Sunday, October 13, 2019
The Value of Coaching
Yesterday, I ran the Tampa Bay Whiskey Run 10k. I really trained for this race. I joined a coaching program and followed it religiously. Sure, there were bumps along the way: I had twinges in my hips here and there that caused me to take a few days off; I ran some workouts too fast or too hard and needed more recovery. Even with the bumps, I felt really prepared for the race. Then, the unexpected happened: Daughter decided she shouldn’t run because of her lack of training; the weather was much warmer than planned, with no breeze. I wanted to run the race in under one hour. That didn’t happen. I ran it in 1:00:50. So close, yet so far. Still, I’m really pleased. Why?
I could have been unhappy that I didn’t meet the goal I set for myself. I could have felt that because I didn’t meet my goal, all that training was for nothing. Sure, I’m disappointed that I missed my goal by less than a minute. Let’s look at the positives. I set a new personal record for that race distance, by six minutes, which is huge. That means I ran each mile a minute faster than I ever have. I ran a race under less than ideal conditions, by myself, with no one to talk to and nothing to listen to, and finished strong. I look great in my post race picture (why is it I look better in my workout photos than I do in the ones for which I preen?). I see the value of the coaching, I didn’t die doing speed and distance work, so I was fit enough to race under adverse weather conditions. All good things. I’ll break that one hour mark in the next race.
Here in the Trenches, it’s disappointing when a relationship doesn’t work out. Especially when children are involved, there are a lot of life adjustments that need to be made. No one thinks it’s ideal to have their children with them less than all the time. It’s hard to share children with someone with whom you no longer share a life and with whom your values may differ. There are so many things outside your control, especially what happens at the other parent’s house. It’s anxiety producing, and heaven knows no one needs more anxiety. What are parents to do?
Take steps to reduce the anxiety, of course. In the Trenches, like with my running coaching, that means hard work. It means thinking about the variables in your children’s lives. It means having discussions with the other parent. It means working through your anger and disappointment enough to co-parent with the person with whom you share a child. It means developing a framework and a process to do that. Helping you find solutions, coaching you through the process, teaching you to regroup when things don’t go according to plan - that’s our job in the Trenches.
Even though we can all parent, just like we can all run, sometimes you need a professional to help you do it better and more effectively, and to handle life’s curve balls. Professionals don’t let you take the easy way, when it is not the better way. They hold you accountable to your higher self, because we all know there are days when we’d rather do what’s easy. They give you the tools to keep yourself doing what you ought to do, and to be able to regroup when things don’t go as they ought. They cheer you on when things don’t go well and when things do. The right professionals are an investment in your children’s healthy future. Sure, you can do it yourself - for years I ran without a coach. It was so much better and effective with one, and didn’t cost as much as I thought. Just a thought. Here in the Trenches.
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