"You take the good, you take the bad, you take them both, and there you have
The Facts of Life
The Facts of Life"
Human physiology is a weird thing. Through sport and exercise, I'd like to think that I've gotten more in tune with my body and understands its workings so much better. But I am constantly confounded by when it decides to have good days and bad days.
I was really hoping to have a day where I would fly yesterday, but it's understandable why I didn't. I was up particularly late (about 3 hours later than normal), so a bit under-rested, and with some extra potent coffee in the morning. From the second I got on the trainer, my heart rate was 15-20 bpm higher than it should have been. Heart rate may be up, but no reason I can't get in the work, right? And for the most part I did, with a pretty tough session. I was getting tapped out in the last 30 minutes, so maybe some more calories would be necessary for that ride. I'll experiment in the future. Once the ride was over, I was out for a quick 5 mile run. Or what should have been a quick 5 mile run. But the weather was ugly, winds at 45+ km/h, and with all the twists on the route it was hard to get into a proper rhythm. I was a bit disappointed with the run time, as I ended up averaging 5-7 seconds more per kilometre than I was planning. The day was good that I got in a lot of hard effort, even if my numbers weren't what I wanted. The response will be to get faster, and hit the numbers next time, right?
And then this morning I went to swimming. After yesterday, I was dragging around the house, and not moving too quick on my way to the pool. Once in the water, everything clicked and I was flying. Every stroke was strong, the times were low, the pace was high. One of the best days I've ever had in the pool. Months ago, we did a test 100 and fairly rested I hit 1:33. Today, as the last 100 of a 4k swim, I went all-out for 1:29. Something must be falling into place.
This is the second swim in a row where I've felt like death warmed up before getting to the pool, and ended up dominating the workout. (Last Friday followed a speed session on the run.) When I feel great, my swim is horrible. When I want to go back to bed, I'm a fish. Does this make sense to anyone?
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