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Mind Monkey Warning: T-minus 5 weeks

Sorry for the unintended blog break there!  When you are in the health or fitness industry, January is a busy, busy month.  In a major “be careful what you wish for” kinda way, I decided to up-level my business and was literally slammed with new inquiries!  Hey, I’m not complaining!

Now I am settled in with a new crop of wonderful clients who, with my support and guidance, are well on the way to fulfilling their dreams and desires, yay!  And I can get back to a more regular writing schedule.

So I am 5 weeks out from the Tel Aviv Half Marathon of 2013.  What I want to write about today, is my struggle to increase my speed, set a personal record finish time, and the monkeys that are getting in my way.  If you remember, I had decided that since I have already run this distance several times, I would work on my speed to keep things interesting.  Turns out it’s much harder than I thought it would be!

This is a re-cap of my racing “career” for perspective:

2005:  Westchester County Half Marathon ~ This was my first attempt at a long distance race and my goal was just to finish it no matter what.  Finish time:  2:23:56

2006:  Yonkers Half Marathon ~ I came into this race under-prepared and over-confident.  The race itself was a nightmare of pain for me.  Finish time:  2:35:39

2011:  Tel Aviv Half Marathon ~A return to long distance running after several years off as I adjusted to life in a new country.  My goal was just to finish.  Finish time:  2:36:11

2012:  Tel Aviv Full Marathon ~ Decided to double my distance and go for 42.2 kms in honor of my 45th birthday.  My goal was to finish before the 6 hour cut off.  Finish time:  5:44

2013:  Tel Aviv Half Marathon Goal Finish Time 2:15.

The difference between my last two finish times in 2011 and 2006 and my goal for this year is about 21 minutes. Spread that 21 minutes out over 21 kms of running and it’s basically running one minute faster per kilometer.

THAT SOUNDS SO EASY!!!

What’s one minute faster?  When I was in the planning stages I felt that was totally doable.  Here in the trenches, I can tell you it feels like the fight of a lifetime for me!!  When I am out there running and trying to maintain my desired race pace, I feel like I am pushing against a 40lb sled!  And really, this is still a pretty slow pace for most people.  The average half marathon pace for women is 2:12.  That is a demoralizing thought.

There are very real issues that impact speed such as age and weight (both have increased over the years!) but truly I think I am up against a mental block.  The bottom line is that it plain hurts to run faster!  And it is scary.  I feel like I could trip and sprawl more easily.  I feel like my heart might explode or that I won’t be able to go the distance.  And the biggie, behind almost every fear:  What if I fail?

So that brings me back to the beginning of the post and the January influx of new people excited to start on a new path to health and fitness.  At first, it’s exciting!  It seems doable.  We are pumped up to get started!

Then a few days pass, or weeks or months, and we get tired of watching our calories, planning and journaling our food.  Surely we can skip the workout, just today.  We look over a month of “work” and see that we have lost a tiny fraction of the weight we need to lose.  It starts to feel impossible.  And hard.  And scary.  Besides, our friends are giving us flack for not being able to eat out with them, and drink, and stay up late.  They’re right, who wants to live such a strictly disciplined life anyway?

WARNING:

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The fact is, we DO want to achieve something here!  If we listen to all the monkey chatter about “I can’t”, “It’s too hard”, “It’s not that important anyway” we will never get what we want.

NEVER

The reason working with a health coach is so valuable, is because you have someone reminding you of this and calling you back when you start to party with the monkeys.

In lieu of personal health coaching, I give you Bruno Mars and some muppets to say what I would say to you. And what I say to myself every. single. day:

 

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You Can Run But You Can’t Hide

Well, you CAN hide.  In fact, I am a bit of an expert in hiding.  But inevitably, the truth catches up and outs me…

As some of you may remember, in February I won a coaching scholarship to work with a life coach in Australia, named Káren Wallace.  My scholarship allowed me 4 weekly one-hour sessions via Skype.  Although I want to keep much of what we actually worked on private, I do want to share with you the process we went through and what I got out of it.

I have worked with many coaches and therapists in my life so I am familiar with the process, but I know that some of you have never worked with any sort of adviser, mentor, counselor or coach and wouldn’t even know what to expect.  For this reason, I want to walk you through the process.

The first thing Káren did was to send me an intake form to fill out prior to the start of our first session.  These were the questions on the form:

1. 

2.  

3.  

4.  WHAT DO YOU THINK IS YOUR BIGGEST OBSTACLE IN REACHING YOUR GOALS?

5.  

6.  AS WE WORK TOGETHER, WHAT DO YOU MOST WANT ME TO LOOK OUT FOR, TO KEEP YOU ON TRACK?

Wow, just by writing some thoughtful answers to those questions, I made major strides in my sense of clarity.  You should jot some answers to those questions for yourself and see what you come up with.

I wanted to work with Káren because I was feeling stuck on some pretty big questions concerning the direction of my business, our geographical location and lifestyle, and some more personal issues that I had been feeling discouraged and worried about.  That’s a tall order for 4 sessions!

