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Trimarni is place where athletes and fitness enthusiasts receive motivation, inspiration, education, counseling and coaching in the areas of nutrition, fitness, health, sport nutrition, training and life.

We emphasize a real food diet and our coaching philosophy is simple: Train hard, recover harder. No junk miles but instead, respect for your amazing body. Every time you move your body you do so with a purpose. Our services are designed with your goals in mind so that you can live an active and healthy, balanced lifestyle.

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Filtering by Tag: no excuses

Tomorrow I will.....

Marni Sumbal, MS, RD


Are you a tomorrow person?
Do you constantly find yourself saying that you will do better tomorrow?
Do you find yourself stuck in a hamster wheel, day after day, not starting something today that you promised yourself yesterday that you would do tomorrow?

As you continue to check off another day of your life today, what's making you feel like things aren't going as you planned today? 
Are you already looking forward to a fresh start (or a better day) tomorrow?

Many times, tomorrow brings hope that it will be a better day.
My question to you is what makes tomorrow such a better day than today? 
What makes today such a bad day?

The idea of waiting until the right or perfect day or time to start something is likely causing you to put off making the change(s) that you need to make, right now.

Whether it's diet, training, exercise, career, relationships, travel or something else in life, you don't have to wait for the perfect opportunity to start something that is important to you. 

One reason why you may be waiting until tomorrow to make a change (or start something new) is because you are letting your feelings get the best of you. 

Sometimes feelings are inaccurate and can be road blocks in an attempt to make progress.

If you are letting your feelings become your reality, you may find it difficult to make smart decisions which can help you move closer to your goals. 

The truth is that you may always feel too busy, too scared, too overwhelmed, too insecure or not good enough.

You can try to not bring your feelings and thoughts to tomorrow or you can choose to change your feelings and thoughts today to take immediate action.

Tomorrow is just another day.
Your thoughts, feelings and emotions will always present. 
How you deal with them is up to you. 

If you keep procrastinating, you will look back with regret, wishing you would have started earlier.

Bring confidence to every day of your life and make things happen today. 

Build confidence, skip the excuses

Marni Sumbal, MS, RD

"Ninety-nine percent of the failures come from people who have the habit of making excuses."
-George Washington Carver
 
 

Saturday morning brick:
2:45 trainer ride
1 hour warm-up (including 20 min of 1 min single leg drills each leg, then both together, etc.)
Main set: 
3 x 15 min Z3 upper w/ 5 min EZ (cadence 90+ rpm)
10 min EZ
2 x 5 min Z4 low w/ 3 min EZ (cadence 90+rpm)
Cool down
 
30 min (3.5 miles) treadmill 'brick' run
15 min warm-up (last 5 minutes picked up the pace a little)
Rest/straddle treadmill for 1 minute
Main set:
5 x 2 minutes (90 sec at half IM race pace, 30 sec at olympic distance race pace) w/ 1 min rest/straddle treadmill
Cool down walk

 
Sunday long run (treadmill):
10.5 miles/1:25
Dynamic stretching warm-up
30 min warm-up (stretched out every 8-10 minutes)
Main set 3x's:
5 min @ half marathon race pace (+20 sec slower)
5 x 1 min @ Olympic distance race pace w/ 20 sec rest in between
1 min straddle treadmill, repeat 2 more times.
Cool down
 
 
It's too cold
I don't have time
I'm too slow
I'm too tired
It won't work
I can't do it
I am not strong enough
I am not smart enough
 
If there is one thing that motivates me every morning to train smart it would be my triathlon goals. My season is laid out well in advance so that I can prep and peak at appropriate times and minimize chances of burnout.
But if there was one thing that keeps me enjoying exercising when I'm not training for triathlons, it would be how great I feel when I workout (and after).
 
One thing that I encourage athletes and fitness enthusiasts to remember is that training for a race is not required to be healthy. You can be healthy and not be training for a triathlon, an Ironman, a bike race or a 5K. Although training may improve health, if not done carefully, training can be very damaging on the body, can interfere with balance in life (work/family/etc.), can increase risk for disease/illness and can increase risk for injury.
 
But no matter if you are training for a race or just exercising for health, it's important to understand the difference between building confidence and having a no excuses mentality when it comes to reaching your fitness goals. 
 
