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Endurance Nation


  • I am coached by Endurance Nation. EN has proven to be the most effective, value-filled coaching option I have ever used. I am over the moon about this program, the coaching, and the gains I am making. These smart guys have created a nation of interconnected athletes that motivate, inspire and hold you accountable. It's like 1:1 coaching for a fraction of the price. You won't believe the value for your membership--free ebooks, podcasts, webinars, blogs, videos, white papers--you name it. Check them out. Better yet, join!

Bodywork Revolution


  • Steve Cunningham of Bodywork Revolution is the central reason why I can get through Ironman training in one piece. No one is as good a bodyworker as Steve. No one. The nuero-stretch class he offers is so good, my teenagers don't miss it! Check it out. He also offers acupuncture, massage, meditation classes, and traditional Chinese medicine.

Ironman Florida Photo Album

My Oprah Appearance

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Training and the Law of Attraction

April 01, 2009

Endurance Nation Podcast Interview with Moi!

Here's a fun interview I did the other day with Coach Rich from Endurance Nation. It's a look at my personal life, and a rundown of some of the highlights I have had with EN over the past 18 months, including that terrific Ironman Florida PR of 1:30+!

EN is doing a "Meet the Team" series of podcasts with a number of athletes. They're fun to listen to and reveal the gamut of athletes we have in "da haus"--all very cool people. Head over to the blog, have a listen, and see if you might want to be part of a really great crew!

Meet the Team Podcast Series: Linda Patch

Posted using ShareThis

February 20, 2009

Did I Really Do That? Sometimes Ironman Feels Like A Dream

LP_FInishing_bright I was driving down the road yesterday, and the Ironman Florida swim popped into my mind. I could feel the chop of the water, taste the salt of the Gulf of Mexico, see the high rises glistening along the beach in the early morning sunshine. My god, did I swim 2.4 miles? Really? I mean, I really swam the first loop, got out and ran back in to do it again?

That swim reverie started a a virtual tour of the day in my head, all with a sense of disbelief. Did I really run out of the Gulf, disrobe the wetsuit, get all my bike stuff on, grab the bike and hit the road in 8 minutes? 8 minutes? I can barely get my running shoes on in that time on a normal day!

Did I really stay in the aeropostion on the bike for 6.5 hours? Yeah, pretty much. I could feel the mind-numbing stretch of Florida highway with five miles of bah-bump, bah-bump ripples in the road. I felt the relief when I finally rode out of them. I remembered thinking, at about mile 75, that a DVD player between my areobars would be a just the ticket to pass the time. I still think it's a good idea! :)

Did I really improve more than one mph over the first Ironman? Would my kids and husband ever understand how dedicating each 30-minute segment to them--one after the other, over and over--truly gave me the guts and the fortitude to keep going?  Did I really feel that fresh after 112 miles on the bike? Ready to run without a second thought after only five minutes in transition? 

And that run! I felt like Superman out there. I never looked forward to a run more in my life! It's too bad about the quad pain that held me back, and I can still feel the knife stabs with every step. But I relived the elation of hanging tough in the face of that pain, knowing that the full measure of my training and dedication was right there for the taking. Did I really run as much as I could? Yes I did.

And the finish!!! The finish triumphant! Driving along, I felt chills picturing the sight of the clock beginning with the number 13. Did I really take 1 hour and 35 minutes off my time? I still shake my head in disbelief. Never, but never did I think I could achieve a finishing time like that.

Through Ironman I touch a spirit and power in myself that moves me to my core. And on a random day in the middle of February, I was able to connect again to that unending pride and feeling of triumph that is now part of my soul. What a nice dream indeed.

November 10, 2008

13:51:22!!!! Ironman Florida Race Report! 1 Hour 35 Minute PR!

Linda Patch
13:51:22
Age Group 17th
Swim 14th
Bike 17th
Run 17th

Let me start by saying I never, ever in a hundred million years ever thought I could break 14 hours in an Ironman. No doubt my training with Endurance Nation (EN) is the numero uno reason why. I did the training by the book, and put my complete faith in it. You know what? If you train the EN way, and execute the EN way, not only do you take the EN Koolaid to the start line, you take flippin’ spiked Koolaid! This race is a personal best of 1 hour 35 minutes!

TAPER
It’s been a long year, and I was glad I listened to my body and took closer to a three week taper. I moved my race rehearsals a week earlier than my training plan indicated, and then slowly started taking it down three weeks before the race. Honestly, it took until Tuesday of race week for me to feel rested. On that day, I woke up and thought, "ahhh, there it is." I was good to go.