I knew it wasn’t much time so I decided I would really focus and make the best of it.  In other words, I was a good client.  What was this “work” though?  Well, after talking for each hour-long skype session, Káren and I set goals each week and I worked my best to get them done.  Sometimes I did, other times I was stuck, but I explored that stuckness in writing and painting until I found it’s source.  When you are stuck, there is ALWAYS a good reason for it.  Your job is to figure out why, and when you do, it usually dissolves.  Many people see their stuckness and just turn away.  It seems too hard, too solid, too implacable…  but the whole point of hiring a coach is to have that support to explore your stuck spots in safety.

When I began with Káren, I wrote in my intake form that I had “lost the thread” of my life and my business and was floundering about lost and ineffective.

By the end of the month I had learned something amazing.  I had not in fact “lost the thread”.  The thread was right there with me all along, and I had already worked it all out in great detail as a matter of fact!  But then, because it frightened me and made me insecure, I tucked it away, forgot about it, and showed up “lost”.

Káren gave me the courage to uncover it, the support to share it out in the open, and the confidence to begin rolling it out.  The changes are already taking place for me.  You may notice them or maybe they will be too subtle to see.  They are basically an evolution for me.  It was time for me to grow but I was afraid to allow that to happen because my comfort zone had been working just fine.

Now, this is what is really interesting to me:  I took photos of both myself and my work space the day I began with Káren and then the day of our final session, 21 days later.  I am not going to share my work space photos yet because I still don’t feel “done” in that area, but I want you to see the difference in my appearance:

 

Same amount of makeup.  Same place and time of day.

Note:  Káren and I did not work on my appearance!  These pictures show the difference between someone who is avoiding what she knows to be true about her path and a person who has decided she will be bold and step forward on it.

This, my friends, is the Magic of Coaching.  If you are at all feeling stuck, fuzzy, confused, worried, or lost, hiring a coach is the best thing you can do!  But hiring the coach is only half of it.  You also have to be willing to do the work.  Your coach, (or therapist or whatever), cannot do anything FOR you.  However, the clarity they mirror back to you, the safe place they keep for you, and the gentle encouragement they provide for you, can give you the courage and strength you need to break through to your next evolution.

To hire Káren, you can visit her website HERE.

To hire me, well, you know because you are already here.  You can book a trial session with me by emailing Emily@TriumphWellness.com.

No more hiding, OK?  Not for me and not for you.

Inhabiting the Body

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This post is NOT just about running, so read to the end even if you don’t give a hoot about my stinky sneakers.

In a panicked effort to prepare myself for my first full marathon, I carefully hit every single workout.  I feared that missing even one would spell certain disaster come race day.  This caused me to sometimes run when injured, tired, and in bad, bad weather.

The sneaker hit the fan the Friday before last, when I set out for a 27km run on what appeared to be a sunny morning wearing only shorts and a t-shirt.  Within 1 hour, a cold front had swooped in, dropping the temperature dramatically, lashing me with wind and rain and then pelting me with hail.  Despite being frozen, wet and capital-M-Miserable, I finished the remaining 2 hours and 45 minutes of this run.  There was nothing fun about any moment of it.

As I headed into that weekend, I knew I was in trouble.  Everything ached, including, and most importantly, my soul.  I sat with my training schedule on my lap and had the very first thoughts of  ”I can’t make it.”  When I entered the words “over training syndrome” into Google, I learned that everything I was experiencing from irritability, insomnia, lack of joy during workouts, old injuries flaring up, and a sense of heart-wracking despair, could be attributed to doing too much running and too little of anything else.  The treatment: Take a few days off from running and cross train instead.

As scary as this was for me, it felt like the correct solution.  This did not feel like a Wall I needed to push through.  Rather, it felt like treading water in the Atlantic Ocean without a flotation device.  I was sinking and I knew it.

So the next Friday, when my schedule said “19km” and I woke up to rain, I packed my gym bag and headed off in search of my lost endorphins.  First, I laid my mat down in a packed, early morning yoga class.  As I slowly stretched muscles and rotated ligaments, I realized with a thud, what had gone wrong with my training.  Then, in the following hour on the spin bike, dripping with sweat and laughing with joy, my suspicious were confirmed:

I had vacated my body.

How could it be possible to lose touch with my physical vessel when training for a marathon?  Well, several things happened.  Firstly, those training runs are LONG.  In some cases, 3-4 hours long.  To stay present in your body for that long, well, it never even occurred to me!  I had been thinking the goal of passing that time was to get lost up in my head, in the beat of the music and the matching cadence of footfall.  I would make periodic scans of my body: how’s my head, my mental state, my temperature, my hips, my knees, my feet, my toes…  but those were just quick visits and back into my head I quickly retreated.

The second culprit was how far away my mind was taking me.  While running I was not entirely conscious of my whereabouts, as evidenced by the number of times I accidentally crossed on red lights and barely dodged angry drivers cursing and honking at me.  I was always surprised, “But surely the light was green!  Or was it…?”  I was always thinking about the next section of the run, the terrain, how much time was left on my watch, what race day in Tel Aviv would be like, how I would feel on THAT day.

