Sympathy
I have new sympathy for the out-of-shape, of which I am one. I have often dismissed the task of getting into shape as one of pure willpower, and while I remain convinced that sheer will is sufficient, summoning such conviction is far easier said than done.
As part of my preparation for this fall’s century, I obtained a heart-rate monitor. According to The Complete Book of Long-Distance Cycling (thanks Tyler!), I should be doing my “pace” rides mostly in Zone 2, or 65% to 84% of my maximum heart rate. Unfortunately, even my “easy” rides are putting me in the upper part of that range, very close to where I think my lactate threshold is located. O, how out of shape am I.
I have no doubt that I will improve with time. Indeed, I must improve if I am to finish my goal. This is far from a cake walk.
Years ago, I managed to go from zero to triathlon in three months, but then I had House for a training buddy, which made motivation easier. I have no local training buddies this time around. Getting up early in the morning for practice feels just this side of impossible.
Still, the potential reward is enticing: becoming one of the “lean people.” Not just lighter — stronger.
The solution? Eat well and exercise. So simple to plan, so difficult to execute.
You have my sympathy. It took me four months after college to get used to fruit as a snack and to exercise daily; then of course the holidays came and set me back another couple months. Now that I have Jenny to work out with it’s much easier to stay motivated.
which hr monitor did you get? i’m getting more serious about this thing.
I got one made by Timex. Seems to work well. It’s not a fancy-pants data logging system, but it does have alerts to let me know if I’m in my target heart rate range.
I am interested in how you will determine you HRmax empirically. I have tried this on a run intervals session and obtained results of 215 bpm. If you have a good method I’d like to try it out…I’m thinking hill repeats would do the trick.
I think I will try the technique outlined in that book. Essentially, find a big hill, charge up it like mad until your legs are burning and you’re seeing stars, then, just before you collapse, glance down at your HRM.
I suppose the lab route is another option, but I’m not sure if I’m ready to make the investment.