Ten Pieces of Advice for New Triathletes

Published by Bethany on

Here is a post I wrote for the tri club blog on unconventional advice for new triathletes!

There is a learning curve to everything, and triathlon is no different. When you first begin you’re given lots of helpful advice on using speed laces, practicing transitions, and not going all-out at every workout. But there is some advice that people won’t tell you and this is my attempt to pass along those ‘other’ lessons that I’ve learned- some the hard way!

1. When you first start training, the sky’s the limit. Let’s say you run a low 50s 10k then train for a short period, and run a low 40s 10k. Immediately your mind starts calculating how soon you’ll be running toe to toe with 30 minute 10ker Shalane Flanagan! (Not that a similar thought has ever gone through my head, of course. Actual ETA:never) The point is that the improvement curve is steeper when you first begin regular training and it’s important to celebrate the big achievements as well as the smaller ones.

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Categories: blog

Bethany

Hi, I’m Bethany–coach, author of Courage to Tri, 2x Kona qualifier, and twin mom. In a decade of coaching and racing triathlon around the world—from first sprint to IRONMAN Hawaii—I learned a ton about mindset: finding your why, sustaining motivation, overcoming obstacles, and goal setting. Now, I help writers, solopreneurs, and athletes reach their goals using the same process.