You may have heard the phrase the ‘reverse taper’ lately. It can be all the rage on social media to use the term, but what does it really mean? I personally don’t love to use this term because after a goal race you don’t literally reverse the taper. If you did literally reverse the taper, you would probably end up injured and burnt out. The idea behind the reverse taper is that you would gradually get back into training slowly. It is important to take time off after a goal race. Sometimes athletes will experience a ‘come down’ or ‘post race blues’ after a goal race because the endorphins all start to wear off and the building towards that big goal has stopped. It can feel like a strange time, but this is a great time to start planning for your future and not get lost in the post race blues
Have you ever had ‘post race blues’
Using the reflection time as a place where you can find ways to improve for next season
Come up with a plan for the next 6-18 months blueprint
Sign up for or research your next race
What if you don’t feel like running after the first 1-2 weeks off?
This is a normal feeling
Sometimes you need to take more time off but sometimes you do just need to ACT before you get the ‘feeling back’
Seasonal changes can make you feel weird during an already weird time
Don’t focus too much on how you ‘feel’ during this time of year
Consistency is the key to success
Don’t do too much too soon
A reverse taper is not a literal thing
You want to take time off then rebuild mileage back to 50-70% of peak marathon mileage
Workouts should be 1 month after race and very short like 6x 1 min ‘effort based’ pick ups
Don’t focus too much on comparing
Don’t look at your marathon training cycle through rose colored glasses
You can’t peak forever
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- FrequencyUpdated weekly
- Published25 October 2024 at 20:02 UTC
- Length42 min
- RatingClean