Adjusted Reality

“Reality can be beaten with enough imagination.” – Mark Twain

Tag: marathon Page 3 of 10

A Peek at a Peachy Peak Week

Last week was a pretty fantastic week.  I feel like I got a lot done, but also don’t feel crispy fried from it.  I just want to continue riding the wave of inertia and make sure I end up feeling good and fresh on Sunday, so any goals I need to drop to make that happen will be thrown to the ground.

Training:

Jan18-1

Lookie!  A bike!

I felt like I nailed this last week!  Finally!

  • 40-45 miles.  Running every day (let’s try this again).
  • Long run of 17-18 with some form of speed/pickups/tempo/etc.
  • One tempo run of 4-5 miles half marathon pace or under.
  • At least 15 minutes of non-running workout or maintenance a day (swim, bike, stretch/roll, weights).
  • At least 1 weights session (2 preferred).

Look at that!  Besides not doing two weights sessions, I nailed every goal I had last week.  I hit 40 miles exactly (and I definitely would have done more if they weren’t 100% treadmill runs :P).  I did a long run of 17 miles, descending the pace for the first 11 and then intervals for the last 6 with a pace in the 10s overall.  I rocked a 5 mile tempo at half marathon pace.  I am not sure if it averaged out to be exactly 15 mins a day of maintenance, but it was close if not even actually MORE if you include walking.  I did only do one weights session, so something to improve on next cycle.

Race Week!

  • Normal run Monday, Tempo Tuesday, then initiate mid-week taper week.
  • 3-4 miles on Wednesday and Thurs, 1-2 miles Friday and Saturday.
  • Run 13.1 miles hard on Sunday.  I’m not going to be upset with myself if I don’t make it because I’m training for a marathon, but I’m going to go for a PR (sub 2:08). About 30-35 miles total.
  • Continue with 15 minutes non-running per day (bike, swim, strength, stretch, walking, etc).
  • One weights session (two preferred), but no weights Friday or Saturday (and no heavy weights).

Food/Scale:

Jan18-2

This My Fit Foods Gumbo was the BOMB.

I feel like flippin’ Violet Beauregard right now (I’m wearing purple and feel extremely bloated), but I’m doing the right things so I’ll just keep on keepin’ on and hopefully the results will come.

  • All lunches and dinners are healthy take out minus 2 days (probably one weekday + Saturday).
  • Continue tracking my food, attempting a -500 calorie deficit, and sticking to my macros.
  • Push more calories to the 1-2 hours before my workout so I don’t get hangry and cut things short to go eat.
  • Back to the harsh reality of daily weight tracking.

Wednesday night or Thursday lunch are when we needed to pick up food, and we just didn’t.  I did have healthy food all week minus a burger and fries after my long run on Saturday, and potato cakes with lunch on Sunday (apparently I was craving fried potatoes?).  I tracked every day and am getting used to the -500 calorie thing pretty well now.  I didn’t leave any workouts because I needed food so bad I wanted to die.  I got on the scale every day until Saturday (so I have a decent baseline) and will resume once that once a month bloat gets a bit less.  I don’t want to have hormones + some awful number send me into a shame spiral right now. 😛

Race week eats!

  • All lunches and dinners are healthy take out my normal pre-race lunch and one meal after the race Sunday.
  • Continue tracking my food, attempting a -500 calorie deficit, and sticking to my macros EXCEPT for Friday and Saturday (eat what I burn, push the carbs a little more).  Post-race, I’ll give it a go to keep a deficit but that’s optional too.
  • Continue to track weight starting Wednesday.  No judgies.
  • No booze after Wednesday.

I want to give myself a little time of actually being flush on calories before the race.  I don’t expect maintaining a minor calorie deficit will actually affect the outcome of a 2 hour effort as long as I feed myself well that day, but I’ll give myself the 2 days previous as an insurance policy.

Dishwasher arrives next Tuesday.  I am excited to be able to cook again!

Life:

Jan18-3

First time I’ve ever worn this dress and I bought it this summer.

Also a pretty good week in this category.

