After Wildflower, I thought I would give myself a week to recover. You know what recovery is, right? Laying on the couch, painting, playing with the dogs, reading a book... all fantastic ideas! But after 3 days of "recovery", which looked more like taking my friends on a hike, teaching Pilates and driving back to Oregon, I decided to stop letting time slip by and begin training for Ironman Boulder.
Coaching yourself in triathlon is hard work. When I hired a coach two years ago, it was fantastic because he would look at my ten hours of training per day and say, "Ashlee, what are you thinking?! I want you to take an entire day off." I would do an easy bike ride instead. Coach would see me and say, "Ashlee... I mean it! No working out today!" It is so much easier to recover when you are forced into it.
So today, I looked at my schedule and saw a huge gap of time between teaching yoga and meeting with Leah. What better way to fill that time than to go crank out a 23 mile bike test then brick it with a five mile trail run? Great idea!
So the IMBoulder training has begun.
STATS AS OF MAY 8, 2014
BIKE 23.1 MILES
RUN 5.0 MILES
SWIM 0 MILES
WEIGHTS 0:15
YOGA 1:00
PILATES 0:00
Starting photos with three months to go:
Showing posts with label yoga. Show all posts
Showing posts with label yoga. Show all posts
Thursday, May 8, 2014
Tuesday, August 20, 2013
The Importance of Being an Athlete
Yesterday, as my physical therapist was directing me through
various running drills, he told me about one of his other patients who is one
of the top high school cross country runners in the state.
“The problem is,” he began. “She is a runner, not an
athlete.”
Wait? How can you be a runner and not an athlete? Better
question: How can you be one of the best runners in the state and not be
considered an athlete?
“She can only run straight,” he told me. Then he
demonstrated what happens when she comes up to an obstacle. Instead of side
stepping the tree or bench or whatever it might be, she has to turn ninety
degrees to get around it. The obstacle throws her off. She can only run
straight.
So many runners love running and focus their attentions
solely on it that they forget to cross-train. They don’t spend time doing
plyometric drills or taking a Pilates class. All of their movements stay in one
plane and they forget to exercise other planes of motion. The great thing about
cross-training is it improves flexibility, helps with joint stability, prevents
overuse injuries and keeps you motivated!
Conveniently, there are several gyms that specialize in
cross-training classes. But being indoors is not everyone’s first option.
Personally, I prefer getting my sweat on outdoors in the sunshine. So what are
some of the best ways to mix up your workout in order to become an athlete and
not just a runner? Yoga and swimming are two fantastic options! Jump in the
ocean or in a lake and swim for 30 or so minutes, using different types of
strokes to get the full body involved. After you finish, lay out the towel you
just used to dry off and do a variety of yoga stretches. Add in some clam
shells, hip raises and downward dogs and you are good to go!
Check out this article from active.com for a quick and easy
yoga workout that you can do anywhere!
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| Image courtesy of Google.com |
| My SB Pure Awesomeness Pilates Class |
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