JULY 2018 RUNNERâS WORLD 53
HOW TO MAKEMORNINGS STICKREWARD YOURSELFTreating yourself to something youenjoy after the run â like the dayâsfirst scroll through Instagram,your favourite podcast, or adelicious breakfast â will actuallydevelop neurological pathwaysthat associate the early-morningrun with said reward. Soon,those same Pavlovian pathwaysactivate whether you give yourselfthe reward or not. Itâs like yourbrain learning to subconsciouslymotivate itself.``````LET YOURSELF GO SLOWLYFor those used to running in theafternoon or evening, the bodyâsearly sluggishness might bedisheartening at first. âMy onepiece of advice,â says coach JohnHonerkamp, âis focus on effort,not pace. The body is slow-movingin the morning, and it needs toget used to it.â The surest wayto abandon your new morningroutine is trying to PB every day.âIt doesnât mean youâre not gettingfitter. Getting out the door is theimportant thing.â``````GIVE IT THREE WEEKSBefore the November Projectbecame a fitness sensation,founder Brogan Graham wastasked with convincing friends,acquaintances and strangers towake up before the sun. Once iseasy â itâs novel and thrilling. Buthow do you make it a habit? âMakea goal of more than one morning,âGraham says. âYour first time isgoing to suck. The second oneyouâll have a better understanding.And the third, youâll be lookingforward to getting up.â``````THINK ABOUT FUTURE YOURecall when you first startedrunning. Maybe your ankleshurt, your lungs burned. Yetyou persisted; and looking backnow, youâre better for it. Takethis same outlook for developinga morning routine right now:Youâll be so glad you did. âIalways regret not going on mymorning runs,â says Honerkamp.âBut I never regret doing it.â
Howyoufeelinthemorningisadirectresult of all the decisions you made theprevious night. Adopt these small habits,and becoming an early runner will beworlds easier.``````Pull back your bedtime.Perhaps thesingle most important part of getting upearlyisgoingtobedearly.âAlotofpeopletrying to develop a morning runningroutine neglect that part,â says coach MarioFraioli. âAs you start to get up earlier, youwill get tired earlier, and listening to thatcueisessential.âInessence,becominga morning runner is less about forcingyourself awake and more about listening towhenyourbodyneedstohitthehay.``````Trymelatoninâbutearlyevening.Melatoninisanaturalhormoneproducedbythebodythatinducesdrowsinessandregulates the wake-sleep cycle. Recently,over-the-counter supplements have gainedpopularity among those who have troublefallingasleepbutdonâtwanttocommittoan âartificialâ sleeping aid. (You do need aprescription though.) Kristin Eckel-Mahanrecommends that instead of poppingmelatonin right before bed, like you wouldasleepingpill,takeitearlierintheevening,``````whichwillworktomoreeffectively adjustyour body clock. âTo shift your chronotype,this is a much better mechanism,â she says.``````Ban blue light.Youâve heard it athousand times: no phones for at least30 minutes before bed. Thatâs not justbecausecheckingworkemailcan stressyou out, but also because the blue light issignalling to your brain, and thus the restof your body, that itâs time to be active.âThe central pacemaker in the brain isprimarilydeterminedbythelight-darkcycle, and is extremely light-responsive,âsays Eckel-Mahan. âAbnormal light ex-posure will misalign your clock.â``````Eat dinner early (and donât eat again).Each cell, tissue, and organ in the bodyhasitsowninternalclockthat producesits own biological rhythm, and in a perfectworld, all of these clocks will be in sync.Just like bright lights signal to yourbrainthatitâstimetowakeup, food tellsthe metabolic organs that itâs time foractivity. That midnight snack you thinkis harmless (youâre a runner, after all), isactually telling your liver and kidneys, forexample, that itâs time to go. âGenerallyyouwantyourfoodintaketomatch youractivity phase,â says Eckel-Mahan. âThatkeepsyourclocksaligned.âWhatâs more,she adds, eating during your bodyâs restphase, and thus misaligning your clocks, isthoughttopromoteobesity,diabetes, andother metabolic disorders.``````Donât bring work home with you.Itâs the advice of innumerable productivitymanuals and self-help guides: get yourhardest work done first thing in themorning,whenyourmindistypicallysharpest and willpower strongest. Andyour morning run could also benefit fromit. If you put off your hardest work till theevening, bringing that baggage home withyou, itâs a recipe for stressed sleep. Plus,front-loading your work and running inthe morning (which is shown to improveconcentration and memory) can create apositive feedback loop: run early, feel great,nail your big project, tend to smaller thingsintheafternoon,comehomeclear-headed,fall asleep early, repeat.
TO WIN THE A.M.,ACE THE P.M.You get hooked onmorning running. Iget to the office, and``````people are half asleep;they ask me, âWhat areyou on?!â I feel like Iâmon top of the world.â`````` JOHN HONERKAMP, RUNNINGCOACH AND FOUNDER OF THENOVEMBER PROJECTâS FIRSTNEW YORK CITY TRIBE
jacob rumans
(Jacob Rumans)
#1