  • Gaming at work during downtime.  Color at home.
  • Get up 15+ minutes earlier than last week (this is where I’m going to be fitting in the majority of that cross training).
  • E-cig only every other day
  • Go out and do something this weekend with friends
  • Make the workout room usable
  • Get my bike to the shop for a tune up
  • Wash my hair mostly every day immediately upon coming in the house every day and keep the laundry basket far away from the bedroom to mitigate allergies.

I forgot a few things.  I didn’t get the bike to the shop (I have much time before I ride it outside, so it’s not a huge priority).  I didn’t crack open the coloring book (but I plan to tonight).  The workout room treadmill is now usable, but it’s still really messy.  However, I feel like I accomplished a decent amount, especially considering I nailed my peak week training as well.  And… we did this…

Jan18-4

Our wall o’Krasayansky is finally up!  I’m so happy!  We’ve been collecting it for over 10 years….

Race Week Stuffs.  All the things that are To Dos that take effort are kind of negotiable depending on level of energy.

  • When I put my laundry away, set out 3-5 things I’d like to wear over the next week.
  • E-cig only twice next week and not any for the three days leading up to the race.
  • Continue to wash my hair at least every other day (and always on bad allergy days).  Keep laundry basket out of bedroom and wash it once it gets full.
  • Gaming during downtime at work, coloring at home.
  • Exchange my Christmas gift at the outlet mall.
  • Clean out workout room and build shelves.

Regarding the clothing fore-thought, I did that last week and it was awesome because I wore different stuff than the normal t-shirt and jeans because it was easy in the morning.  Right now, since I feel like a giant grape, I may play it by ear on how I feel in the mornings, but it’s nice to have an idea when I have more of a brain than right after waking up.

I’m starting off this week a bit groggy and stuffy from allergies, but hopefully I can shake that quickly and have a great third week of the year!

Question: what is your favorite piece of art/decoration in your house?

Progress is the Opposite of Congress

That pun always makes me chuckle, and it seems even more timely right now… because I’ve finally discovered News Room and am devouring it.  And, also, election year, politics, yadda yadda.

But, unless congress, I can say I’ve made a little progress this week.  Though, there is definitely a long way to go to get where I want, that’s what the second week of January is all about – now that I’ve got just a little inertia, it’s time to keep building on it.

Training:

Jan11-3

The aftermath of almost 3 hours on the treadmill…

Goals for last week are below…

  • 40-45 miles, running every day.
  • Long run of 15 with the last 3-5 portions of each mile after 3 closer to half marathon pace than easy run pace.
  • One speedwork session
  • One fartlek run
  • At least 1 swim
  • At least 1 weights session (2 preferably)
  • Stretch and/or roll 5 mins a day after work

I feel like I did alright here.  I ended up being about 5 miles short of the minimum I wanted to do.  I don’t have a GREAT excuse here.  I ran every day, I just cut some runs shorter than planned – all my easy days during the week were 3, when I had planned for more like 5.  Getting back on a normal schedule is rough.  I definitely wasn’t getting up in the morning for this.  Lunches were full of stuff to do (or not enough time to leave the office between meetings).  So, I ran every day after work – either at the gym or with a headlamp outside.

The upside is that I had two pretty key sessions.  Tuesday was a great tempo run – holding half marathon pace for 4.5 miles and not feeling completely gassed after.  Saturday, the air was trying to kill me with cedar pollen, but I was able to get through a 15 mile treadmill run.  Three things made this bearable – two caff gels to kill the allergy haze, netflixing bad 90s movies on my phone, and a 1/3 mile-ish (one song) pickup to about 9:45-10 minute mile pace even mile after 3.

I did weights on Tuesday and broke my “no leg weights during marathon training rule” and regretted it.  I stretched and rolled a few times but I’m sure I didn’t get every day.  I FINALLY got back in the water after months on Friday and felt so great I got back in again after my long run Saturday.  Just 5-10 mins of swimming after a run brought my legs back to life.  Amazing how I forget this every year.

This week’s goals:

  • 40-45 miles.  Running every day (let’s try this again).
  • Long run of 17-18 with some form of speed/pickups/tempo/etc.
  • One tempo run of 4-5 miles half marathon pace or under.
  • At least 15 minutes of non-running workout or maintenance a day (swim, bike, stretch/roll, weights).
  • At least 1 weights session (2 preferred).

