mikvan52 wrote:anything but talking about well documented training
Why in the world would you want to "document" your UT training?
Over my 25 years of running, I must have run 10,000 15K-30K training runs, but in those thousands of sessions, I never did any of them against a clock so that I could "document" them.
I did similar training for a decade or so each on skates, in a canoe, and in a pool, but I never timed my day-to-day skates, paddles, or swims.
I never even considered doing my day-to-day UT training against a clock.
I just ran/paddled/swam/skated, working hard, often as hard as I could, so that I found each session both enjoyable and satisfying.
Sure, when I did interval training, I worked against the clock.
And, of course, I worked against the clock when I raced.
But I saw no need whatsoever to time my day-to-day UT training.
Timing your day-to-day UT training puts it in the wrong temporality.
UT training is about passive, ecstatic immersion in a physical activity.
The goal is unconscious habit formation.
"Groovin"
Relaxation, ease, smoothness, enjoyment, satisfaction, fitness, health and well-being, etc.
In this ("cyclical", or perhaps, "centered"/"lyric") temporality, clock time ("linear" time), disappears entirely, as do timed "pieces" ("relative" time), as they are positioned within clock time.
Psychologically, the temporality of UT work is physical and emotional, not volitional and cognitive.
You go with the flow.
You let your will and mind go.
You don't "force it," worrying about how fast you are going.
Exact timing is a measure of narrative development and dramatic performance.
UT training sessions are not exciting stories or dramatic performances.
If you think they are, you are screwing with your head and missing the boat, the most important boat of all, the boat that determines how good you can be in the sport.
The best cross-country coach I ever had assigned workouts that sounded like this:
Easy 15 miles.
Hard 8 miles.
Medium 10 miles.
ranger
Rich Cureton M 72 5'11" 165 lbs. 2K pbs: 6:27.5 (hwt), 6:28 (lwt)