I had the worst case of taper crazies I ever remember. I think the physical fatigue started messing with my head. I had some serious work to do to get my mental state where it needed to be, as I was unraveling for several weeks. I twisted my ankle the Sunday before the race, and that was almost the last straw. I spent a good part of race week in Panama City Beach (PCB) working on my head space. I used some very simple, but powerful strategies to realign my energy and get inside what I call my “Ironmind.” I actually brought some of what I worked out to the start with me to read before the gun went off. I’m as proud of this accomplishment as anything physical I did in the race, and the mental work I did buoyed me all day. I called on it time and time again.

SWIM
Whereas the swim in ’06 was almost genteel with feet to draft the entire way, this swim was war. I have never been in a triathlon swim like it. I had to swallow a little panic in the first 30” or so. But after a few good strokes, I settled down completely. It also took a self-reminder of those sets of 10 x 150 I swam all summer! No way was I going to cop out now!

It was just a mob scene with every stroke until the final turn to shore. I lost the pack there, and sped up a little to catch it again to ride some feet. I was determined not to let that happen on the second loop, and I didn’t. I decided I would rather be in the mix and try to draft, that be out there in clear water. I love the swim!

Hit the mat in 1:24:02    

T1
Coach Rich and Coach Patrick were at the race to support all us EN athletes. I was living in mortal fear of Rich in my transitions! He would never let me hear the end of it if I hung out like I did last time. I had that volunteer hoppin’!

The day before the race, I had my DH driving all over PCB looking for the Goodwill so I could get a cheap jacket to dump at an aid station. Found one for $4.90. Perfect. I threw it on in T1, and the zipper promptly broke off. Crap. I handed it to a spectator who wanted my number so I could get it back. Coach P said he was wondering why I’m talking to spectators when I should be racing! Coach Rich is screaming all drill-sargent like—“GET ON YOUR BIIIIKE!!!” I’m so rattled I almost fall over. Coach Patrick is laughing, and so am I. Ai yi yi, I had to get out of there. Most interesting transition I’ve ever had.

T1 8:03    

BIKE
Long, somewhat dull and mostly uneventful. ! definitely rode my should bike split, as opposed to my could bike split. The "should" bike split sets up a good run. We have a saying in EN, "there is no such thing as a good bike followed by a bad run." You ride smart so you can run well. I just watched the watts, and did what I was supposed to do. I was definitely holding back and being conservative. I called on each member of my family to get me through each half hour. Keith, Ryan, Grant, Taylor, and Casey—over and over. OK, Grant, get me to 6 hours! Taylor brought me to the finish.

The wind was a factor in the first 50 miles, but nothing like in ’06. So I just kept my head down, and rode my watts. By mile 70, I thought a DVD player between my aerobars would have been a wonderful idea. I was bored. Then Mr. Hertz came into my life. Hertz and I must have passed each other 30 times in those last 40 miles. He kept me from going completely bonkers. (Saw him at the expo the next day and got a huge hug. He was nice.)

Keith, my rock, would pull up every 10 miles or so from about mile 60 on. He’d take a picture, turn up the radio to tease me, say hi, wave, and just move on. It was a nice distraction.

Nutritionally, I had that dialed right in:

  • About 275+ calories/hour, mostly Infinit.
  • Aerobottle filled with water, and a 4-hour Speedfill bottle.
  • Two, small Infinit “slurry” bottles in the singlet pockets. At mile 50 I stopped, dumped the slurry into the Speedfill, added water and I was off—under a minute for sure.
  • EFS bar early in the ride, but the stomach said nyet. Switched to Shot Blocks, and ate some mostly for something to do.
  • One to two S-caps/hour (salt complex). At the first twinge of a cramp, or nausea, or just feeling “off,” I popped an S-cap. Those things settle things down amazingly for me. I’d be set up just right after taking one.
  • Two Advil at mile 80, and one caffeine.

Perfect. With a few miles to go into the wind, I was so looking forward to the run. My legs felt fantastic, my stomach was good, and my mental energy was ready to roll! Let’s go running!

6:30:22
Rolling time 17.6 mph
Clock time 17.2 with a few pit stops

T2
Again, the ghost of Rich hovered over my every move. I was all business with the cute volunteer. Got in, got out.

5:48     

RUN
By the end of the training, I was very confident in my running. I am so speed demon, but I was cranking out the miles really well all summer. My quads don’t much like marathons, but I had no reason to worry. There was no indication of pain on any long run. I was very much looking forward to the challenge of this marathon.

I started out very easy. The aid stations just kept coming quickly. At each station, I’d walk a little at the end, then pick it right up again. By mile 6 I was feeling like I could start to pick up the pace. OMG, it was going so well!

By mile 8, I felt that first glimmer of pain in my quads. Oh crap. By the turn around, it was stabbing pain. I felt like the brain-leg connection was already getting fried. The rest of me, however, was in a super place. I felt like an aerobic King Kong. The pace was easy, my breathing was perfect, I felt like I could go all day—but the legs were screaming. This led to the…

Compression short debacle!

