RojoRacing
Donut Powered Wise-guy
Someone asked me a related question so I'm sharing here with everyone. Don't the grammar or structure of the wall o words, I just typed as things came to mind. I know I make it sound like everyone isn't trying but it's more along the lines of are you trying hard enough and in the correct way.
you have to remember how much I believe in the mental aspect of a person's ability and potential, even as much as I preach it I still surprise myself and those are valuable reminders. Do you know how I always say never assume to know what your limits are? I can't stress that one enough because it is a major factor in people's slow growth or no growth at all. I know up till now I've only ever about reached 300 watts for a full hour race effort or but the number of times I've matched that by trying to do so are almost zero. What I mean is if I try and aim for my limit I always fall short because I enter a mindset of assuming what my limit is and I want to try and just reach it. Every time I surprise myself with some exceedingly good numbers it was because I was doing everything except looking at my numbers. A month ago when I was struggling to climb the alp faster each week it was because when it got hard and I saw that my watts were 10-20 under what I wanted and my mental state started to spiral out of control. After 2 rides like that and again in the first 10 mins of the third I completely stopped looking at the time and my watts and only focused on the road ahead and what my body was telling me. When I got to the top, not only did I get back on level with my desired effort I started going harder all while it feeling more manageable. I'm very good at listening to my body and always keeping it on the limit but that limit changes every minute and you need to practice aiming at it while being extremely uncomfortable, you can't do that if you're also trying to monitor numbers, you can look at numbers afterward. That's why I also achieve my best-recorded efforts when I'm chasing someone in a race or just a really fast ride, I'm not looking at my limits and only concerned what me vs them and I'll keep pushing as hard as it takes to match them. You can't do this if you go in with the attitude that you are weaker than they are. If your thoughts are that of this is going to hurt or I'm going to get dropped, when you approach a climb then of course you are. If you see a climb and think ok attack up it and focus on the recovery after the top then you may still get dropped but I guarantee you go up faster and if you happen to be having a good day you may achieve something you previously thought impossible. This is why when I ride the V20 against DF riders of my caliber and we are going up a 2-3% grade with short 30' kickers I always tell myself to attack into it and lead over the top. If I didn't do that I'd see them pass me and I'd start doubting my ability to stay with them. I've even had cat 1 racers tell me afterward that they started to doubt their own pace and abilities for that day when I'd go past them on the steep parts because it when against everything they expected, how quickly the mind forms doubts. Did I burn a match doing such a surge? of course I did but matches are meant to be burned and depending on how you use them you can add more to the box mid-ride or one match can catch the rest of the box on fire.
moving your limits is like trying to move a heavy stone block with a rubber band. As you pull on the band it stretches and you start to feel really uncomfortable and it hurts but the stone still doesn't want to budge because it's heavy. It isn't until to really get the rubber band at its limit that the stone starts to slowly slide, only then are things changing. If you pull on the band to hard and quickly you'll break it, I think of that as going too hard and getting injured.
you have to remember how much I believe in the mental aspect of a person's ability and potential, even as much as I preach it I still surprise myself and those are valuable reminders. Do you know how I always say never assume to know what your limits are? I can't stress that one enough because it is a major factor in people's slow growth or no growth at all. I know up till now I've only ever about reached 300 watts for a full hour race effort or but the number of times I've matched that by trying to do so are almost zero. What I mean is if I try and aim for my limit I always fall short because I enter a mindset of assuming what my limit is and I want to try and just reach it. Every time I surprise myself with some exceedingly good numbers it was because I was doing everything except looking at my numbers. A month ago when I was struggling to climb the alp faster each week it was because when it got hard and I saw that my watts were 10-20 under what I wanted and my mental state started to spiral out of control. After 2 rides like that and again in the first 10 mins of the third I completely stopped looking at the time and my watts and only focused on the road ahead and what my body was telling me. When I got to the top, not only did I get back on level with my desired effort I started going harder all while it feeling more manageable. I'm very good at listening to my body and always keeping it on the limit but that limit changes every minute and you need to practice aiming at it while being extremely uncomfortable, you can't do that if you're also trying to monitor numbers, you can look at numbers afterward. That's why I also achieve my best-recorded efforts when I'm chasing someone in a race or just a really fast ride, I'm not looking at my limits and only concerned what me vs them and I'll keep pushing as hard as it takes to match them. You can't do this if you go in with the attitude that you are weaker than they are. If your thoughts are that of this is going to hurt or I'm going to get dropped, when you approach a climb then of course you are. If you see a climb and think ok attack up it and focus on the recovery after the top then you may still get dropped but I guarantee you go up faster and if you happen to be having a good day you may achieve something you previously thought impossible. This is why when I ride the V20 against DF riders of my caliber and we are going up a 2-3% grade with short 30' kickers I always tell myself to attack into it and lead over the top. If I didn't do that I'd see them pass me and I'd start doubting my ability to stay with them. I've even had cat 1 racers tell me afterward that they started to doubt their own pace and abilities for that day when I'd go past them on the steep parts because it when against everything they expected, how quickly the mind forms doubts. Did I burn a match doing such a surge? of course I did but matches are meant to be burned and depending on how you use them you can add more to the box mid-ride or one match can catch the rest of the box on fire.
moving your limits is like trying to move a heavy stone block with a rubber band. As you pull on the band it stretches and you start to feel really uncomfortable and it hurts but the stone still doesn't want to budge because it's heavy. It isn't until to really get the rubber band at its limit that the stone starts to slowly slide, only then are things changing. If you pull on the band to hard and quickly you'll break it, I think of that as going too hard and getting injured.