Thursday, December 8, 2011

The kinks are almost out....moving into a full-on training schedule

I've been stuck in a rut of definitely not enough training since August or so, each month declining further and further into the abyss. I gained 20 pounds. I lost the ability to run six miles every day for five days in  a row. I doubt I could swim 1,000 yards straight through right now. And I can't be on the bike trainer for more than hour, compared to high-intensity two hour rides last winter.

But now I have a couple of weeks under my belt of training. I finally cut down the wine drinking to about two glasses per week. I am watching what I eat again, although not necessarily stopping anything but more aware of what I'm doing.  My body clock is nearly completely changed to early morning wake-ups.  I've worked out all the kinks in my new gear and my routines early in the morning.  

I'm ready to start hitting it hard!

Here are a few quick tips for the first phase of training and those first 2-3 weeks of training when you're just starting out or getting back into it.

1. Consistency is the key! Consider cutting your workout in half for volume and intensity before you think you just can't even start a workout.

2. If you are really tired, start the workout with an absolute minimum effort in mind. You'll find after a few minutes that you get into a groove and pick it up a bit. Before you know, you have a good workout completed.

3. Don't start a new "diet" the same time you start a new training schedule. You'll probably find that you are absolutely starving many times during the day in the first couple of weeks. That's because your body is adapting to the new demands and needs energy. Feed the beast! The massive hunger "moments" should subside by week four or five back into something more natural for you.

4. Adjust your alcohol, tobacco, and soda intake right now (yes..in direct conflict with #3!). I'm not talking about drastic cuts or stopping cold-turkey. Adjust to 50% or so to keep the empty calories to a minimum, which will help you see initial results more quickly, which feeds the motivation monster just when you're starting to wonder if it's worth it.

5. Don't get discouraged when you have a hard time getting a workout started. This three weeks is about getting your body, schedule/routine, and gear ready for easy start-ups down the road. This is an investment period when you put things into place to make everything easy to maintain consistency and simply get workouts started in the next phase.

6. Write down some data points every three or four days. Include your weight, time for a standard run or bike route, and a 500 yard swim. Don't worry about improving your times right now. You are getting data points now to compare three or four months from now. It's incredibly motivating to see how much weight you lose and how much faster you get!

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