I'm trying to run farther.
The genesis of this is silly thing: in a fit of "I can set a goal" on my electronic trainer program, I put in a goal of 40 mile in three weeks. Not a big deal, right? That didn't account for the New Home cold, where I missed some days (as I mistakenly figured that 30 F was too cold to run). Suddenly, I looked to the timing and realized I had only 43% completed with a week to go. I calculated the difference - and found that, with a little pushing on my part, I could make it.
And so, starting yesterday, my mileage went up.
The biggest challenge I found is not that the distance is about twice what I usually run. That's not so hard as I'm not running for time (now) - maybe that will come later. The hardest challenge has actually been the fact that I am really running that far.
It comes down to mental decisions - something that I have pondered and noted before. The decision that, before I even step on to the road, I am going to run the distance that I am going to run.
Knowing that decision up front makes the whole event a great deal easier. Certainly there are places where I can step aside and pull back, that I can peel off early and go home to the cup of coffee that awaits me. But I've decided in my mind that I am going to accomplish this thing, and so I am committed to doing it.
The remarkable thing, of course, is that life is no different.
We complete that which we set our minds to. Think in your own life: what are those things which you did completely? They are the things which you decided to do - up front, before you even began the thing.
This is a critical step and one often missed. How often have I done the opposite: started an activity not deciding up front that I would finish it and then, when I get halfway through and am suddenly bored or tired or have lost interest, finding the way out prior to finishing.
Commitment is the key.
Does it have to be a written commitment? Some writers would say yes - and maybe in some situations that is true. Certainly I don't write down finishing my run in the morning - but I decide it in my head before I step out the door.
Will I make my running goal? I don't know - even without a commitment, it is still a fair distance to make up. But even in trying, I have found another key to success: Decide before you Do.
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