I find that it requires a lot of energy to make excuses. First, there's the thought of what you should be doing. Then there's the thought of why you can't do it, why you don't want to do it, why you don't have time to do it or why it can't be done. Then there's the energy to convince yourself that the reason for not doing whatever you should be doing is good enough to keep you from doing it. But then in the back of your mind, you feel guilty, upset or frustrated that you have convinced yourself that you can't do what you should do.
 
I've said "I can't" many times in my life. In career, education and in sport, I am not afraid of admitting that "I can't" is part of my vocabulary.
But when it comes to my goals, whether career, education of sport, I refuse to give up and I don't like to waste my energy on excuses.
Typically, my use of "I can't" out of my mouth comes from a lack of confidence at the task ahead. I have no problem putting in the work when the work needs to be done but often times, I doubt myself, my skills and my ability to succeed and that's when I need support to keep me positive.

Everyday we are faced with choices and for many, diet and exercise and other life choices are viewed as chores. Something that "has" to be done. But when it comes to making things happen because you have a goal for yourself, you have to make the choice to get it done. Sure, motivation may be higher at certain times than others but just think of all the energy you are making on excuses and perhaps it's time that you spend a little more energy on how you can make things happen.
 
One of the best ways to stop (or reduce) excuses is to work on confidence. Confidence that what you are doing is moving you closer to your goals. (even if you think that you should be doing more or something differently - if you are aiming for perfection you will not be able to recognize progress).
 
Confidence is the feeling that you are unstoppable, even if you have to change the plan at times (but never change the goal).

Confidence is knowing that you can still move closer to your goals as long as you try. And even if you think you could be doing more or better, you don't let that black or white mentality keep you from succeeding.

When you focus your energy on why you can't do something, your mind will give you plenty of reasons why you can't do it. But if are confident that something is better than nothing, you will be amazed how making a little effort, every day, will move you toward your goals. On the contrary, giving yourself reasons why you can't make things happen will not give you the results you want (even at crunch-time when you feel the pressure and motivation to make things happen that should have happened weeks or months prior)
 
Sit down with yourself and create a plan. Life, nutrition, exercise - whatever it is that you are struggling with when it comes to motivation, dedication, discipline or enthusiasm.

Create a plan that is realistic and practical and allows for progress. Your plan is YOUR plan and is helpful only for you and your goals at this time in your life.

If you feel you are too busy, too cold or too tired, close your eyes and visualize yourself reaching your goal.

Now put that vision into your life and dedicate passion, hard work and commitment to your life in order to create the momentum that will help you move closer to your goals.
 
No more excuses.
You CAN succeed.

No excuses - home and back at it!

Marni Sumbal, MS, RD




Well, that's a wrap from the Oakley Women ambassadors, Shawn Parkin and Sweat Pants media. Photos, how-to videos, product reviews, recipes and so much more all accomplished in two days. 


Thank you Oakley Women for another amazing experience to share my knowledge on nutrition and triathlons. There's nothing more motivating and inspiring than being around so many fitness enthusiastic, passionate, hard working and motivated women. 

With a few upcoming exciting months ahead for Trimarni Coaching and Nutrition, I was ready to get home on Wednesday (1/22) to get back to the normal routine. 

                                                         

4:45am West Coast wake-up call. 
4:00pm East Coast arrival
5:45-7:15pm swim practice with Karel at UNF
3700 yards
Main set:
8 x 150's on 2:45 (middle 50 fast)



8:30pm - reunite with my furry BFF and enjoy a warm bowl of soup with Karel. 


1 can tomato basil soup + 1 can water in large pot
Add 1/2 bag edamame (out of the pod)
1/2 package mushrooms (chopped and washed)
2 large handfuls kale

After cooking covered for ~20 minutes on low-med heat (stirring at 10 minutes to combine) pour your portion into your soup bowl and top with 1 tbsp nutritional yeast and a pinch of shredded cheese. 
YUM!
I missed my kitchen!!



This morning's workout:
1:30 trainer bike (new stem on bike - thanks Karel!) + 35 minute run (wearing my new pure flow Brooks running shoes)

Bike:
20 min warm-up + 5 sets of single leg drills (1 min each leg, then 1 minute both)
Main set:
1 min ON/OFF
2 min ON/OFF
3 min ON/OFF
5 min ON/OFF
4 min ON/OFF
On was Z4 low with 90+ rpm cadence
rest of the ride steady.

Treadmill run off the bike (our complex gym)
10 min warm-up
Main set:
5 x 3 min @ half ironman race pace w/ 30 sec rest (straddle treadmill)
5 min steady
walk cool down