I had compression shorts in my run "special needs" bag. Now where the hell to change???? I slipped into someone’s back yard. There I am, in someone’s yard, trying to wriggle my sweaty butt into these tight shorts before anyone looks out a window or comes outside!  OMG, hurry up! I finally get them on, and hide my running shorts under their gas grill (which I handily retrieve the next day!).

Ahhhh, much better. I believe the shorts would have made a big, big difference if I would have worn them from the beginning. My quads, however, were already too far gone, but I believe they helped things from falling apart completely.

Nutrition was simple. Infinit in Fuel Belt until mile 5, where I dumped it. (Keith got it back.) Coke the rest of the way, with a water chaser. That was it.

By mile 18, my eyes are rolling in pain, but I keep on running absolutely as much as I can. The rest of me feels as strong as an ox. It was all there. All the training, all the taper, all the correct pacing on the bike. There is no doubt that I was ready to pull off a good marathon—if not for all this pain. Man, I was feeling good in every way but that.

Then I meet cute Luis from Mexico City. (He’s 28.) We start running together, walking a little if we have to. “Leenda,” he says, “if we keep up this pace, we can beat 14 hours.” He can do the math? I love this guy. Like Rich and Patrick describe, my Ironman racing "box "got really, really small. OK, Luis, let’s run to that lamp post. Can you keep going? We were like Rain Man out there. We did this kind of thing over, and over, and over. But we never, never let up. By mile 21, I’m telling you I would have paid $1,000 dollars for an iPod!

Hearing Mike Reilly and the crowd is like getting to the Emerald City. I was smiling from ear to ear—so happy! When I pulled up to the finish and saw 13:51, I was stunned. I could not believe it. Really, I couldn’t believe it. I thought sure I would do about an hour longer, and, truthfully, I would have been thrilled with that. EN friend Kathy G caught me, and it was nice to have an EN person right there. I saw Rich and Patrick right away, and Keith a few minutes after. It was done, and I was elated.

A few thoughts on the run…looking back I can see lots of places where I created too much friction, which ate up lots of time (shorts changing aside). I could have lopped off a bunch more time if I would have got out of my own way. Next time (planning on another Ironman in 2010), streamlining tasks during the run is the lesson from this race I’ll put into play.

THE END
So that’s the Linda Patch story of IMFL ’08. For me, race day is a journey of intention. The intention to honor my family’s support, my training, my coaches, my EN compatriots and friends, and most importantly, myself. My intention through Ironman is to wrestle the demons to discover deeper and more profound dimensions of myself that will make me a better wife, mother, friend, citizen. Through Ironman I touch a spirit and power in myself that moves me to my core. I know those of you who have done Ironman know what I mean.

Here is the race in pictures!

Gina, her friend Larry, and me just back from an easy ride.

Gina, Larry,Linda PreRide

My $4.90 Goodwill jacket I ran all around PCB to find! Not bad, heh? I had planned to wear it for the first 20 miles or so because it was chilly. The zipper promptly broke before I even got on my bike.

Photobucket

The EN coaches go to every North American Ironman race, and plan a team dinner. It was very fun to meet training buddies for the first time. Felt like meeting old friends.

EN Dinner

Coach Patrich and Coach Rich do a pre-race talk at the Gatorade swim for their athletes and anyone else who wants to sit in the day before the race. It was terrific, and just what I needed to hear.

Rich and Patrick at the Talk

Here's some of the group at the talk. Gina, KathyG, Me, Jennie, Dave, Leigh, and our mascot Gus!

EN Group Talk

I put "Stay in Your Power" on my bike to remind me to not only ride my watts sensibly, but to stay connected to what I knew I had in me, and what I had to do. Don't get rattled, don't get thrown off my game.

Photobucket

"Flow" was to remind me to find the rhythm, get into the zone, and stay relaxed and easy. Just let it unfold.

Flow

DFU is the last thing Rich said to me as I left the restaurant the night before the race--Don't F%#@ It Up! Gotta love it!

DFU--Rich's Final Words of Advice

I wanted to take my EN chickas with me through the race to draw on their strength and support. Gina, Colleen, Paula, Marianne, Nemo, Kris, Verna, Helen, Heidi, Michelle, Laura and Leigh. Thank you ladies for all your support, advice, encouragement, and friendship!

EN Girlfriend Inititals

Me and Gina before the swim start.

Gina and Linda Preswim

Mass swim start. 2,200 athletes in the water at once! It was craaazy!

Mass Swim Start

I kept it aero. Nice and low.

