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Basketball / Re: A WHOLE BUNCH OF DUNKS AND SHIT.
« on: December 19, 2017, 02:42:01 pm »
everyone's probably seen the video so far, so here's a photo of KD getting owned:
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Mo farah wins sports personality of the year (out of british athletes)http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=52s_h5AP0AA
Then the video signal loss lol. British Broadcasting at it's best
SPOTY 2017 | How they voted
1. Sir Mo Farah 83,524
2. Jonathan Rea 80,567
3. Jonnie Peacock 73,429
4. Anthony Joshua 73,411
5. Adam Peaty 63,739
6. Lewis Hamilton 60,627
7. Chris Froome 47,683
8. Harry Kane 18,759
9. Anya Shrubsole 15,237
10. Bianca Walkden 13,962
11. Johanna Konta 7,591
12. Elise Christie 6,504





Some things (quotes/mantras etc) i've been thinking lately.
If someone were to ask me why I approach races the way I do: "I don't care about losing, only about winning"
- ie, take risks & don't worry about failure. losing is overrated.
- so I take a huge risk, achieve it or not, burn out and perform worse overall than expected .. who cares?
- so I take a huge risk, achieve it, maintain a respectable level of performance, and perform better than expected -> break mental and physical barriers, set new limits, gain more confidence .. boom.
- so i plan on taking a huge risk, wimp out, fail miserably .. worse case.
Running is actually easy. All you have to do is slowly conquer fear & doubt head on. The only way to do that is to not back down.
I'm trying to focus more on the skill of racing, than the physiology of running. The former is more about rising to the occasion, no matter who shows up. Not limiting yourself to numbers/predictions based on workouts, past races, or what you think you are capable of, but more about finding out on race day -> it's more of a fight/combat approach than it is a strict formula. For fighters, this is an easy analogy: no matter who you are in there with, you try to win, survive, etc - no matter how much more accomplished/skilled/experienced your opponent is. For dunkers, this is analogous to throwing a high lob, going up and trying to get it. It's not precise, even if you want it to be. Sometimes the ball bounces higher than expected, and somehow you still get up there and get it, even if it's just a hard miss.
Finally the idea of inhibition: I tend to already think of myself as someone who could run some insane times/do some sick performances. I think you have to believe that if the mindset above is to be executed properly. I feel like i'm trying to remove inhibition, rather than gaining fitness. By simply removing inhibition, i'll go faster, because i'm already capable of maintaining faster speeds physiologically. So by stripping away layers of inhibition, i'll be able to utilize higher levels of my current fitness, and at the same time, create a stronger stimulus for improving fitness. The circle of PR life.
This prefontaine quote is perhaps the best quote i've ever read, because i've actually used it recently in a few training sessions & in my last few races: “Something inside of me just said ‘Hey, wait a minute, I want to beat him,’ and I just took off."
I've actually thought about it, and then gone faster. I think it resonates with me so much because, I can imagine myself being that guy that someone took off on, and not fighting for it. So, that quote is the only one i've ever used in competition of any kind, as far as I can remember.
Obviously there's a legit physiological component to all of this, but I find the mental components to be most challenging (evidenced by this & many of my previous posts).
There's probably some more but i'm forgetting them right now.
First and foremost though: need to stay healthy, not do anything stupid!
pc!
Brilliant! So many runners I know have that fear of not finishing a race, or finishing in such a fatigued state that they don't even race and run completely within themselves.
We all know that it's 90% above the shoulders and I would think that by removing those barriers to performance you will by proxy remove some physiological barriers at the same time.
I actually watched the Prefontaine movie last week with Jared Leto. Ashamed to say it's the first time I've actually heard of him too. Absolutely incredible story.
- run 5.01 km in 22:56
road adult PR, second time meeting december goal. slower than first time because road.
- stretch

went to lahore this weekend with gf. was fun but also stressful for a couple of reasons. the old city is batshit, doubt many or any of you have experienced driving like that. street barely wide enough for a small car, motorcycles and pedestrians passing on both sides in both directions. hiring a driver next time, it's worth it. anyway i needed to move when we got back. slightly lightheaded now.

Idk where I left off so yesterday I did a 30 minute jog and today I did a 30 minute bike session.
Tomorrow will be a bro/xfit day