DiscoverRun to the Top Podcast | The Ultimate Guide to RunningUnlocking your Mental Running potential with Sports Psychology Practitioner Ashley Eckermann
Unlocking your Mental Running potential with Sports Psychology Practitioner Ashley Eckermann

Unlocking your Mental Running potential with Sports Psychology Practitioner Ashley Eckermann

Update: 2024-08-14
Share

Description

Building mental toughness is one of the best ways to improve your running. Without any change in fitness, having good mental strategies can help you to unlock a new level of performance. This is the key to overcoming a setback or managing stressful situations that all runners face like pre-race nerves or balancing a hectic schedule.

Ashley Eckermann is a former competitive triathlete and a noted psychology practitioner who teaches athletes of all abilities to perform at their best without positive thinking. Studies show that positive affirmations don’t actually work and this interview is all about uncovering what does. You can actually train your brain to perform better!

This is not a science lecture, and we’ll focus on going through specific examples of how to apply these strategies in training and racing. Some of the topics we’ll cover include:

  • What is mental resilience?
  • How do the pros think differently than the rest of us?
  • What is the best way to deal with a stressful situation in training?
  • How can you apply strategies of mental resilience during training and racing to improve your performance?

Ashley has helped numerous athletes to transform their thinking and perform at a higher level. This is a fascinating conversation that will literally change how you think.

Maximize the Mind - Mental Performance Coaching

Connect, Comment, Community

This week’s show brought to you by:

TIMELINE

Improving your mitochondria is one of the easiest ways to upgrade your performance and make your body work better. 

Time-line Nutrition's Mitopure is backed by over a decade of research and is clinically proven to revitalize mitochondria. 

Mitopure restores mitochondrial function, so every cell in your body has the energy to do its job and keep you healthy and functioning right. In fact, clinical studies have shown that 500mg of Urolithin, one of the main ingredients in Mitopure, can significantly increase muscle strength & endurance with no other change in lifestyle.

Improving your mitochondria is one of the best things you can do for your health and with Mitopure from time-line nutrition, it has never been easier. 

Go to timelinenutrition.com and use promo code RUNNERSCONNECT for 10% off the plan of your choice.

UCAN

If you’re looking for a better energy gel that contains no sugar and instead uses a revolutionary slow burning carbohydrate called LIVESTEADY, then you should check out UCAN.

Independent, peer-reviewed studies have shown LIVESTEADY is absorbed quickly through the stomach to reduce GI distress, yet is released into the blood stream slowly to provide sustained fueling without the spikes and crashes typically associated with traditional gels. 

By avoiding the sugar spikes, UCAN can help be less reliant on frequent feedings of sugar-based fuels during the run.

All this data means using UCAN can help you avoid hitting the dreaded wall during the half, full and ultra marathon distance.

Head to runnersconnect.net/UCAN  to get 6 Edge energy gels for FREE. All you pay is shipping. You can also save 20% on your entire order at ucan.co with code RUNNERSCONNECT

Comments (1)

Steve Lockhart

I tried smiling while I was struggling at a recent 10k...worst race photo ever...don't care...I was second when I showed up to the race thinking I didn't have a fast 10k in me that day.

Aug 15th
Reply
loading
In Channel
loading
00:00
00:00
1.0x

0.5x

0.8x

1.0x

1.25x

1.5x

2.0x

3.0x

Sleep Timer

Off

End of Episode

5 Minutes

10 Minutes

15 Minutes

30 Minutes

45 Minutes

60 Minutes

120 Minutes

Unlocking your Mental Running potential with Sports Psychology Practitioner Ashley Eckermann

Unlocking your Mental Running potential with Sports Psychology Practitioner Ashley Eckermann