Stephen Lane Archives - 国产吃瓜黑料 Online /byline/stephen-lane/ Live Bravely Thu, 21 Oct 2021 20:26:14 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cdn.outsideonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/favicon-194x194-1.png Stephen Lane Archives - 国产吃瓜黑料 Online /byline/stephen-lane/ 32 32 How to Cope with the Post-Marathon Blues /running/post-marathon-blues/ Sat, 23 Oct 2021 11:00:29 +0000 /?p=2534660 How to Cope with the Post-Marathon Blues

Feeling adrift in a black hole after your marathon? You鈥檙e normal, and in good company. World-class runners, coaches and sport psychologists offer their advice.

The post How to Cope with the Post-Marathon Blues appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>
How to Cope with the Post-Marathon Blues

This article was first published by


After winning the inaugural world marathon championship in 1983, Grete Waitz said she felt 鈥渁s hollow and empty as the tunnel鈥 she walked through to exit the stadium. Joan Benoit wrote in her memoir that she felt empty after big races; sometimes, she said, she couldn鈥檛 shake her foul mood for weeks.

This post-race malaise may be one of the few things most of us have in common with all-time greats. It doesn鈥檛 hit everyone and doesn鈥檛 happen after every race, but this fall 鈥 the season of long-anticipated, long-delayed major marathons 鈥 it may strike more runners than usual. Marathoning, often a profound experience, will be especially so this year. And the aftermath may be more difficult.

The good news, if post-marathon blues hit you: you鈥檙e not going crazy, you鈥檙e not alone, and you don鈥檛 need to hide it.

In fact, it鈥檚 constructive to acknowledge what you feel. Mark Coogan, coach of听听(which includes Olympians Heather MacLean and Elle Purrier-St. Pierre) sees a positive trend toward recognizing 鈥渢hat athletes are not just robots, but people鈥 鈥 an acknowledgment that, no matter your level of ability, running and competing are hard, and not just on the body.

A Grand Obsession

鈥淚 always had a huge crash after a marathon,鈥 says Ben Rosario, coach of听听(and Olympian Aliphine Tuliamuk). Rosario points to the removal of the goal that has been your north star. 鈥淢arathon training brings with it a level of addiction 鈥 you鈥檝e spent months on this one thing that got you up in the morning and drives your decisions. And then it鈥檚 gone.鈥

Amy Begley, 2008 Olympian and coach of the听听agrees. Leading up to a major race, she says, 鈥淵ou have blinders on.鈥 But after can be like 鈥渃oming down from an amazing high,鈥 Begley says. 鈥淭here is this black hole you come back to, and a lot of people don鈥檛 understand. People say you should be happy and excited.鈥 Sometimes, you are; other times, less so. And it is not necessarily tied to your results.

Expectations, Meet Reality

We may even feel worse after triumphant races. Marathon champion听Jack Fultz,听, recalls that of all his marathons, he felt the let-down 鈥渕ost poignantly鈥 after winning the Boston Marathon in 1976. Expectations 鈥 how we think we will feel 鈥 often exceed reality, says Fultz. We end up feeling like something鈥檚 wrong with us because we鈥檙e not as happy as we think we should be.

It doesn鈥檛 have to be the marathon, and it can hit even after the biggest possible successes. Five-time Olympian Nick Willis, now听,听recalls feeling most lost after his 1500m medal-winning performances in 2008 and 2016. 鈥淚t was much harder to get back to being focused on anything,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 sort of drifted for several months before getting back into anything serious.鈥

Neurochemical Rollercoaster

Neurochemical shenanigans may also play a role. We don鈥檛 know as much as we鈥檇 like about how marathoning affects the brain, but we do know that it takes a while for the brain to reset. Exercise increases levels of mood-influencing compounds in our brain 鈥 we feel better after running. But marathoning is more than just a bout of exercise for most of us. It is long, intense, and, for most of us, the culmination of a long journey toward a personally meaningful goal.

One mood influencer, dopamine, is connected strongly with the pursuit of goals 鈥 if we are taking steps toward achieving a goal we have set, the body releases more dopamine to make us feel good about it. Marathon training releases dopamine into our system, and the race itself causes a spike. But once we have achieved our goal, we lose that particular dopamine fix. The more meaningful the goal is to us 鈥 if, for example, you finally achieve your goal of qualifying for Boston 鈥 the harder the crash may be, and the harder we may find it to get refocused.

听that another mood-influencer, Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor (BDNF) fell below baseline levels three days after a marathon. (However,听 that, on average, marathoners鈥 moods were still elevated three days post-race. Plus, says Astrid Roeh, the lead author of both papers, 鈥淥ne would assume that changes in BDNF would take more time to affect mood.鈥) Our brain workings are still murky, but it does seem plausible that the post-race emotional let-down may have a similar cause to our physical soreness: Our bodies are repairing the stress of the effort.

Masters runner feeling post-marathon blues
If post-marathon blues hit you: you鈥檙e not going crazy, you鈥檙e not alone, and you don鈥檛 need to hide it.听(Photo: Getty Images)

Normal-Person Time

Because the causes of the emotional let-down are complex, there鈥檚 no simple solution to getting over it. Common advice is to set another goal. Benoit wrote in her memoir that she often pivoted her focus to the next big race as quickly as possible 鈥 but, she allowed, that usually didn鈥檛 help.

