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Tapering Tips

71 bytes added, 13:15, 18 November 2015
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* Ensure you get plenty of sleep, especially the week before the race. The night before the race is not critical, but the few nights before that are important.
* Avoid infection by washing your hands and being careful around sick people.
* Spend time visualizing the race. Visualize your preparation, race start, the mid miles, the late miles, how to use [[Aid Stations|aid stations]], how the finish will feel, etc.
* Make lists of things you need to take with you or you need to do on the night before the race and on race day. This will make sure you are prepared and help deal with the stress. Use the same list for every race, building and changing it based on experience.
* Reduce your calorie intake to balance the reduced training load. Tapering is not the time to gain weight.
* For the bulk of the taper period, reduce carbohydrate intake and favor protein and fat. [[Protein]] and fat are critical for healing and repair. [[Protein]] should be taken several times a day; protein drinks and skimmed milk are good choices. Fats must be low in saturated fats and high in essential fatty acids. Fish oil, fatty fish, nuts, flax or flax oil are good choices.
* For the last few days, favor carbohydrate and/or fat depending on what you learned from your [[Long Run|long runs]]. (You did learn this, didn't you!) I find that fat is better for me than carbohydrate for ultras.* Store 'creative energy'. Any race should involve suffering, and that suffering requires fortitude. Spending time in visualization, meditation, prayer, yoga[[Yoga]], or similar activities will help create the needed mental strength.* Use '[[The Stick|the stick]]' to [[Massage|massage ]] [[Muscle|muscles ]] and verify that there are no sore spots or problems. A massage can also help. The massage should be more gentle as the taper progresses.
* Be very careful with stretching. [[Stretching]] may help, but it can also cause damage.
* If you feel crappy in the taper period, you're suffering from [[Taper Psychosis]]. Most runners hate the taper period, often feeling guilty, lethargic, stiff and generally out of sorts. This is normal; just accept that you'll be okay on the day.

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