This did not match the feeling I got after watching that video.
Looking ahead, I don't see the volume start to spike any time soon either, what gives!? Coach Liz is a smart cookie, I'm sure she knows me better than I actually realize. She know's that If she gave me mile repeats right now, I'd eat them up, I'd LOVE it. You're thinking "He likes mile repeats, but think's a crunch is boring? What a weirdo." I'm right there with ya on that one. I always grew up thinking MORE is better especially with high school coaches urging you to squat the day before a race. To a certain extent it's true more volume = more fitness. How do we make time for MORE? Usually by cutting out the easier work, and time for recovery. I'm in my last year as an exercise science major and something that I've known for a while, but finally come to terms with is stress = stress. There is no magic workout that gets Craig Alexander able to run a 2:42 marathon at the back half of a Ironman. What gets him there is recovery. Stress + recovery = adaptation - a common formula you'll see Bob Seebohar founder of Fuel4mance use. I couldn't agree more, actually I think this is a better way to put it, Stress + (Recovery^2) = Adaptation. Be smart about your workouts, and recover HARD and OFTEN, and you'll be healthy on race day and reach 90% of your potential, I can nearly guarantee it.
What can ruin a season is being greedy, I learned this first hand in the early months of the race season this year. All winter I had been CRUSHING my workouts, even though March - May I was running faster than I had in most races, during easy workout runs. I was ready to cut 10 minutes from my Olympic distance times, NO PROBLEM. The problem was I was being greedy, I was running too hard, when I should have been RECOVERING hard. In June, I had started to see difficulty running paces that I just fell into earlier in the year. Aches and pains didn't go away in a couple days like they used to. Luckily I knew the symptoms of overtraining well enough to know what was going on, I relaxed a bit and was able to still have a good season.
Think of your season like any endurance race, 70.3, half marathon, marathon it's all the same. In the early parts of your season (or the race) you want to feel good, know you can go faster but be confident in the fact that you DON'T need to. This requires a good deal of patience, persistence, and optimism. Three words that regularly cross my mind while racing for 4.5+ hours. Leave it to the sprinters to not be patient, we are endurance athletes. Being patient is key, if you want to get "as fast as freaking possible this instant" you're going to have a short lived career. It's not too often I start out the run of a 70.3 100%, and the same goes for any season. Persistance is the back bone of all endurance racing and the key to consistency. With training weeks nearly as long as the work week, how do we make it to the next rest day, or the next transition, or the finish line. Persistence in training (which includes recovering) is how we keep the fitness gains rolling without plateaus or peaks. Though some days you need to know when a rest day, or stopping and stretching is absolutely necessary, optimism through the rough patches of training or racing is how you continue you to reach your goals.