Finally, turn off the chatter and listen to
your body. In turn, instruct your muscles to relax and go
to work. Feel the perfect tempo and enjoy the experience.
Go With the Flow
The concept of flow is closely related to--and
oftentimes achieved with--mental imagery techniques. In
sports (as well as many other disciplines), a "flow
state" refers to a positive psychological state in
which a person finds an almost euphoric balance between
the challenge at hand and his or her capabilities. It is
a relaxed state, not one of hyperawareness, though the performance
result resembles that of a deep and total focus on the task.
A flow state is the opposite of overthinking; you are "in
the zone" and things seem almost effortless as you
proceed feeling exactly matched to the task.
In endurance running, remaining mentally present--with
no regard for what is behind or ahead--is one way to ready
the mind for this euphoric state. Each step is the only
step. It may also help to view the running task not in competitive
terms, but as a natural process of oxygen intake and energy
expenditure that rolls along without regard for strategy.
Flow state is about recognizing positive feelings and capitalizing
on them as you run.
Put Up a Fight
Sometimes a flow state can remain elusive.
At such times, there is a place for a competitive spark
in your arsenal of mental strategies. And the fuel that
ignites the competitive spark is mental toughness. This
fosters a need to stay in the game, not give up, push past
all limits and plow through failure to success.
If flow state running involves capitalizing
on positive feelings, mental toughness strategies can be
thought of as capitalizing on negative feelings. Mental
toughness is the gift that keeps on giving. Each time you
push through failure and finish strong, you strengthen this
disposition and make it that much more accessible and effective
for the next challenge.
Practice competing--even in your solo runs--so
that you can call upon these feelings during a race. First,
be sure a hard run is on your schedule, and that you are
physically ready for such a run. (Remember, regardless of
what the schedule says, muscle fatigue or sluggishness means
your biggest benefit that day will come from taking it slow
and easy.)
Once you are warm and feel ready to run hard,
you can compete against the clock. Try interval training
on a track, hill repeats or variable-pace road runs. You
can also compete against another runner or against objects
by spotting neighborhood landmarks and keeping pace until
you reach them. These running games teach you that you can
push past limitations, building the key ingredient you'll
want on race day: self-confidence.
(Dreyer, Danny, 2004, Chi Running,
New York, Simon & Schuster, 236 pp.; Csikszentmikalyi,
Mikaly, 1990, Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience,
New York, Harper and Row; Speilberger, CD, 1971, “Trait-state
anxiety and motor behavior,” Journ. Motor Behavior,
Vol. 3, pp. 265-279)
Portions of this article were
contributed by Frederick C. Surgent, Ed. D., HPER, professor
of Health, Physical Education and Recreation at Frostburg
State University, a constituent institution of the University
System of Maryland.