostly survive the marathon on stubbornness and occasional sips of water.

In my last Ironman, a friend finally convinced me to take a caffeinated gel because I was mentally falling apart. Within minutes, I felt dramatically better. The fog lifted. The world seemed brighter. I was convinced the gel contained heroin.

When I explained my fueling history to Claude AI, I swear it laughed at me. The basic response was, “Ross, maybe your mental game isn’t terrible. Maybe you’re just starving.”

Fair point.

So now I have an actual fueling plan. I tested it on my second ride of the Rockford course. The ride was slower than the first attempt, but I felt dramatically better afterward. Not a little better. Dramatically better. I also have an actual pacing strategy. Historically, my pacing strategy was, “Whatever feels good.” It turns out that’s not really a strategy.

This time I’m going to keep my heart rate under a certain ceiling on the bike. If that means I ride five or ten minutes slower, so be it. The theory is that the bike sets up the run. You don’t win your race on the bike, but you can absolutely destroy your run there. On the run, I’m planning to walk the first minute or two until my heart rate settles, and then run about thirty seconds per mile slower than my normal pace. Slow and steady. Which is funny because I literally have a tortoise tattooed on my arm, yet I spend most races trying to be a hare.

The final thing I’ve done is reach out to a sports psychologist. It’s obviously too late for Sunday, but maybe a few conversations can help with the nonstop negative self-talk that has been hanging around for almost sixty years. Better late than never.

So that’s where I am three days out. Nervous. Excited. Dreading it. Looking forward to it. Wondering why I signed up. Glad I signed up. All at the same time.



Morning Music…

Bruce McCulloch – The Daves I Know




Morning Music…

IDLES – Dancer




Morning Music…

Prince Buster – Madness




Morning Music….

No videos, just the two long playlists that got me through last weekend’s bigger workouts.

First, the 56-mile bike:

Next, the 9-mile run:



This Week in Training – Week 16 – Last Big Week Before the Tune-Up Race

This was a significant week for two reasons. First, it was my last week of work before summer break. Second, it was my last build week before I taper and “race” this Sunday.

I put race in quotation marks because this is really just a supported training day. Even so, I’m nervous as heck about it.

Swim 🏊

  • Total swims: 2
  • Total distance: 6,025 yards
  • Total time: 1:55

I was supposed to get in a third swim, but between finishing up school and a hard weekend of training, I dropped it. No regrets. The volume was still solid and I felt good in the water.

Bike 🚴

  • Total rides: 5
  • Total distance: 83.9 miles
  • Total time: 5:31

Four of those rides were commutes, which absolutely count, but aren’t quite the same as dedicated training rides.

The big ride was Saturday when I rode the Rockford 70.3 course for the second time. This time I completely dialed in my nutrition. Big thanks to Claude AI for helping me think through fueling and hydration.

Ironically, the ride was slower than my previous attempt when I nearly dehydrated myself into another dimension. But I felt much stronger throughout. I intentionally kept my heart rate lower and rode within myself.

Afterward, I did a 15-minute run off the bike.

It stunk.

But I learned a few things:

  • Walk for the first 60-90 seconds to bring heart rate down.
  • Start slower than I think I should.
  • Remember that race day should be cooler.

When I started that brick run, it was 81 degrees. Sunday’s forecast calls for a high of 74. That difference is enormous. I do not like hot weather.

Run 🏃

  • Total runs: 4 (including the brick run)
  • Total distance: 23.2 miles
  • Total time: 3:47

This was actually an increase in run volume.

The highlight was Sunday’s 9-mile run. It was one of my slower long runs, but considering it came less than 24 hours after a long ride on the Rockford course, I’ll gladly take it. I got it done and wasn’t that far off my normal pace.

Total Training Time 🧮

  • Total time: 11 hours 13 minutes

My biggest training week of the cycle.

Reflections ✍️

Now comes the part that feels wrong.

The taper.

Today is a rest day. Thursday is another rest day.

Tomorrow I’ll do a short open-water swim. Officially, it’s to get comfortable in the wetsuit. Unofficially, it’s to freeze to death in Lake Michigan.

The rest of the week is ridiculously short workouts. Twenty to thirty-minute rides. Twenty to thirty-minute runs. Just enough movement to stay loose.

I’m putting a lot of faith in the taper.

Sure, my bike was slower this weekend, but I had already run six miles and swum an hour the day before, not to mention all the accumulated fatigue from the week. On Sunday, I’ll be racing on fresh legs. That matters. The cooler temperatures matter. The nutrition plan matters. Even “legal drafting” on the bike course matters. Six bike lengths back is still six bike lengths back.

Mostly, though, I need to trust the process.

If I’m being honest, I’ve probably spent most of the last two weeks somewhere between nervous and a panic attack. I don’t know for sure it’s the race, but I don’t know any other reason. The good news is that once it’s over, I’ll stop wondering and start knowing. I’ve also started planning the next phase. I ran my Ironman plan through Claude and adjusted it for the three weeks I’ll be in Utah this summer. That should make the transition smoother after the race.

For now, though, the focus is simple:

  • Rest.
  • Recover.
  • Enjoy the first week of summer. Try to calm down and reset my existence a little.
  • One week to transition into summer.