Better, perhaps, to get away for a while. 鈥淏e cautious about how quickly you jump into either signing up for another race or getting back into training,鈥 says sports psychologist Justin Ross. 鈥淩egistering for another race or resuming training too soon just becomes a hopscotch move over processing what you just accomplished.鈥

The coaches concur. 鈥淭he ones who try to jump right back into the next thing end up having bigger problems,鈥 says Begley. 鈥淵ou have to take a breath.鈥 Coogan agrees, adding, 鈥淒o the things you haven鈥檛 been able to do. Go have fun 鈥 try to be normal.鈥 Rosario prescribes going to Disneyland: 鈥淕et away from the running world. Indulge yourself. Give yourself time to let that excitement come back naturally.鈥

That鈥檚 not always easy, however, and can cause problems of its own. 鈥淲e still have goals and dreams,鈥 says Amy Cragg, a two-time Olympian who now coaches听,听鈥渁nd it doesn鈥檛 make sense to say 鈥榙on鈥檛 think about them.鈥欌 Normal-person time can leave you feeling that you鈥檙e letting yourself go, and your goals are getting further out of reach.

Rather than not trying to think about your running goals, try to broaden your focus to include non-running goals, suggests Dr. Loretta Breunig, author of听, who also blogs regularly for听.听鈥淰ariety stimulates dopamine,鈥 she says. She cautions, however, that your new goals 鈥渉ave to give you a sense of pride.鈥 Runners run because we find meaning in running 鈥 but we don鈥檛 have to be single-minded about it. 鈥淟ean into other aspects of your life,鈥 advises Stephanie Roth-Goldberg, sports psychotherapist and founder of听.

Staying active is important with any strategy, and not only because it will help you feel like you鈥檙e still making some progress toward your goals. If there is a neurochemical cause for feeling dispirited 鈥 your brain is used to exercise 鈥 it is good to get that fix somehow: Easy running if your body is up to it; biking, swimming, walking, or just getting outside with friends if it isn鈥檛.

The Wisdom of Canines

Keeping your race in perspective can help you feel less adrift after it. 鈥淭ry to ground yourself in what鈥檚 really important,鈥 says Jonathan Green, coach of Olympic bronze medalist Molly Seidel. 鈥淩aces are a special thing, and we should really try to enjoy them in the moment, but running is just left-foot, right-foot 鈥 there are bigger things out there.鈥

It鈥檚 easy for runners to magnify the importance of running, according to Roth-Goldberg. 鈥淎thletes devalue other aspects of their lives,鈥 she says. We need to be reminded that running isn鈥檛 everything. 鈥淩unning can be a big important part of your life, but it doesn鈥檛 define you,鈥 Rosario says. 鈥淚f you think things will change because of how you run, you鈥檙e mistaken.鈥

Sometimes we need a reminder that our individual worth is more than just our running. Rosario likes to quote something one of his athletes, Scott Fauble, likes to say: 鈥淵our dog doesn鈥檛 know you ran a marathon.鈥

It鈥檚 a valuable reminder even for professionals like Fauble, the top American finisher at the 2019 Boston Marathon 鈥 for those of us running for the joy and the pursuit of our own personal goals, it鈥檚 even more important. Be the person your dog thinks you are 鈥 which is much more than a marathoner.

The Companionship of the Long-Distance Runner

Further, marathon running is not just a solitary experience, and often runners are missing the comradeship of the training and raceday as much as they are the actual running. 鈥淧eople often fail to recognize that training and racing has a social connectivity piece,鈥 says Roth-Goldberg.

Post-marathon, runners might need to rely on other parts of their social circle. 鈥淪upport systems 鈥 families, spouses, coaches 鈥 need to be ready,鈥 says Begley. But be patient if they don鈥檛 understand why this thing that obsessed you hasn鈥檛 made you happy. Cragg advises, 鈥淔ind yourself a good sounding board.鈥

If athletes are really stuck after a major race, Begley encourages them to volunteer with club practices or events, or to be pacers for training groups, or to help a friend train. These 鈥渞ace enabling鈥 activities, she says, will help runners get out of their own head, and examine their reasons for running: 鈥淭hinking about helping others can help you discover something new.鈥

It鈥檚 (a Lousy) Part of the Process

No solutions are guaranteed to work; the downs (and, it鈥檚 worth remembering, the ups) that we experience are, says Breuning, 鈥減art of what makes us human.鈥 Post-marathon, you may still find yourself in a dark place. If you do, remember that it isn鈥檛 the mark of mental weakness 鈥 any more than not being able to walk down stairs after a marathon is a mark of physical weakness. Both are signs of a hard, honest effort.

Give yourself time to heal, physically and mentally. If your moods seem especially dark or hard to shake, consider seeing a therapist, the same way you鈥檇 seek medical help for a nagging injury.

Cragg was prepared for the let-down after Rio. 鈥淚 still felt lost, but I was OK being lost,鈥 she says. 鈥淥K鈥 is also how Willis says he felt during his post-Olympics drift, and for a while, that was鈥 OK. But, he says, 鈥淚 tend to feel most alive when I鈥檓 passionately working towards a goal.鈥

And that鈥檚 probably how we are wired. Though we are not all Olympians, we are runners. Elites and duffers alike, we try to keep the arrow pointed north; the very fact that we seek the challenge of a marathon suggests that it is our nature to put a goal out there and pursue it wholeheartedly. If we must wander the desert for a while afterward, that may be the price we pay to once again reach the promised land.

The post How to Cope with the Post-Marathon Blues appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>