Episodes
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ou've built the fitness. Now what? This week we're digging into training specificity: how to shape your training around the actual demands of your goal race, whether that's a road marathon, a 50K, or a 100-miler like Leadville or Hardrock. Specificity is the sexy stuff athletes love to obsess over, but it's also where we see the most expensive mistakes. We break down what race-specific training actually means, when it belongs in your training calendar, and the traps that cost athletes their races.
What we cover:
Specificity is earned. Why general fitness is the raw material and specificity is just the sculpting, and why "couch to 50K" plans set athletes up to failThe training funnel. Wide and general in base season, narrow and race-specific 8 to 12 weeks out, with fine-tuning inside the final two to three weeksDuration and time on feet. Why training for the hours you'll be out there matters more than the miles on the race page (100 miles can mean 14 hours or 30)Vert, terrain, and eccentric loading. Why per-mile elevation ratio beats a weekly vert number, how to read a course profile (three 1,000-foot climbs is not one 3,000-foot climb), and training downhill resilience with the repeat bout effectFueling and gut training. The most underrated specificity of all: why you need to practice your race-day fueling for a minimum of 12 weeksThe number one trap: sacrificing fitness on the altar of specificity, from course-obsessed weekend commutes to heat suits on the treadmill in JanuaryPlus:
Listener question: "I missed my long run, so I added the miles to next week and dug myself into a hole." Why makeup miles don't exist, why the body knows stress rather than miles, and how to actually rearrange a training week when life blows up your scheduleHot or Not: running belts, handhelds, gas station candy as ultra fuel, and strength training during the taperWe're off for a two-week summer break and back in August.
Questions for a future episode? Email us at [email protected] or find us at microcosm-coaching.com.
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What is fitness, really? VO2 max, lactate threshold, running economy, durability, and neuromuscular power — in this episode we break down the five distinct systems hiding inside that one word, how each one develops, which respond fastest to training, and which age best. If you've ever chased a watch number and wondered why your race results didn't follow, this framework explains why "getting fitter" is actually five separate questions — and how periodizing your training over years brings them together on race day.
We also answer a timely listener question about running in wildfire smoke: what PM2.5 actually does to your lungs, how to use AQI (and its limits), CDC guardrails for exercising outside, when to move to the treadmill, and how to set your line in the sand before race day — including what to do if smoke rolls in mid-race.
Plus Hot or Not: gravel running, Garmin's heat acclimation metric, photochromic lenses, and whether bells or eye patches actually deter mountain lions (spoiler: your voice works better).
Send us your Hot or Nots and listener questions: [email protected]
Curious about coaching? Join the Foothills tier — $10/month for twice-monthly Ask-A-Coach calls and our Slack community of 200+ athletes. Use code FOOTHILLS10 at microcosm-coaching.com
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Missing episodes?
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Heat training and altitude training are two of the most obsessed-over (and most misunderstood) tools in endurance running. In this episode, Zoë and TJ break down the actual science: what heat adaptation does to your blood plasma, why "poor man's altitude" is a myth, and how the EPO-to-hemoglobin response really works up high.
They cover who should bother with heat or altitude training at all, the two questions to ask before you start, and why fundamentals like consistency, sleep, and fueling beat every environmental hack.
You'll hear practical guidance on hot bath protocols, ferritin levels, live-high-train-low, and the 21-days-or-24-hours rule for racing at altitude.
Plus: coach spotlight with James Nance, a listener question on time-based training in the mountains (the body doesn't know miles, it knows stress), and hot-or-not takes on golden hour and probiotics.
Curious about coaching? Our Foothills tier is $10/month for twice-monthly Ask-A-Coach calls and a 200+ athlete Slack community. Use code FOOTHILLS25.
Join at microcosm-coaching.com or reach out at [email protected].
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Durability is the word every endurance runner has latched onto — but what actually is it, and how do you build it? Zoë and TJ break down durability for marathon and ultra runners: the difference between aerobic durability (heart rate drift and cardiac decoupling over long efforts) and mechanical durability (the eccentric loading that blows up your quads on late-race descents), why a smaller engine that doesn't fade beats a bigger one that falls apart, and why the only real path is years of consistent, recoverable volume. There's no shortcut — you have to put in the time to get to the place where you can put in more time.
