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    Silence of Mind...

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    • Dimitrios KanellopoulosD Offline
      Dimitrios Kanellopoulos Community Manager @ChrisA
      last edited by

      @chrisa said in Silence of Mind...:

      that goes even further: I once told one of my teachers, that “I” had problems feeling “my body” and he then replied:" Ah, so you are actually two persons?- YOU and YOUR BODY?" .

      I love this!

      Most of the people now-a-days don’t know their body (they say) and some even don’t want to look at it

      Community Manager / Admin @Suunto
      Creator of Quantified-Self.io
      youtube.com/c/dimitrioskanellopoulos
      https://instagram.com/dimitrioskanellopoulos
      https://www.strava.com/athletes/7586105

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      • Łukasz SzmigielŁ Offline
        Łukasz Szmigiel @ChrisA
        last edited by

        @chrisa one of my physiotherapist kept insisting that I try to listen to my body. I’ve had no idea what he was talking about, and I regarded it as a mambo-jumbo inspired by eastern philosophy. Only recently I’ve begun discovering what it really means, how it is to experience the of “listening” to the body during the post-injury healing process and how to step back and try to observe what is hurting me.

        And it’s very humbling.

        S9PP 2.40.38

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        • W Offline
          wakarimasen Silver Members
          last edited by

          The ‘body as machine’ thing has been a revelation to me over the last few years. I regularly slept very little, ate sporadically and drank too much (on occasion). When you take a step back and think of the body as a machine, it’s pretty obvious.

          Suunto Race Titanium
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          • D Online
            dulko79
            last edited by

            It is the life style that pushes us so we do not have time for anything. Flooded with stress and information we miss so many things in life, like in relationships, in health…we are focused on unimportant bizzarre things. Not a lot of people listen and stop madness until something breaks…sometimes is too late.

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            cosme.costaC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
            • cosme.costaC Offline
              cosme.costa
              last edited by

              I do not know about you, but everyday that passes I think I need less metrics and features.

              Everybody has his history, as a child I was very active, but in my late teens and uni time I was very inactive (with all its consequences), then I started doing quite a lot of MTB until I have two boys and I stopped again, when the younger started to let us sleep I started again with the MTB and running, this was 4 years ago. I bought, then, my first chest strap and GPS device and it helped me, as @ChrisA says, to keep me active and not giving up, because I could see the progress. But nowadays that I listen to my body I think that I could pass without half of the things that the devices offer. For me the problem is the people that are more obsessed with the metrics and features than in enjoying the run/swim/ride… The other day, I even enjoyed doing some hard intervals 😮
              The more you know yourself, the less you need, but the thing is that we want all even we are not going to use it.

              isaziI 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 5
              • cosme.costaC Offline
                cosme.costa @dulko79
                last edited by

                @dulko79 said in Silence of Mind...:

                It is the life style that pushes us so we do not have time for anything. Flooded with stress and information we miss so many things in life, like in relationships, in health…we are focused on unimportant bizzarre things. Not a lot of people listen and stop madness until something breaks…sometimes is too late.

                I completely agree with you!

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                • isaziI Offline
                  isazi Moderator @cosme.costa
                  last edited by

                  @cosmecosta this is why I want my watch to help me during the activity, and give me some measurements that I can use, and not suggest me what to do or tell me that I am not training properly 🙂

                  Watch: Suunto Vertical Ti

                  Blog: isazi's home

                  cosme.costaC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                  • cosme.costaC Offline
                    cosme.costa @isazi
                    last edited by

                    @isazi Agreed!

                    But here, IMHO, users need to be educated and sport watch producers need to educate how the metrics work. As an example, today I did a trail run where I did my best or second best time ever in that route, and I’m feeling that I’m improving but the new TP metrics are saying that I’m losing fitness, and my VO2max has gone also down. I know that all this metrics are based on HR and HR thresholds and I know how to trick VO2max to go up, and I know why it went down. I’m going to get obsessed because the watch and SA say something that I know is not true, NO but other people yes and this is also not good.

                    Łukasz SzmigielŁ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                    • Łukasz SzmigielŁ Offline
                      Łukasz Szmigiel @cosme.costa
                      last edited by

                      @cosmecosta even if you know how it works it’s sometimes hard to do. The pressure of numbers is real 😉 I’ve managed to keep myself under 145 HR when the temps went up only because I’ve switched pace off my watch face. I know that my pace is irrelevant but I can see how slow I am and its bugging me. Can’t see it, it’s not there, I don’t think about it, I focus on breathing, gait, etc and HR goes down.

                      S9PP 2.40.38

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                      • Dimitrios KanellopoulosD Offline
                        Dimitrios Kanellopoulos Community Manager
                        last edited by Dimitrios Kanellopoulos

                        At my peak performance (climbing some pods) I did not have HRM. Yes I did track , but no HRM.

                        I still miss those times.

                        Here is a fun fact. At one of those trainings back in 2015 I had worn an HRM from a friend.

                        I went back to look at the values, it was something like avgHR 190 (not even sure if that is correct), something that today would explode me. Or do I think it would?

