2 Questions For You
I.
What specific systems do you have in place for decision-making under fatigue, and how have you actually tested them in realistic conditions?
II.
When part of your plan falls apart, or mental demons start to attack, what's your framework for maintaining psychological resilience and forward progress?
1 Real-World Example
Stephen, a veteran of multiple Paris-Brest-Paris and LEL events, demonstrates how systematic preparation pays dividends. Despite his experience, LEL 2022 threw him unexpected challenges: longer, more difficult course than anticipated, brutal road conditions, and extreme weather variations from 6°C fog to 34°C heat.
His systematic approach showed its value throughout: when he lost a bidon lid before Barnard Castle, he improvised with a muesli bar wrapper rather than panic. When checkpoint food was inadequate (just cereal with no milk), he methodically found alternatives rather than accepting poor nutrition. Most importantly, when facing psychological lows around the 700km mark, he had a framework: contact his support person Mel to "realign where I was at, the conditions I was seeing and where to from here."
Stephen's success wasn't about perfect conditions - it was about having robust systems that worked under pressure. His meticulous planning, ability to adapt solutions on the fly, and systematic approach to managing both physical and mental challenges exemplify how preparation beyond just fitness determines ultra-distance success.
Clare explores these ideas in depth in our blog: London Edinburgh London - How to Plan for Success
Ready to develop systematic approaches for your next ultra-distance challenge? Our coaching goes beyond training plans to help you build robust frameworks for managing the complex demands of ultra-events.
If you're an endurance cyclist or runner stalling through fatigue. We build training and recovery systems so you can race at full power – without burning out.
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