Before the main discussion, they take on three listener "hot or not" questions: whether antihistamines like Claritin really blunt training adaptations (the dose in that study matters more than you think), why swapping a strength session for yard work doesn't count, and the truth about chasing an "ultra bod" — energy availability, why underfueling undermines the adaptations you're working for, and why body composition is an output of training, not a lever to yank on. Plus downhill technique, easy volume, and TJ's three biggest coaching pet peeves.
Curious about coaching but not sure where to start? Join our Foothills tier for $10/month — twice-monthly Ask-A-Coach calls and a Slack community of 200+ athletes. Use code FOOTHILLS25 at microcosm-coaching.com.
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AI vs. human coaching is the big question this week: can a chatbot really build your training plan, or is it a premium cookie cutter? Zoë and TJ break down what coaching actually is — the plan plus the relationship, communication, and buy-in that no model replicates — and dig into the research, including why studies lag behind the tools athletes are actually using, the 2025 analysis pointing toward hybrid human-plus-AI models, and why AI is a good summarizer but a poor authority. Before that, three rapid-fire segments: why you should hide the heart rate field while racing (and trust RPE instead of a signal that lags 30–90 seconds and gets polluted by heat, caffeine, and sleep debt), whether Hotshot actually fixes muscle cramps and side stitches or just floods your mouth with a sensory distraction, and how high humidity wrecks evaporative cooling, spikes your RPE, and slows your pace — plus why heat training isn't the biohack shortcut Instagram sells. Practical, evidence-based, and skeptical in the best way. Questions or hot takes? [email protected]. Join the community on the Foothills tier ($10/month, code FOOTHILLS10).
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💪 Want coaching without the full 1:1 commitment? Join Foothills for twice-monthly Ask the Coaches sessions — $10/month with code Foothills10 at microcosmcoaching.com
Long runs, ultramarathon training, and fueling are at the heart of this all-time favorite episode, back by popular demand. Kristin Layne and Kyle break down how to actually build long run duration without breaking down — and why the biggest barrier to going long usually isn't fitness.
They cover the physiology and psychology of pushing into unfamiliar durations, why you should think in time rather than miles, and how to grow your long run gradually (a good rule of thumb: keeping it under about 30% of weekly volume). You'll learn why you don't need to run your full race distance in training, how back-to-back long runs build confidence and durability, and where RPE should sit so you're building fitness instead of digging a fatigue hole.
From dialing in 60–90g of carbs per hour and training your gut, to strength work for late-race durability, to mental tools like segmenting and telling the difference between uncomfortable and dangerous — this is a complete blueprint for stepping up to your first 50K, 50-miler, or 100. Give yourself the runway, and you can absolutely do it.
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How do you know if your training, supplements, or recovery hacks are actually working — or if you're just fooling yourself? Zoë and TJ break down the science of the N of 1 experiment and how to self-coach intelligently in a world flooded with biohacks, miracle protocols, and "this one weird trick" content. Borrowing Feynman's first principle — you must not fool yourself, and you are the easiest person to fool — they walk through six cognitive biases that trick endurance athletes into believing something works when it doesn't: regression to the mean, the placebo of the shiny new toy, confirmation bias, the novelty honeymoon, comparison traps, and sunk cost. Then they get practical: how to actually test an intervention, change one variable at a time, define success before you start, and ask the question that cuts through the noise — compared to what? Plus a coach spotlight on James Nance, TJ's road back to Leadville, and Zoë's day-by-day approach to managing an Achilles flare-up. If you've ever overhauled everything after one bad race or wondered whether your $80 ketones are doing anything at all, this one's for you. Reach out anytime: [email protected].
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Check out the fuel tracking app here! FuelFlow
Running metrics, wearables, and training data get a reality check this week as Zoë and Kylee Van Horn cut through the noise of HRV scores, readiness ratings, and AI coaches to name the five numbers that actually move the needle in 2026. The episode opens with a familiar character: the athlete double-fisting a Whoop and a Garmin who hasn't strung four consistent weeks of training together in six months.
