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BODY+MINDYo u âll f e e l l e s sstressed``````People who supportothers have lessactivity in brain areasassociated with stressthan those who receivesupport, accordingto a study publishedin PsychosomaticMedicine. Stress isa burden and it canafect performance: astudy published in TheJournal of Strengthand ConditioningResearch found thatcollege athletes werenearly twice as likelyto develop injuriesduring stressful schoolweeks (such as inals)``````as they were duringperiods of minimalacademic stress.``````Youâll learn fromeveryone``````Spectating allows youto see racers you missas a participant, andthereâs something toglean from each pacegroup. âIf youâre usuallyat the front, you mightthink running is allabout competing; ifyouâre in the back, younever see how theelites glide,â saysKamphof. Spectatingallows you to take noteof the form and focusof the pros, whilegaining inspirationfrom the grit of theback of the pack.``````Youâll know whatto expect``````âTaking in the exactsurroundings andseeing other peoplemodel the courseis a powerful thing,âsays Kamphof. Letâssay you stood on a hillsection of a marathonyou were planning torun and saw a varietyof runners struggling
- elites, athletes withdisabilities, those whorun at your pace. Theexperience would helpyou develop innerstrength for when youtackle the hill yourself.âTheyâre modelling theexperience for you,so you know what toexpect and can feelmore conident inyour own abilitieswhen the time comes,âsays Kamphof.CROWD SOURCEWhy cheering for other runners can boost your performanceYOUâRE MORE LIKELY TO BELIEVEYOU CAN ACCOMPLISH SOMETHINGWHEN YOU SEE OTHERS DOING ITRAISE YOUR HAND if a spectatorhas given you a boostduring a race â if some jellybabies saved your soul atmile 20 or a strangerâs high ive putmore oomph in your steps. Now,keep that hand up if youâve been asolid spectator yourself. Still up? Itshould be. It turns out that cheeringfor other people might help makeyou a better runner.The reason is what psychologistscall âself-eicacy by vicariousexperiencesâ, a fancy way of sayingyouâre more likely to believe you canaccomplish something when you seeothers doing it. âYou think, âIf theycan do it, I can, too,ââ says CindraKamphof, a professor of sportspsychology and author of Beyond Grit:Ten Powerful Practices to Gain theHigh-Performance Edge (Wise Ink).Believing you can do somethingcan be powerful. For one, youâre morelikely to stick with a commitment``````when things get tough. For example,researchers at Penn State University,US, looked at people with kneeosteoarthritis and found those whowere more conident in their physicalabilities early in the day were moreactive throughout the day, despitepain. And in a study by the Universityof Illinois, US, people with an âI-can-do-itâ attitude were more likely to stickto exercise regimes in the long term.Kamphof, also a competitiverunner, saw this efect at irst handwhile watching the US OlympicMarathon Trials. âI never saw myselfas an Olympic runner, but my pacewas similar to some of the people inthe back,â she says. âSo I imaginedmyself in their shoes, and it gave memore motivation in my training.âKamphofâs renewed commitmentto her running helped her win theOmaha Marathon a few years later.Here are three other ways spectatingcan boost your performance.``````LOUD HAILERSMembers of the ParisRunning Club setthe standard
WORDS: KIERA AARON CARTER. PHOTOGRAPH: VIRGILE GUINARD (PARIS RUNNING CLUB)
jacob rumans
(Jacob Rumans)
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