Showing posts with label rehearsal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rehearsal. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Indoor Riding: Purely Mental & Keeping Your Focus

I spent the last two days riding on an indoor-trainer - a generous gift from marketing consultant, Reeves Lim Leong. For the relatively uninitiated, I mounted my road-bike on an indoor-trainer (an apparatus that locks your bike in place, and allows for variable resistance). The version I use is the Minoura Rim Drive Trainer, which operates with two wheels over the rim of my road-wheels. The advantage of this type of contraption is that, it spares my expensive race tyres from being worn out. The version I used previously (years ago) was abrasive on my tyres, and left sticky shreds of residue after each riding session.
The roller pressure is kept at an even 365 watts, and larger resistance would cause more rim/roller pressure and wear them out. The initial pedal resistance is not very hard, and gains nice momentum after a few revolutions. I have up to seven levels of difficulty to adjust to. Due to the varying resistance offered from each style and model of trainers, it has often been described that, an hour of indoor riding might be equivalent to 1.5 hours outdoors. It certainly feels that way, since you do not enjoy a variety of surroundings and scenery.

Considerations for doing indoor sessions with your trainer:

1)    Keep you room ventilated. Open all windows.
2)    Use a fan, and ensure that you are adequately cooled especially when the humidity is high. Set your fan to blow at your face-level for most effect.
3)    Ensure that you have adequate fluids. Fill up two bottles of hydration.
4)    If it is a session that is 3-4 hours long, consume nutrition as per your long rides outdoors.
5)    Lay a large towel directly underneath your body, including the pedals. This will assure your family against a wet and slippery floor. Use a smaller towel, draped over your handle-bars/aero-bars set-up.
6)    To ease into the mundane situation of riding-but-not-moving, you can catch up on the news on television.

Deca-Ironman Kua Harn Wei has spent 4-6 hours on his trainer when it rains. Rumour is, he used to do it consecutively, every day, for three weeks as a prelude to his 10 Ironmans done back-to-back for 10 days. Indoor-trainers may be testing on your patience and mental resilience, yet it is as Spartan (and mentally punishing) as it gets. It is certainly safer than riding on the roads these days (unless you mounted your bike poorly). However, you do lose the effort put into balancing, bike handling, and experiencing headwinds/side-winds and other impediments. Nevertheless, you can train and rehearse your entire bike leg in safety, and with strategic relevance. You can mix your program up with power sprints, strength intervals, time trials and tempo training.

Leadership Lessons: How mentally tough are you? Handling your boredom and impatience can be a useful skill. How do you handle senseless, mindless tasks like irrelevant meetings and useless presentations? How do you maintain strict focus over your professional behaviors? How aware are you about displaying appropriate behaviors?

Sunday, August 1, 2010

Dry Run On A Wet Day

 I spent the whole day undergoing a dry run for the Singapore 2010 Youth Olympic Games. Despite a persistently rainy countenance, spirits were warm, positive and encouraging for a Sunday.

Our Venue Manager led our family of about 600 volunteers and sports officials through their paces. Dry runs or rehearsals were ably and aptly conducted so that the volunteer leaders and volunteers had a clear picture of the actual event. The volunteer leaders also conducted briefings and training for their team comprising adults and youths. Our sports announcers were youths who communicated in fluent English and French. Leadership abounded in different ways and styles. There was leadership by expertise and experience.

The quality of leadership is critical for ensuring a world-class event is delivered to expectation and exacting standards. Art may imitate life. Sport may actualize life. We are expected to be competitive in the field of play, outwit, outplay and outlast our opponents and adversaries. Fairly – of course, or we may veer off-course. We do that by training hard, preparing thoroughly, and developing the mental fortitude and resilience to last the race. A wet run follows a dry run. You run through all scenarios and respond to it so that on race day our responsiveness is ingrained into our system.

Train. Rehearse. Race. The writing is on the wall.

Saturday, February 6, 2010

The Long Ride

Tomorrow morning at about 4.30am, I will set off with a group of riders into Malaysia to do a challenging ride.

Orchestrated and initiated by our leader, Clifford Lee (of the popular TriFast blog) we will ride a grueling 180km into relatively unchartered riders' territory. Over the past week, we have enjoyed intensive information relating to the distance, route, terrain and weather. Some of the 22 committed riders are feeling anxious; some are excited; others are playing it cool. It is akin to the day before an Ironman triathlon.

It will be a memorable day I'm sure, as this is a tune-up for some of us doing Ironman Malaysia at end-February. A 180-kilometre ride is a good rehearsal before the race, and this has the elements of an Indiana Jones adventure: frying-pan heat, suffocating humidity, and gasping hills. This is also a welcome respite as there is a long stretch of vacation coming up, with lots of feasting involved. This is like punishment before the pleasure. We will celebrate in style tomorrow, after the ride, as we have decided on our menu (that reads like a glutton's festival). My take is: 'Melts in you mouth, goes to your heart!' In a good way, of course. We would have deserved it after ploughing through the long distance and rolling roads.

Resting up today - okay, maybe some swim drills, bike check and my nutrition package ready for tomorrow. More on this ride tomorrow. Happy weekend to all!