Question to the Coach:
...I must confess I have been LAZY. I have been out to the work out two of the three times. So I have no problem getting up on Saturday and driving 45min. to do the running, but during the week I just can't get motivated. Do you think to kick myself in the A** I should run in the morning? I think that might work ... but like I said I have been lazy. Please help! Talk to you soon.
Coach Randy's response:
Motivation is a feeling, feelings are a choice. Like so many things in life. Happiness is a choice. Example: You get in a traffic jam, your choice could be: to sit in this rush hour traffic jam and appreciate the time alone with your thoughts to sort out the world, or.... Another example: When the weather is cold and windy you can think about how you are going to dress for today's run and what route will be plowed or out of the wind. You can think about the great challenge and how you will conquer it. (The same would go for 90 degree heat)
Or, you can bitch, moan and complain about how the world is and do nothing and be miserable!
So, when your mind seems to be made up that it wants to do anything but run, go run. Show your mind that not running is not an option. Hey head, get with the program or be miserable, it's up to you, I'm running! Feel bad? Run down? Unmotivated? Good! Once this run is finished you will have a much greater feeling of satisfaction and accomplishment than an easy run on a nice day. Those are the wimpy runs!
So the next time you feel unmotivated. Get your lazy a__ out of bed and Go Hammer!
Stay obsessed,
Coach Randy
Discomfort, exhaustion, and even suffering come to mind while out there yes, but such trials bring about a spirit of adventure and quests, as well as nirvanas, unknown through the easier ways we have come to take for granted as whole.
"They've moved out of the society that would have protected them, and into the dark forest, into the world of fire, of original experience. Original experience has not been interpreted for you, and so you've go to work out life for yourself. Either you can take it or you can't. You don't have to go far off the interpreted path to find yourself in very difficult situations. The courage to face the trials and bring a whole new body of possibilities into the field of interpreted experience for other people to experience - that is the hero's deed."
- Joseph Campbell