                        Community Manager / Admin @Suunto
                        Creator of Quantified-Self.io
                        youtube.com/c/dimitrioskanellopoulos
                        https://instagram.com/dimitrioskanellopoulos
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                        ? 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                        • ? Offline
                          A Former User @Dimitrios Kanellopoulos
                          last edited by

                          @dimitrios-kanellopoulos back in 2019 on one of the 10K races my average heart rate was 191 bpm, maxing out at finish line at 206 bpm. Not sure if HR data was correct or not, but it was mind blowing looking back at data the next day. It didn’t felt like that hard effort.

                          Dimitrios KanellopoulosD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                          • Dimitrios KanellopoulosD Offline
                            Dimitrios Kanellopoulos Community Manager @Guest
                            last edited by

                            @andrasveres that is also race HR. At a race typically the hr is +10-20bpm up, but feels ok.

                            Adrenaline?

                            But yeah, many “elite/proff” athletes do not even use HR

                            Community Manager / Admin @Suunto
                            Creator of Quantified-Self.io
                            youtube.com/c/dimitrioskanellopoulos
                            https://instagram.com/dimitrioskanellopoulos
                            https://www.strava.com/athletes/7586105

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                            • ? Offline
                              A Former User @Dimitrios Kanellopoulos
                              last edited by

                              @dimitrios-kanellopoulos indeed, we get some invisible boost on race days 🙂
                              I noticed on my training that when I start to struggle I just stop looking at metrics and start focusing on finding the right mindset for comeback. I keep my watch to display only distance, time and average pace during many of my races and keep it as simple as possible on trainings too (focused on the type of training I do). Too much data can be overwhelming and keeping away my focus from what is important at that moment.

                              isaziI 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                              • isaziI Offline
                                isazi Moderator @Guest
                                last edited by

                                @andrasveres I don’t look at time and distance on a long race, cause I don’t want to think about the future. I usually have only one screen focused on pace and a single lap, so I only focus about executing my plan in the present 🙂

                                Watch: Suunto Vertical Ti

                                Blog: isazi's home

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                                • cosme.costaC Offline
                                  cosme.costa
                                  last edited by

                                  @Dimitrios-Kanellopoulos @andrasveres You know which is the most important metric for me? Time of the day, to make sure that on week days I arrive at home before kids wake up and on weekends before my wife is angry 😀

                                  Jokes aside, we also should know that every individual is different. I usually run with a friend that his avgHR is 20 bpm less than mine for the same pace and route. At the beginning I thought his chest strap was faulty, but now we are using the same model and same watch. The other day we did some hard intervals, if you see his graph you can see perfectly all the intervals but mine was lets say, flattish. Of course he is more fitted to me.

                                  D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                                  • BulkanB Offline
                                    Bulkan Moderator
                                    last edited by

                                    I really like the @ChrisA post. Agree 100%. I began a path of less is more a few years ago after my surgeries. When you learn that body has a time to health, mind has another timing to health and you have to go brick by brick, adjusting, learning about your body and a process, slow process…

                                    Since then I use aerobic threshold (not anaerobic) to keep my workouts easy even when I’ve been asked if I’m injured because I ride or run very slow. In our society the healthy approach is gone. I prefer to get a faster time in a route with low heart rate rather than go all out and get a Pb. Sometimes a race, or nowadays a faster time in a route I like to do once a month.

                                    The metrics can be useful or a great disturbance in the day.

                                    I have almost all my notifications off, I prefer to run at 5;00a.m with the silence rather than 13;00 with the noise of the city… I train most of my time alone and I need that part of life. So this approach of silence is very intriguing for me.

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                                    • ? Offline
                                      A Former User
                                      last edited by

                                      @isazi GPS reception can be wobbly sometimes and that affects pace too. Usually I have a target finish time or an average pace set for myself, thats why I use this combonation for my race display. That might change in the future, as I evolve. Right now I’m on the very beginning of my road. 😉

                                      @cosmecosta sure, HR is very individual, but it was ‘high’ compared to my previous runs. I didn’t intend to compare with anyone else’s HR. 😉

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                                      • ? Offline
                                        A Former User @Bulkan
                                        last edited by

                                        @bulkan 🙇

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                                        • D Online
                                          dulko79 @cosme.costa
                                          last edited by

                                          @cosmecosta but your jokes are not far from reality 😆 especially the 2nd one 😆

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                                          • Nigel Taylor 0N Offline
                                            Nigel Taylor 0 Bronze Member @Jamie BG
                                            last edited by

                                            @jamie-bg said in Silence of Mind...:

                                            @nigel-taylor-0
                                            i think that part of it is to do with our current situation - in that lots of people are working from home where the distractions are fewer and or very different. You don’t have to get up from you desk to attend meetings, you probably don’t have a variable lift desk, I doubt your chair is as ergonomically comfortable, and you don’t have people coming up disrupting your workflow (instead they PM now), so yes I think we tend to forget to get up, change position, take a breather, like a disruption at work would encourage us to do, and due to this these apps become more popular.

                                            As it happens I’ve worked from home since 1999 as part of a change in working practices in preparation for the then upcoming “Millennium Bug” (which had zero impact on my customers but I did collect a big £££ for working through midnight on 31st Dec 1999!) - and through multiple role and account changes have never had to go back in other than a meeting every couple of months, so I’m well adapted by now!!

                                            But yes, I get this point that there is probably a new focus on “being reminded to look after the self”.

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