I’ve been wondering, with the distances or times of races, do people tend to experience similar stages of mood?
Like, say the first couple miles of riding, the first 5 minutes maybe, we have to get over this hump of our body not wanting to do anything. But then something kicks in and we feel more eager to keep going.
Does there tend to be a pattern beyond that? Like “Stages of Grief,” do cyclists tend to go through a sequence of stages in their mood?
This is related to the Time Trial because during the final quarter, I keep finding myself in a mental state of road rage. Then I stop and dismount, load my bike onto the rack, and feel stuck in this violent mindset. I’m wondering if I were to push on further if that will snap me out of it.
Neal, If any of us could truly answer this we would be famous coaches! haha - because that is everyone's question - and the subject of endless books on the topic
I think people vary in many ways in what allows them to perform their very best and different races (short, long, spring, ultra long, etc) will also need different solutions.
I have only been racing for 5 years and am just learning. There literally dozens and dozens of factors that come into your decision. (training load, resting load, sleep, lack of sleep, diet, temperature, humidly, relationships, is your dog happy with you, the list goes on and on and on.
Most people agree you need to at least be well rested and appropriately warmed up to perform your very best. Tapering is also recommended, but that is when you are coming off a high level of training and you are straining you body to the max to get everything out of you can.
I think we each have to learn how our bodies react to different things, and when you think you have it, try and duplicate it. Even then, suddenly you will be doing "everything wrong" one day (from the standpoint of what you think you need to do to perform optimally) and then suddenly you will perform better then you ever have. Times like that drive you crazy! That has happened to me many times. I would be training really, really hard, then go to the track and ride 100 miles (hardish), only to break my current record not even rested, not even having the optimal fuel etc. Of course this makes you feel like you should be able to go even faster when "all the stars align" , but sometimes that never happens. Then you drive yourself crazy trying to figure out what you were doing that made you perform so great! You might never find out and it is a little maddening sometimes!
For me on something like this TT challenge (a 30'sh min effort) - I usually need a pretty long warmup period - maybe 30-40 minutes at a medium effort with a couple quick hard efforts thrown in, and then some brief spinning. I can also do pretty well on these "quick" efforts with only a day or 2 of rest. As an example, since I have not had much time to really ride or train since this series began, I usually ride 1-hour hard on Tues morn, 1-hour hard on Thur morn, and then do the TT on Sat morning. My Tues and Thur rides are usually just as hard as Sat. I do not have tons of time, so I am only warming up about 15-min on Sat. This leads to what you described above (taking 5 mins to acclimated to the hard effort). I generally feel pretty crappy for the first 4 of the 12 miles. By the time I am done I am really warmed up, and almost feel like I could go at it again. I have tried that and have never gone faster the 2nd time, but sometimes pretty close (within 30 secs or so).
I think if you pushed on through it you would have the same experience as I described above.
The "stages of grief" thing: haha - When you do 12-hour or 24-hour hard efforts, then you go through all kinds of "stages" - usually it is your brain telling you body you cannot do it and trying to convince it. Baring any physical injury, or if you fueled so badly that you bonk, it is usually wrong! OH yeah - for anything under an hour - you don't even really need water - and definitely I would not eat or drink anything that you body would need to metabolize.
Hope this helps. I am sure others will chime in with their words of wisdom and what works for them