This is the week where I declare cross training a thing in my life again.  I don’t think I’m going to be popping out of bed and springing out into the cold to run before work ever yet, but I can get up 15 minutes earlier and stretch, do my dozen, or ride the trainer, and maybe eventually build to running an easy 3 soon.

Food/Scale:

Jan11-1

When this is one of your unplanned meals out, you’re probably doing ok.

  • All lunches and dinners are MyFitFoods or Snap Kitchen for the week minus two four (planned meals out with family or friends).
  • The majority of the rest of my intake should be fruits and vegetables, with a little bit of carb supplement around runs (cereal, pretzels and hummus, popcorn, etc).
  • Track my food with the attempt to hit my normal macros (60g fat, 100g protein, 25g fiber), and examine where my calories and carbs are and adjust according to training levels on the daily.
  • No scale yet.  Let’s get 1 week of healthy food down before I do that to myself.

I rocked this.  While I ate out two more times than expected, the food I got was well within the boundaries of my eating plan.

At this point, I figure the best way to go about this is pay attention to two things: a) my macros and b) the amount of calories fitbit says I should eat.  I’ve got my intake set to -500 calories a day, which, in theory, shouldn’t completely kill my training as long as I’m careful, and also take off a lb a week (though I’m not counting on the rate of loss, I’d just like to see a downward trend).

I also know it takes me 3-ish weeks for my body to stop being a stubborn asshole and resisting change, but if I can suffer through that, I should start seeing the progress I’m seeking.

Onward!

  • All lunches and dinners are healthy take out minus 2 days (probably one weekday + Saturday).
  • Continue tracking my food, attempting a -500 calorie deficit, and sticking to my macros.
  • Push more calories to the 1-2 hours before my workout so I don’t get hangry and cut things short to go eat.
  • Back to the harsh reality of daily weight tracking.

These should probably look similar because they are.  The only changes are subtle, like trying to have a more substantial snack before workouts.  I’m sure it will help with my actual performance, and I cut a few of those runs short because I was about to start gnawing my arm off.  I’ve realized the only way for me to really make progress is by measuring, and for me, that’s daily weighing.  It wasn’t pretty today, but you have to start somewhere.

Life:

Jan11-2

Bundled up!

  • Looking to be a pretty mellow week between the myriad of meetings.  Work on getting caught up on my game!
  • Set up a weekly to do list.  Figure out a place it can be shared with Zliten so we can collaborate.
  • No drinks until Saturday night, and be a reasonable human being about length of partying and consumption.
  • Color, read, and/or play KingsQuest.  In other words, something besides the netflix and social media binge all the days.

Well, some of it.  I definitely got some game time in at work.  I set up a weekly to do list and it helped us remember some things I think we would have spaced otherwise.  I didn’t get any home gaming time in, but I made some progress on my book and we finished a page in the coloring book and picked out a new one.

We made conscious decision to indulge in some wine on Wednesday night instead of abstaining, and actually had a little more than I wanted (which is why that whole section is a fail for the week even though I drank responsibly on Saturday).  The upshot of calorie tracking is that I had to own it, and make it work – which meant counting half of it one day, and half the next.  Already being calories down for the day made me cranky and hungry for TWO days, so I don’t think I’ll be pulling that shit again for a while.

What else do I want to do?

  • Gaming at work during downtime.  Color at home.
  • Get up 15+ minutes earlier than last week (this is where I’m going to be fitting in the majority of that cross training).
  • E-cig only every other day
  • Go out and do something this weekend with friends
  • Make the workout room usable
  • Get my bike to the shop for a tune up
  • Wash my hair every day immediately upon coming in the house every day and keep the laundry basket far away from the bedroom to mitigate allergies.

Most of these are self explanatory, but let’s talk about that one that probably make me lose some respect in the eyes of all the healthy peeps.  I don’t do caffeine, I don’t have a huge sweet tooth, but I do have a little nicotine (which, if you examine it alone, away from the other nasty stuff in cigarettes, it’s pretty similar).  The happy thing is that I got a new e-cig set up that is so clean, my lungs feel unaffected by using it.  The bad thing is that without the drawbacks, and while I’ve been trying to control my appetite to hit those diet goals, I’ve gotten used to puffing on the thing every day.

