dmuskett wrote: ↑January 29th, 2025, 4:46 pm
I'll be honest, people keep using "HD" and I figure it means like... quit the exercise or something, from the context, but I have absolutely no idea what it stands for.
My assumption has been that it stands for "handle down", i.e. quitting the session before complete, due to fatigue, pain, illness, starting too fast, house on fire, the call of nature, or whatever. I may well be wrong.
I always try to start - and hold - a pace that I've done in the past over a similar time and distance, plus or minus 1 second due to fatigue, sleep, etc. As I ramp up distance, I try to hold the same pace as the previous distance, or very close to it - see the BPP. I know at some point that this will become unsustainable, but it's not a bad idea given that the SS sessions go up only 500m/week.
I've only failed twice, but whether or not they're actual failures is up for debate.
1) I started a steady state session 4 or 5 seconds faster than normal, but felt fine (don't we all for the first 1k?), and decided to try to maintain it. I figured I'd die in the last 1-2k, but didn't. Newbie gains and all that, but I honestly thought that I had pretty much dialed in my SS pace for that sort of time/distance. It seems as though I found my new SS pace, or something darn close to it. So far it's held - lucky me.
2) I felt like crap but got on with it anyway. I started at a pace about 4s slower than normal. I didn't relish the idea of spending even more time in the seat than normal, but I wanted to make it to the end, which I did, so I considered that to be a "success", given that I didn't quit (HD?).
Your #2 concern is also one of my own. I don't want to sacrifice my form, poor as it may be, for pace. Thinking long term.