Last Friday, first in Yoga and then in Spinning, I was fully present in this, the earthly home of my soul, for the first time in a long time.  

It felt like a Homecoming.  ”Hey girl, welcome back!”

There is greater significance to this story than just marathon training.  People who do not exercise regularly, or engage in any sort of mindfulness practice like meditation, yoga, tai chi etc, often spend entire lives cut off from the body.  Driving around all day, sitting at a desk at work, always thinking of what needs to get done next and how much time we have to do it, we stay all up in the cerebral and far away from the Now, the present moment and the bodies we inhabit.  When a diagnosis comes of disease or injury, or we find ourselves having gained weight or gotten out-of-shape, we often look down at our bodies in surprise for the first time “What?  You needed tending?  But you seemed fine without me.  How can you betray me like this?”

We eat when we are not hungry and we overeat when already full.  We ignore hunger and try to live on meager calories.  We stay up when tired.  We sleep when depressed.  We eat meals while reading, while driving, while doing the crossword puzzle.  We watch tv while having sex and think about what we will make for dinner while we are meditating.

Not surprisingly, I checked out during race training and traded my mojo for a tempo count.

Today, my first day back after my little running break, I shut off my music and listened again to my breath.  I went down into my legs and watched the muscles stretch and contract, stretch and contract.  I observed my feet and ankles instinctively making minor adjustments to keep my balance over rough terrain.  I felt my heart pumping hard and my lungs filling and emptying.  I sensed my skin reacting to the warm sun striking it.  All of this had been happening and I had been completely oblivious to the grandeur of it! 

I found my bliss again.  It was right here, just below my neck, the whole time.

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Banish the Blues

When you work in the weight loss industry, January is a busy, busy month!  Lots of new clients with high hopes and goals they want met.  A mind-boggling number of email requests for info.  The whirling energy of new beginnings.

Yet, a few weeks later, not even a full week into February, and many of my newbies are already gone, programs postponed, dreams shelved, goals forgotten.  Those of us who work out in the gym, call this the February Phenomenon:  how all those new gym membership cards never see the light of the laser swiper after February 1st.

If you are one of people I am talking about (but probably you would not be reading my blog if you were), please do not take offence.  I mean none.  Yes, as a coach I am disappointed when people allow excuses to block their progress, but I have been there myself and in many areas, still am there!  I am not one to judge.  Change is hard.  Excuses are SO easy to believe!  However…

Ouch!

So now that I actually have time to blog again (see, there is always a plus side to things!), I want to tell you about some of what has been going on with me personally.

If you have read this blog for any length of time, you probably know that I have winter slumps.  Maybe it is S.A.D. and all to do with diminished sunlight, or maybe it is a sort of natural cycle of hibernation that I should respect more and worry about less.  But worry I do, because I don’t much like the me who feels a bit lost, fuzzy, sleepy, and most definitely un-sparkly come January and February.

But I do like it when magic happens.

On January 16th, I was writing whining in my Morning Pages about some  life issues I am confused on and I penned:

I need help with this. I can’t do this alone.  I need someone who can see it from the outside.  Please put that person in my path today.

Later that morning I got a normal email from twitter telling me that someone named Káren Wallace was now following me.  I use social media to be in contact with people I am genuinely interested in – not just to collect random noise – so like always, I clicked through to Káren’s website.  I saw that she is a life coach specializing in self-care and clarity for women and…  what is this… she happens to be offering a scholarship to her Soul Intensive Care Coaching Program for one lucky person.

Now, when you ask for something as specifically as I asked, and then a possible answer drops into your lap, you would have to be dumb to turn away.  (Yet how many times do we in fact brush it off and turn it away?).  I applied for Káren’s scholarship immediately, and not surprisingly, I won it.

I had my first session with Káren last Thursday and already my personal rain cloud is brightening.  Káren is in Australia and we have our sessions via Skype.  My unbelievably generous scholarship will include 4 one-hour skype sessions, and just as I believe Káren is the person I asked for, I saw right away that she exudes calm, peace and love right over the computer wires, 8 time zones and half a world away!  That is some amazing gift!

As I spent an hour absorbing Káren’s calm over Skype, together we set up some doable, FUN, goals for me to accomplish this week, and I hung up with just a teensy bit of my usual sparkle feeling buzzing around my heart.  By evening the buzz had grown to a hum so loud I actually had trouble sleeping.  This from the previously hibernating bear!

By the next day, I felt back to my old self again and that sparkle in my step carried me through a 24km training run on Friday!  (I will write a more comprehensive training update soon as we are now getting closer to race day and the excitement terror is ramping up).

Moral of the story:

1.  When you’ve got the blues, ask for help and then open your mind WIDE to see the answer you are handed.

2.  Please don’t be a victim of the February Phenomenon!  Excuses or Results, take your pick.

3.  Do me a favor and go to Káren’s Facebook page and click “like”.  She is one smart lady and I know you will enjoy her content.  You can tell her Emily sent you as a way to thank her for putting the shazam back in your favorite blogger’s blog!

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