Honestly, I don’t love the idea of being addicted to anything, so it’s time to take baby steps back from it, just on principle.  This week, M/W/F/Su, I will not have any e-cig.  If I’m having diet intake issues, I’ll just have to tough it out with other coping mechanisms.

Overall, this week, I just want to continue the work of inertia, take baby steps towards the places I want to be (and away from the places I don’t), and continue to be enjoy the present.

Second week.  Harder than the first because the honeymoon is over and it’s still hard.  Are you on track with getting where you want to be?

 

 

Thief of Joy

It’s no secret this is my least favorite time of year weather-wise.  Dark early.  Cold.  Just wanna snuggle with a blanket unless I happen to be running.

Jan7-1

Headlamp, you my only friend….

However, this is one of my favorite times of year at work.  We’ve all had a break, so we’re less stressed and more clear headed.  We’re talking about possibilities, planning, and doing creative thinking.  I’m so excited where we’re at and what’s to come, I just came out of a meeting with such JOY, it was silly.

And to think, Sunday night, I was wondering if this was still the right fit for me.  If I was maybe just so burnt out that my candle still felt extinguished after 20 days, maybe it was time to move on.

I tend to forget that I have a thing with inertia.  A me in motion stays at motion.  The way out is through.  Keep on keepin’ on.  That’s what I do.  But, once I’m at rest, there I am.  And it’s usually for the good.  However, I’m not the kind of person that either springs out of bed or explodes back from vacation saying “I’m ready world, bring it on!”.  It takes forcing myself to put the costume on, and go fake it for a little while before I’m like “hey, I actually DO love this”.

So, I think I’ve found what the problem was in late 2015.  Maybe just one of them, but it’s a big one.

The future was stealing joy from the present.*

It really hit me yesterday when I was getting crunchy about being scheduled TEN meeting the week we’re back.  I listed them out on my to do list and realized that most of them were actually awesome meetings to collaborate on new stuff that I’m really excited about.  I immediately re-framed my thoughts to, “I’m excited that I’m part of creative meetings where my opinions matter” and felt much better.

One of my least favorite (and thus I know, probably most beneficial) runs is a tempo run.  Y’know, set the pace at not completely ball-busting but certainly not comfortable, and then just pitch your tent there for miles without a rest.  I haven’t had the mental oomph to try one of those for quite a while and on Tuesday, I thought… rock and roll, let’s do this.

Instead of counting down the tenths of a mile or the seconds or whatever, I spent the time trying to focus on different things than the future.  How my stride felt.  How I was breathing.  Singing along with my music (sorry gymgoers).  Focusing on how annoyed I was with the fact that the rock wall in front of me didn’t have a foothold in the center of my field of vision.

Sure, I spent some time visualizing the course I’ll be running in 2 weeks, but that was pretty positive as well, so I’ll take it.

Jan7-2

Want practice staying in the moment?  Color things with small details.

In the latter part of 2015, I somehow had shifted my attitude that everything between awakening in my bed and finally plopping myself on the couch for the day was a mere task.  Something to check off, to spend as little time and attention on as possible while still completing it.  Somewhere in there, I forgot that I love pretty much everything I do, even if it’s on the must-do list, and even if sometimes there’s just a little too much of it.

So, my intention is to stick with that.  Keep my head in the present.  Realize that joy is in the doing, not just the coveting something that’s going to happen get here already.  Consider that by spending time fantasizing about the future, I’m robbing this very moment right here of it’s significance.  And that sucks.

Not to say that I won’t ever look forward to the future.  Mile 12.5 of the half, I’m absolutely going to have thoughts of the finish line.  Two weeks before a vacation, I’m going to blissfully start packing lists and counting down and dreaming about beaches.  That’s not going to change, nor should it.

I think the best first step is in the day to day.

Work is not just a roadblock between waking up and whatever else I’ve got planned that day.  I’m doing a job I’m a great fit for, I’m important, I get to be creative, and when we remove a bit of the stress from the equation when things are piled on a little too thick, I rather quite enjoy.

Training is something else I love.  I need to not get caught up in the fact that it’s something I HAVE to do.  It’s something I chose to do.  I also get caught up in the “well, if I didn’t have to work I’d work out all the time” theory.  I didn’t cram a million hours of training into my 20 days off.  In fact, I didn’t do that much at all.  I logged 40 hours my last week off, but that took less than 7.5 hours and that was ALLLLL I did.  It’s interesting to fit it around work sometimes, but I prioritize it because I love it.

