Listen "Knowing Yourself"
Episode Synopsis
Knowing yourself can facilitate your next goal or break through. Owning where we are at and where we have to go shouldn't bring us into doubt or fear, but motivate us to make plans to achieve the incremental steps.
The World of Running
As always, before discussing our main topic, we shared some of the most recent tidbits dominating the running conversation this week:
The Ripley's with Allyson Felix in 2018
Nike shoes controversy (link to Letsrun Podcast with more opinions)
Shelly-Ann Fraser-Price considered to be the fastest woman in the world. (NBC reports)
Allyson Felix broke Usain Bolt's World Gold Medal record with 12 gold medals in world events.
The great American distance runner, Shalane Flanagan retired (here's the Letsrun.com article mentioned).
Main Topic Summary:
11. Know your limits (time, physical, pace)
2. Your limitations don’t always mean a cap on your goals, but rather an honest evaluation of how many miles you should run, what pace you should aim to hit during workouts and races, and how much time you need to prepare your body (routines) beforehand.
3. Set reasonable goals/expectations
Create multi-tier goals (Thanks, Coach Rod Wortley ). Check out this article all about racing mindset and strategies.
Pursue incremental gains.
Follow or develop suitable training plans with your current effort in mind (not always the pace you want to run or thing you "should" run).
The World of Running
As always, before discussing our main topic, we shared some of the most recent tidbits dominating the running conversation this week:
The Ripley's with Allyson Felix in 2018
Nike shoes controversy (link to Letsrun Podcast with more opinions)
Shelly-Ann Fraser-Price considered to be the fastest woman in the world. (NBC reports)
Allyson Felix broke Usain Bolt's World Gold Medal record with 12 gold medals in world events.
The great American distance runner, Shalane Flanagan retired (here's the Letsrun.com article mentioned).
Main Topic Summary:
11. Know your limits (time, physical, pace)
2. Your limitations don’t always mean a cap on your goals, but rather an honest evaluation of how many miles you should run, what pace you should aim to hit during workouts and races, and how much time you need to prepare your body (routines) beforehand.
3. Set reasonable goals/expectations
Create multi-tier goals (Thanks, Coach Rod Wortley ). Check out this article all about racing mindset and strategies.
Pursue incremental gains.
Follow or develop suitable training plans with your current effort in mind (not always the pace you want to run or thing you "should" run).
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Runners Need to Stop
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The Most Important Thing to Know
10/09/2025
Know Where You're Going
02/09/2025
Help is on the Way!
06/08/2025
Consistently Find Balance
23/07/2025
The First Rule for Realizing Your Dreams
17/07/2025
Living in the Age of Legends
08/07/2025
Was it EVER possible?
02/07/2025
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