Post your daily inspiration here..
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Moderators: k9car363, the bear, DerekL, alicefoeller | Reply |
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2014-04-28 1:47 PM |
2 | Subject: Post your daily inspiration here.. Let me start first.. |
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2014-05-02 9:27 AM in reply to: SoeSach |
, Illinois | Subject: RE: Post your daily inspiration here.. "Obstacles are those frightful things you see when you take your eyes off your goal." - Henry Ford (1863-1947) |
2014-05-02 9:50 AM in reply to: ec1974 |
Expert 1224 Is this Heaven? No, it's Iowa. | Subject: RE: Post your daily inspiration here.. You have to beat the best to be the best. Just heard that on the radio and kinda like it.
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2014-05-02 10:10 AM in reply to: SoeSach |
Champion 10668 Tacoma, Washington | Subject: RE: Post your daily inspiration here.. He who conquers others is strong. He who conquers himself is mighty. -- Lao Tse Strength does not come from physical capability. It comes from an indomitable will. -- Mahatma Ghandi |
2014-05-02 2:37 PM in reply to: SoeSach |
Member 1293 Pearland,Tx | Subject: RE: Post your daily inspiration here.. |
2014-05-09 10:05 AM in reply to: SoeSach |
Master 6595 Rio Rancho, NM | Subject: RE: Post your daily inspiration here.. |
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2014-05-09 11:34 AM in reply to: rrrunner |
Member 2689 Denver, CO | Subject: RE: Post your daily inspiration here.. You've survived worse. |
2014-05-09 2:13 PM in reply to: rrrunner |
Veteran 267 | Subject: RE: Post your daily inspiration here.. Discipline is what makes punishment, unnecessary. |
2014-05-11 9:40 PM in reply to: SoeSach |
Regular 94 West Texas | Subject: RE: Post your daily inspiration here.. Pain is temporary, quitting lasts forever. Lance Armstrong |
2014-05-12 5:53 AM in reply to: 0 |
Pro 6011 Camp Hill, Pennsylvania | Subject: RE: Post your daily inspiration here.. "Embrace the suck." - Macca ETA: "There is no pain." - Me
Edited by TriMyBest 2014-05-12 5:53 AM |
2014-05-12 8:18 AM in reply to: TriMyBest |
Master 8250 Eugene, Oregon | Subject: RE: Post your daily inspiration here.. "You may feel bad, but everyone else feels worse." (My favorite delusional self-talk on race day.) and "The faster I run, the sooner I'm done." (Not sure who to give credit for this one.) and (when things get really bad) "It's still not as bad as my first marathon." (In almost 31 subsequent years of running and four years of tri, and in fact pretty much everything physical I've ever done, nothing has been--I guess it was good to establish that benchmark of profound suck at a young age!) |
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2014-05-12 9:07 AM in reply to: SoeSach |
Champion 18680 Lost in the Luminiferous Aether | Subject: RE: Post your daily inspiration here.. The Universe is under no obligation to make sense to you. -Neil deGrasse Tyson |
2014-05-12 9:15 AM in reply to: SoeSach |
Subject: ... This user's post has been ignored. |
2014-05-12 9:27 AM in reply to: 99Puddles |
Member 2689 Denver, CO | Subject: RE: Post your daily inspiration here.. Saw this at the rec center yesterday: "No matter how slow you are, you're still lapping the person sitting on the couch." |
2014-05-12 4:19 PM in reply to: SoeSach |
Master 6595 Rio Rancho, NM | Subject: RE: Post your daily inspiration here.. |
2014-05-18 8:23 PM in reply to: rrrunner |
Supersonicus Idioticus 2439 Thunder Bay, ON | Subject: RE: Post your daily inspiration here.. "When you want to wiggle your fingers and toes, your MIND tells your fingers and toes to wiggle. You don't need Isaac Newton to tell you that. I figured that out when I was 5. If your MIND doesn't think it can do something, your body isn't going to do it!" C.T. Fletcher. |
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2014-05-19 5:05 PM in reply to: So Fresh So Clean |
Veteran 930 Morgan Hill, California | Subject: RE: Post your daily inspiration here.. I go to this one a lot. At work, with my kids, in training, race day: Whether you think you can, or you think you can’t – you’re right. --Henry Ford |
2014-05-20 1:18 PM in reply to: kmac1346 |
Master 6595 Rio Rancho, NM | Subject: RE: Post your daily inspiration here.. |
2014-05-20 5:18 PM in reply to: rrrunner |
Champion 5312 Calgary | Subject: RE: Post your daily inspiration here.. Training is doing your homework. It's not exciting. More often than not it's tedious. There is certainly no glory in it. But you stick with it, over time, and incrementally through no specific session, your body changes. Your mind becomes calloused to effort. You stop thinking of running as difficult or interesting or magical. It just becomes what you do. It becomes a habit. Workouts too become like this. Intervals, tempos, strides, hills. You go to the track, to the bottom of a hill, and your body finds the effort. You do your homework. That's training. Repetition--building deep habits, building a runner's body and a runner's mind. You do your homework, not obsessively, just regularly. Over time you grow to realize that the most important workout that you will do is the easy hour run. That's the run that makes everything else possible. You live like a clock. After weeks of this, you will have a month of it. After months of it, you will have a year of it. Then, after you have done this for maybe three or four years, you will wake up one morning in a hotel room at about 4:30am and do the things you have always done. You eat some instant oatmeal. Drink some Gatorade. Put on your shorts, socks, shoes, your watch. This time, though, instead of heading out alone for a solitary hour, you will head towards a big crowd of people. A few of them will be like you: they will have a lean, hungry look around their eyes, wooden legs. You will nod in their direction. Most of the rest will be distracted, talking among their friends, smiling like they are at the mall, unaware of the great and magical event that is about to take place. You'll find your way to a tiny little space of solitude and wait anxiously, feeling the tang