And in these realizations, my head is so much more quiet.  The last two nights, I’ve fallen asleep so much easier than I have in a while.  I’ve not wanted to drink out any frustrations, or just skip to the weekend, please.

Someone may need to remind me of this when I’m in the thick of it, but I think my mantra for at least early 2016 is “Joy in the Present”.

What’s your mantra?

*At first I felt awesome about coming up with this, but then I felt like I may have stolen it from somewhere – google had no love.  If I took your saying, please let me know so I can credit it!

Emerging Gently

I expect the want to do these type of weekly/monthly/etc goal setting posts will drop off as they typically do, but, here we are at the first full week of the year.  I don’t typically 100% go off the rails in December, but there are treats to go with good healthy food, there is slothiness to match the running, there is lots of indulgences and staying up late to celebrate and unwind, and it can’t go on forever in exactly those ratios.

January, when a lot of other folks are in the same mindset, is a good excuse for me to essentially hit the reset button on goals and progress, and bring things more in line with the 80/20 rule than the 50/50 rule. It’s always nice not to be the only weirdo trying to eat clean in December. I have company in January!:)

This week is about establishing a regular routine after 20 days of vacation, but not expecting to be firing on all cylinders in all areas (this way lies burnout).  Training is probably the most rigorous because I have a marathon in 9 weeks, a half I’d like to take a shot at PR’ing in 3 weeks, and I lifted weights ONCE in December and it hurt me bad.  With everything else, it’s a gentle shift.

Training:

Jan5-2

While I won’t be doing much serious cycling until later in the year, I have indeed joined the ranks of alien headed aero helmet dorks as of Dec 24th! 🙂

This is actually where I excelled over break.  I did a 40 mile week last week!  That’s not bad for the “whatever, whenever” running plan.  Streaking is the best.

This week, I’m all about just a TOUCH more structure, simply because I at least have to plan when I’m going to run, instead of just heading out the door around 4pm because I was done slacking for the day.

Goals:

  • 40-45 miles, running every day.
  • Long run of 15 with the last 3-5 closer to half marathon pace than easy run pace.
  • One speedwork session
  • One fartlek run
  • At least 1 swim
  • At least 1 weights session (2 preferably)
  • Stretch and/or roll 5 mins a day after work

Food/Scale:

Jan5-1

Lunch today was healthy, delicious, and someone else (My Fit Foods) cooked it for me.  Win!

This is resetting what is actually a correct portion and healthy food.  I certainly don’t want to do a meal service for a long time, but 2-3 weeks will make me a) able to eat healthy without stressing this month and b) make me really look forward to batch cooking again!  The cost seems to be slightly above what I normally pay in groceries but the time savings and convenience is worth it.

Goals:

  • All lunches and dinners are MyFitFoods or Snap Kitchen for the week minus two (planned meals out with family or friends).
  • The majority of the rest of my intake should be fruits and vegetables, with a little bit of carb supplement around runs (cereal, pretzels and hummus, popcorn, etc).
  • Track my food with the attempt to hit my normal macros (60g fat, 100g protein, 25g fiber), and examine where my calories and carbs are and adjust according to training levels on the daily.
  • No scale yet.  Let’s get 1 week of healthy food down before I do that to myself.

Work/Life:

Jan5-3

Be less like my cat, but not TOO much unlike my cat to shock the system.

I’m just looking to adjust gently to getting back to work, regular life, and a normal schedule.  Not looking to tackle any huge projects, totally revert my sleep schedule, or do anything drastic.

  • Looking to be a pretty mellow week between the myriad of meetings.  Work on getting caught up on my game!
  • Set up a weekly to do list.  Figure out a place it can be shared with Zliten so we can collaborate.
  • No drinks until Saturday night, and be a reasonable human being about length of partying and consumption.
  • Color, read, and/or play KingsQuest.  In other words, something besides the netflix and social media binge all the days.

I’m hoping this is just the right mix of gentle change and return to routine that will set the stage for a great January!

