Articles

The Haywire Heart – Case, Mandrola & Zinn

Tldr; I felt this book raised an interesting point that over exercising can be as bad as under exercising, however I feel it was overly alarmist given the limited amount of scientific studies available for evidence and presented a largely anecdotal based view. Worth a quick read with a pinch of salt. 3.5/5.  The Haywire Heart examines the idea that too much exercise can put undue stress on the heart and lead to some serious heart conditions later in life. It is an important read for anyone undertaking endurance training, especially those who have done it for 5-10 years or longer.  How Does My Heart Work? The book begins with an overview of how the heart works and the different systems that it uses to keep us alive. The authors do a nice job of explaining the workings of the heart and the different functions of its areas. It turns out that the heart is effectively two systems, plumbing and electricity as they put it.  The plumbing is the main part of the heart, keeping the blood enclosed and flowing to the right areas. The electricity part is what keeps the heart beating. A complex series of chemical interactions in

Read More »

My Principles for Life

In life it is the decisions you make which will shape your future. But when faced with a difficult decision, how do you decide which course of action to take? Personally, I have a set of principles that guide the actions in my life. If something I am doing doesn’t fit in with one of these principles then it needs to be cut.  Think of yourself as a ship sailing on a foggy day with low visibility. The principles are the map and compass that you use to plot your course and avoid danger when you have a hard time seeing where to go. Some decisions are easy. Many times it is obvious if something will be good or bad for you. If it fits in with your life or not. Others it is hard, and especially in these times, it is useful to have some concepts to run things by.  The guiding principles that I am using in my life are as follows:  Set Long Term Goals Having goals and a long term focus is crucial. This is the load baring structure that enables the framework of principles to grow strong. In economics we are taught, “in the long

Read More »

The Why in Ultra – How to Keep Going When Things Get Tough

In every long distance race there comes a point where you want to quit. A moment when your legs are burning, the terrain in front of you looks intimidating, other runners are passing you and you would literally rather be anywhere else in the world. At that point you will turn around and ask yourself the single most important question you can ask yourself, “Why?”.  If you buy any book on training they will tell you 101 ways to become physically strong. Marathon plans will focus on intervals and tempo runs, ultra plans on elevation and back to back long runs. Hardly any books I have every purchased even have a section on “mental” aspects, despite this being possibly the most important aspect of the training! Finding your “why” is, at least in my opinion (and in the opinion of quite a few others I know), THE single most important aspect of your training. And guess what, it is a principle that you can apply to virtually any aspect of your life.  Why do you need a Why?  To really understand what makes the answer to the question “why” so powerful, first we need to consider what are the aspects

Read More »

How I am Training for Aran by UTMB

The Torn Dera Val d’Aran is a 161km ultra marathon in the Pyrenees, traversing some of Spain, France and Andorra’s most difficult terrain and highest peaks. With a cumulative 10,200m of elevation over the course you are expected to climb 63.5m for every 1km you move forward (and descend the same amount to finish back at the start!), the course is steeper than the famed UTMB race in France. At the first edition last year, the winner finished in just shy of 24h, whilst less than 50% of participants made it from start to finish.  Regardless of this, I have signed up. Here is how I plan to train.  The image below is my actual training plan that I am using, written at the end of 2021 after copious amounts of research and drawing on my experience in previous races and training blocks. Before I go any further I must stress, I am not a qualified running coach (whatever that is) and whilst I have undertaken a large amount of study on physical performance and running, this study has primarily been self-supervised and I do therefore not hold any formal coaching qualifications. A large portion of this plan has been

Read More »

The Power of Compounding

Compound Interest. It’s a simple idea. Leave a dollar in an account which pays interest. Say 10% (we all know that a 10% interest account doesn’t exist right now, but still). Come back next year and you will have $1.10. Forget about it for another year and suddenly you are earning 10% of $1.10 and not $1. By the end of year two you have earned an extra $0.11, vs $0.10 the first year. Incredible right?! I know it doesn’t sound very impressive. But let me explain.  Where time is your friend. With compound interest, time is your friend. You may have heard the story of the king and the chess playing sage that goes a little like this:  A great king who loved chess travelled across the land to meet a chess playing sage. In order to motivate the sage to play a game with him, the king offered any reward the sage could want. The sage asked only for a few grains of rice distributed in the following way. If he won, the king was to place a single grain of rice on the first square of the chess board on day one. On day two he was

Read More »