LP Aero Position

This is IMFL on the bike. Endless miles of the same scenery.

LP On the Road

Me on the run. Feeling really good!

Linda on the Run

Finishing up a great day!

Linda Finishing

At the finish talking to my son!

Linda at Finish On Phone

Meeting Gina as she finishes!

Linda and Gina at Finish

We are both so happy!

Linda and Gina at Finish

I just finished an Ironman,and all I get is this lousy PBR!!! Sat in the bar with Coach Rich and Coach Patrick and Keith after the race. Perfect.

Linda and Beer

Is there anything like the day after an Ironman? No pressure,no workouts,a huge sense of accomplishment--it doesn't get any better than that.

Keith and Linda on the Beach

Cooling off the legs in the Gulf before we say goodbye. Til next time!

Keith and Linda In the Gulf

March 14, 2008

A New Relationship with Food

I read Eckhart Tolle's "A New Earth" a couple of years ago, and loved the book. I recommend it to anyone who wants a deeper--and kinder--understanding of themselves and those around you. While the read can feel somewhat ethereal, I have found that once you internalize the concepts, it leads to a much more content way of being. I also found the precepts in the book very helpful to me in business and training by teaching me to be in the moment and clear. There's lots of power that comes from that state of being, whether it be trying to influence a colleague or take that run up another notch.

As you may know, Oprah is doing a 10-week series with Eckhart on "A New Earth." It's every Monday night at 8 (EST), and it runs for 90 minutes. (I download it and listen to it the next day.) I absolutely love it. To hear Eckhart expound on his thoughts has been incredibly illuminating for me. You can find out more at the Oprah web site.

On the latest program, Eckhart, Oprah, and a caller had a discussion about weight loss, which I was able to apply directly to my sugar addiction. In brief, they talked about how dealing with such things are actually spiritual at the core. If you "allow yourself to be fed by the energy in your body"--the good energy, the powerful energy, the real core energy--then you are more likely to give your body what it needs. Overeating or stuffing bad foods is actually a substitute for the sense of "aliveness" that is basic to who we are. By being truly conscious and in touch with your body, you almost don't have to think about what to choose to eat. It can be a treat or an apple, but it will be what it needs to fortify you body and soul--no more, no less.

The whole idea of using your energy as a guide really resonated with me, and this week has proved it works. By being tuned in to my energy and how I want it to support me in my athletic and personal goals, it has naturally led me to better eating. There have been some treats, but they have been eaten without angst or guilt. The salad rather than the pizza has been eaten without feelings of deprivation. I have lost 2.5 pounds of those stubborn 5 I haven't been able to shed in 18 months. Seriously, I think I might be onto a new life-long relationship with food.

One other thing...Eckhart Tolle, who doesn't exactly look like an athlete, mentioned several times how understands and values intense physical activity. He feels the kind of training we do helps people learn the power of "being in the moment," which gets you in touch with the part of yourself that is very, very powerful. The part that cannot be accessed by thinking and ideas. I know for myself, once you learn that power, there's no going back. The guy has the soul of an Ironman, for sure.

March 01, 2008

The Law of Attraction, My Son, and Striving to Excel

My boys have participated in sports all of their lives. Each of them has a black belt in Kenpo Karate, and three of four of them swim competitively. My oldest son is a nationally-ranked triathlete as well. The door to using the Law of Attraction was opened for my children through their karate training. Karate, at least as their sensei teaches, is about using your energy to accomplish any challenge the discipline asks of you--whether it be moving on to the next belt, learning a technique, or taking down an opponent.

My third son is pulling down some very fast swim times. He's getting better and better. He recently swam a 4:55 in the 500 freestyle at the state championships, which was a 12-second PR. That's smokin' fast for a 10th grader. In debriefing the race with him, he claimed that what he learned in karate is what helps him excel in his swimming. "Karate is the foundation of my life," he said. He went on to explain how, just as they were taught in karate, he visualizes himself swimming faster in practice, then taking it up a notch in meets. He says he just opens his heart and attracts the success to himself. "It's the Law of Attraction, Mom," he reminds me. "You can use it anywhere in your life, you know." I know now. How I wish someone would have opened that door for me in my early years.

Here's a short clip of him swimming to his PR. Swimming is just a beautiful sport to watch. He's second from the left standing straight and tall on the blocks.

Don't Stop Believing

  • My kids picked Journey's "Don't Stop Believing" as the theme for Ironman '06. As they hoisted the sign at the swim start, I thought, "Oh yeah, I'm going to make it!"

You Can Get It If You Really Want


  • The boys chose Jimmy Cliff's "You Can Get It If You Really Want" as the anthem for Ironman '08. Need a lift? Motivation? This will be the best three minutes of your day! Take a listen. "You must try...try and try..."

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