 

 

2016 Seasonal Goals

They say that doing the same things and expecting different results is madness.  So, I’ve spent a few years with some solid goals, and done well the first part of the year, and then, got frustrated and said “fuck it” at some point because it was too regimented.

This year, I have a lot of different things I’d like to accomplish, but I also have unique focuses during each season.  This also gives me three months to accomplish things instead of one, which will help me stress about things less, a reset point four times this year, and also might save y’all from monthly wrap up posts (maybe…)

Winter (Jan-March)

Jan4-2

Racing:

  • Get your racing confidence back.
  • Try latch onto B at 3M half marathon and see if a PR is in the cards.
  • Race happy at Woodlands and also open yourself to the possibility of a 4:xx:xx marathon.

Training:

  • Run a lot.  Streak January (7 days in!).
  • 6 long runs 15+ before March 5, please.
  • Don’t neglect speedwork, one speed session and one run with some faster than M-pace miles per week until March.
  • Foam roll and stretch (put on some music and use this as meditation time).
  • Get back into the habit of at least throwing my bodyweight around once or twice a week if not more (weight or time).
  • Try to remember what it’s like to swim and ride bikes whenever possible.

Food/Scale:

  • Eat good, solid, quality food.
  • Get a good start by doing 2-3 weeks of meals at My Fit Foods and Snap Kitchen, and graduate to solid, healthy, batch cooking after.
  • Count calories, and try to figure out where the sweet spot is for training.
  • Transition to a lower calorie count after the marathon by end of March.

Work:

  • Set myself and my team up for success by establishing a good and solid plan for the year.
  • Get back in the habit of to weekly to do lists.
  • Find a better way to handle the stress than I have been.  Leave it at the office more often.  When it comes home with me, find ways to calm it down that are less self destructive than late boozy nights.  Coloring books have been awesome.  Going out and doing something might be a better answer than sulking on my couch.  Just going to bed and starting over the next day sometimes helps.
  • Play games – my games and other games.

Life:

  • A weekly to-do list seems to work well for me at work.  I want to start doing this at home as well.  Not to stress myself out, and not to pack my day full of tasks, but so I have a few things to focus on instead of wasting my free time solely on social media and netflix.
  • Decrease consumption of my e-cig. Because there are so many less health and performance consequences of using it, I’m finding I’m using it more often.  But it’s still not the greatest thing in the world to feel addicted to nicotine (even if it’s a very small dose).
  • Set some better limits on the LENGTH of drinking sessions.  Having a few drinks a few days a week is fine.  Drinking for 8 hours on a weekday is not.
  • Go out more.  If nothing else than for the purpose of putting on a dress, doing my hair and makeup.  I’ve realized while it doesn’t bother me that much because I’m just not focused on it, I have not looked in the mirror in a while and said to myself “hey, you look awesome/put together/etc”.
  • Color!  Since I’ll be training for a marathon, I’m not going to put a whole bunch of to-do life goals here, but I’d like to fill up a bunch of pages in my coloring book.  It’s relaxing and fun!
  • Bike/run commuting.  I don’t think I’m going to really hit my stride before the marathon here, but it would be nice to get out the door on my bike a few times before spring.
  • Get the leezard situated.  We had to tear down her cage since she hurt herself on it, but find a more permanent structure for her to have as a home instead of some boxes and bags piled in a closet.

Spring (April-June)

Jan4-1

These lists will get shorter, because in some cases, these are just additional to the goals earlier in the year.  This season will be focused on weight loss, and being kind of a normal person!  For someone who really loves triathlon and racing, I’m oddly excited for it…

Racing:

Any races are just for fun.  No pressure.  Probably 10/20 and Lake Pflugerville because, tradition, but nothing here is about gunning for PRs.  Maybe race without a garmin just for funsies.

Training:

  • Use that time March – June doing things like taking walks in interesting places, doing casual “coffee” (decaf?) rides not worrying about paces, getting better at yoga, camping, and just remembering what normal people like to do in spring besides run bike and swim until they pass out.
  • I don’t plan to 100% abandon training but be selective on what I spend the few hours a week I let myself do.  The absolute best thing you can do to maintain fitness over minimal time is short, high intensity interval training stuff.  So, I plan to do one HIIT session per week of each discipline, and having some form of strength training.  Basically, the stuff I used to do before when I was actually losing weight.