of adrenaline in your legs. You'll stand there and take a deep breath, like it's your last. An anthem will play. A gun will sound. Then you will run. Courtesy "http://thelogicoflongdistance.blogspot.com" I like that one. There are many reasons for doing a race and I have ran for most of them. But there are few feelings as good as standing there in a crowd of people knowing that a select few of you have come to that point at that time and have been prepared for nothing as well as you have for that thing. My recent incarnation is less about endurance sports and more about lifting, so I share this "Strength training makes people more awesome, because becoming strong is more awesome than being able to lick your ***** or put your foot up behind your ear. Or even being able to run twenty six miles in a great time, like all the marathon champs who have to ask Granny to open the pickle jar. A rational person would conclude that you cut down on all the running around like a blue-arse fly, and do more squats and deads. They actually have a chance of making you more awesome: Squats + deadlifts > running. There is no equivalence, no either/or: Squats and Deads are to running as Hummer is to unicycle. The Army does not use unicycles, no matter how politically correct/ecologically sensitive/in touch with your feminine side they may be. That should be a clue that you should add a plate(+90lbs) to your squat and dead, then another, then try for another. And stop ****ing around like there was any kind of parity between strength and running distance. " That from http://forum.bodybuilding.com/showthread.php?t=140637441 |
2014-05-21 8:20 AM in reply to: rrrunner |
Master 8250 Eugene, Oregon | Subject: RE: Post your daily inspiration here.. Love this. It's exactly what I like about running, and why I've kept at it for 35 years! |
2014-05-21 10:43 AM in reply to: Hot Runner |
Expert 1224 Is this Heaven? No, it's Iowa. | Subject: RE: Post your daily inspiration here.. This is long. Really long. Sorry for that but someone sent this to me when I was in my last couple of weeks before Ironman Arizona 2013 and I go back and read it once in a while. It gets my heart pumping every single time!! I would like to find the source to give proper credit to the author.
TAPER Your body knows the truth: You are ready. Your brain won't believe it. It will use the taper to convince you that this is foolish - that there is too much that can go wrong. You are ready. Finishing an Ironman is never an accident. It's the result of dedication, focus, hard work, and belief that all the long runs in January, long rides in April, and long swims every da~n weekend will be worth it. It comes from getting on the bike, day in, day out. It comes from long, solo runs. From that first long run where you wondered, "How will I ever be ready?" to the last long run where you smiled to yourself with one mile to go...knowing that you'd found the answer. You are ready. You will walk into the water with 3000 other wide-open sets of eyes. You will look upon the sea of humanity, and know that you belong. You'll feel the chill of the water crawl into your wetsuit, and shiver like everyone else, but smile because the day you have waited for so VERY long is finally here.
Grind Fight Suffer Persevere You'll plunge down the road, swooping from corner to corner, chaining together the turns, tucking on the straights, letting your legs recover for the run to come - soon! You'll roll back - you'll see people running out. You'll think to yourself, "Wasn't I just here?" The noise will grow. The chalk dust will hang in the air - you're back, with only 26.2 miles to go. You'll relax a little bit, knowing that even if you get a flat tire or something breaks here, you can run the damn bike into T2. That first mile will feel great. So will the second. By mile 3, you probably won't feel so good.
Just don't sit down - don't EVER sit down. You'll make it to the halfway point. You'll load up on special needs. Some of what you packed will look good, some won't. Eat what looks good, toss the rest. Keep moving. Start looking for people you know. Cheer for people you don't. You're headed in - they're not. They want to be where you are, just like you wanted to be when you saw all those fast people headed into town. Share some energy - you'll get it right back.
Walk if you have to Just keep moving The miles will drag on. The brilliant sunshine will yawn. You'll be coming up to those aid stations fully alive with people, music, and chicken soup. TAKE THE SOUP. Keep moving. You are ready.
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2014-05-21 11:38 AM in reply to: SoeSach |
Champion 7821 Brooklyn, NY | Subject: RE: Post your daily inspiration here.. "It's just a hill. Get over it." (t-shirt I saw at a half-marathon last weekend) |
2014-05-21 11:42 AM in reply to: jmk-brooklyn |
Master 6595 Rio Rancho, NM | Subject: RE: Post your daily inspiration here.. |
2014-05-22 7:08 PM in reply to: rrrunner |
Master 8250 Eugene, Oregon | Subject: RE: Post your daily inspiration here.. Some days, yes, the fact that breakfast is back at home gets me through the morning workout! I don't really know how to explain this one, but it was cool. I've been running for a long time.....most of my life. I looked behind me briefly at the start line of my race last weekend and thought, "Everyone looks so young." (There were maybe 12 or 15 women in my 45-49 AG, but not many above that.) Then all of a sudden, I remembered standing on the start line of my first 5K (at 11) and marathon (at 14), as the youngest in the race, and thinking, "Everyone looks so old." It made me feel old (at "only" almost 45), but it was kind of cool. It would be neat to be the oldest runner or triathlete on the line someday. It never actually gets old--the start-line adrenaline is always there, there's always a point where I'm convinced I'll be DNF/DFL, but show me a finish line, and I'm always ten at heart, sprinting towards it like it was my first race. |
2014-05-23 8:56 AM in reply to: Hot Runner |
Master 6595 Rio Rancho, NM | Subject: RE: Post your daily inspiration here.. |
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