My leg is finally feeling better, and it's been two weeks since Sheboygan. My trainer has arrived, and next Monday is the end of daylight savings. I've finished reading the Training Bible, and will soon be done with my first nutrition book. Other than one night of light spinning, I haven't been on th ebike since Sheboygan.
It is time to begin training for next year.
I've never started training this early, and while I'm not going to ramp it up for a month or two, I will be spinning 4 or 5 days a week, just to avoid putting on any extra weight. When it's nice I'll ride outside.
My eating has already changed a bit, and early and mid-day meal portions have shrunken to accommodate the lower number of calories burned, but I still have my lifelong bad habit of pigging out later at night. Perhaps meal planning will help me avoid that.
I've never felt so motivated this late in the season. Between this year's successes, my category upgrade, and my preliminary team plan for next year (which I cannot discuss quite yet), I've already generated goals for the off-season. While my training goals are a bit more abstract for the next few months, they'll become more concrete as we approach Spring.
Off-season goals:
1. Learn about nutrition. This may seem vague, but I've never known much about nutrition and tend to eat things that make my other mom (Denise Whalen) cringe. Beyond eating fruits and veggies and avoiding sugar and fast food, I don't know much.
2. Keep riding weight below 160 (normally I jump from 155 in-season to 165 off-season).
3. Purchase a Powertap and learn to train with power.
4. Learn about racing with the big kids from those who do it.
Next season's specific goals:
1. One top 15 finish in a WORS event.
2. A top 25 overall finish in WORS.
3. A top 75 finish at Chequamegon.
Less specific in-season goals:
1. Attend 10 WORS events.
2. Attend the Tuesday night time trials at Franklin.
3. Attend two large non-WORS MTB races, such as an MNSCS or Michigan event. Maybe SBF.
I'll soon be posting retrospective pieces about my races from this year. Writing is how I think about things, and I think it will help me process some of the less obvious skills I've learned from this year.