Food/Scale:

  • The whole goal after the marathon is to lose weight as quickly as possible while not a) doing a bunch of unhealthy things that will sabotage my goals later in the year and b) not driving everyone around me completely insane.
  • However, this is totally timeboxed so I will essentially be at the weight I want to be at for the next 9-12 months when I stop.  So, my goal is to make that as low as possible.
  • This is the typical attempt to maintain a 500-1000 calorie per day deficit depending on my hunger, sanity, level of activity, and… life.  If the numbers worked out properly, I should lose between 20-40 lbs.  I’ll take anything in that range.

Work:

Things will start to get busy with two milestones in the spring.  Continue to manage stress, use a weekly to do list, plan well, and play games.

Life:

  • Have 4 usable bedrooms (aka – clean out the workout room and office).  Clean off the vanity and all the bedroom surfaces.  I feel like if I can deal with those things, I’m in good shape for the year and most of the rest of the organization I want to do are little projects.
  • Kitchen or back patio renovation.  We really need to start one of these two things unless some SEVERE financial hardships come our way.  This season, we should at least pick which one and start the process of planning and estimates.
  • Do something with the blog (design-wise) intentionally and commit to shorter content more often.
  • Get back into my piano, jewelry making, and/or sewing.
  • Bike commuting – the weather should be nice, the light should be good, I’m not fatigued from training, there’s no excuses.  Spring is where this becomes a habit.

Summer (July-September)

Jan4-5

Summer will see a gradual ramp up and return back to training, though a lot less steep than normal to get to Kerrville in 2 months.  Since I’ve had Spring as my offseason, I’ll need to balance the need for workouts with the need for water recreation. 🙂

Racing:

First big block of training, so probably not much racing here.  Maybe Jack’s Generic Sprint as a measuring block.

Training:

  • Start training and decide on the rest of the season from there.  Speed comes back faster than distance.  Shorter races are NOT less worthy.  It’s not giving up not to race a 70.3 or a marathon late in the year if it’s the right call.
  • Either way, the summer will be focused on speed, not a whole lot of distance.  I mean, more than my spring offseason, but I’m not ramping up to 10+ hours of training a week.  That will come later.

Food/Scale:

Transition from weight loss to eating to fuel training.  Not nearly as much as I will later in the year when I add bigger volume, but hopefully I’m happy with where I’m at since it’s likely I’ll be there for the majority of the year.

Work:

This will be the busy season with a few back to back milestones.  Continue with the stress management tactics I’ve established.

Life:

I’ll probably have more to talk about here as the year goes on, but either in the summer or fall, I want to go on vacation here (Roatan).

Fall (October-December)

Jan4-4

Fall will be a ramp up to bigger volume, and hopefully less chaos at work that normal, since I’ve planned to have the bigger stuff done in the summer.  Instead of a big 4 month ramp up to get to 70.3 and a marathon, I’ll be training more conservatively with a 3-4 month ramp up for a 70.3 and only a half this year.

Racing:

  • Kerrville for sure, but maybe just the Olympic.  Depends on how we feel a month or two out.
  • Probably actually doing our hometown 70.3 in Austin.
  • Spacecoast HALF this year, not full.

This sounds very light compared to last year.  Y’know what?  It is.  Because the big goal is…

IM Texas, April 2017.  Yeah, buddy.  It’s time.

Training:

Time for volume!  Build for a 70.3 and a half marathon, and then a short break to get rested up for the big push to IM.

Food/Scale:

Ramp back up to eating like an athlete.  Hopefully maintaining whatever weight I’m at, not gaining like I did fall 2015 :P.

Work:

Continue with everything as all year.  This is the prime time for feature creep with the last big milestone in the last year.  Try to protect against it.

Life:

This will definitely be overflow from earlier seasons, and since I’ll be ramping up training, probably have less time to do life stuff (for the most part).  But, we’ll see!

And, because Texas weather is weird, all the selfies are from the last two weeks, not 4 different seasons. 😛

Cheers to an amazing 2016!  I do have some specific things I’m doing in January, so I’ll probably dedicate some blog space to that, but for now, it’s all out there, and hopefully I can make 2016 just as positive as: Confidence, Commitment, and Fluidity.

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