From there, the conversation breaks down what makes a metric genuinely useful, is it actionable, is the signal strong enough to act on, can you verify the underlying measurement, and does it tell you something your body isn't already saying? Then comes the countdown of the five that earn a spot on your watch: rate of perceived exertion (the master metric), consecutive weeks of consistent training, your 14-day sleep average, your long run as a percentage of your 30-day max, and carbohydrate intake per hour on long runs. Along the way: why one bad night of sleep won't break you, the 2025 research linking a single oversized long run to a 128% jump in injury risk, and why most runners fuel with far fewer carbs than they think they do. Evidence-based, occasionally unhinged, and a genuinely useful nudge to audit what you're actually tracking. Questions or hot takes? [email protected]
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Running economy is one of the most misunderstood concepts in endurance training — and one of the most trainable. In this episode, Zoë Rom and TJ David break down what running economy actually is, why it matters more than VO2 max for marathoners and ultra runners, and the specific levers you can pull to get more output for the same input. Using the analogy of miles per gallon, they explain how two runners with identical VO2 max can run race times that differ by 20+ minutes — and what's going on under the hood to explain the gap.
The conversation covers the seven physiological factors that determine economy, from tendon stiffness and motor unit recruitment to substrate utilization and thermoregulation. Then they dig into the five interventions that actually move the needle: strength training, plyometrics, strides, hills, and consistent aerobic volume over time. Finally, they bust four of the most persistent running form myths — that you need to run 180 steps per minute, that mid-foot striking is automatically better, that super shoes are cheating, and that form drills will fix your mechanics.
If you're an intermediate runner who feels like you've plateaued despite logging the miles, this is the episode that explains what's missing. Plus a coach spotlight intro with Microcosm's Zachary Russell.
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Hydration is one of the most overlooked levers in endurance performance — and one of the most punishing when you get it wrong. In this episode, Zoë and TJ unpack why dehydration is so much more than feeling thirsty, walking through the cascading downstream effects on your gut, your blood, your muscles, and ultimately your race result. They cover gut osmolality and why a too-concentrated drink mix actually pulls water the wrong way, the link between plasma volume drop and cardiac drift, and why dead legs late in an ultra often trace back to a sodium problem rather than a fitness one.
The conversation then turns to the practical side: how to DIY your sweat rate test at home, why your sweat sodium concentration is the number that changes everything, and which lab tests Zoë and dietician Kylee Van Horn actually recommend after testing six different options. They also break down why generic 300–800 mg per hour sodium guidance fails most athletes, with real roster examples ranging from 200 mg to over 2,300 mg per hour.
Before the hydration deep-dive, Zoë and TJ tackle a thoughtful listener question about the asides they sometimes make regarding endurance training and sexual health. They walk through the RED-S framework, what suppressed libido and menstrual dysfunction actually signal in athletes of all genders, and why these conversations belong in the coaching toolkit rather than as punchlines. Coach Kylee Van Horn at Fly Nutrition is mentioned as a go-to sports dietician for clinical questions.
If you've ever had a mystery DNF, persistent GI distress, or fallen apart late in a race for reasons you couldn't pin down, this is the episode to listen to twice.
Questions, topics, hot or nots: [email protected] Learn more: microcosm-coaching.com
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This week we welcome you behind the scenes of Microcosm Coaching with a quick introduction to Coach Zachary Russell, an athletic trainer and strength coach whose multisport background spans Ironman, triathlon, marathoning, and trail running. He shares what kinds of athletes light him up to coach and how his experience across disciplines shapes the way he builds plans.
Then Zoë and TJ dig into TJ's recent Canyons Endurance Run 100K, which he completed roughly 80 minutes off his goal time after a brutal stretch of life context, including his dad's ongoing health and the loss of his uncle the night before the race. They talk about how Cliff and TJ restructured the build entirely, doing more base earlier and less intensity later, and yet Training Peaks read his fitness as identical to previous cycles. They get honest about caretaker stress, mental bandwidth, the choice to keep the door open to joy even when training feels heavy, and why the comparison trap between seasons can quietly steal everything.
The bulk of the episode tackles a listener question from Delaney, who has noticed the same faces at every ultra and is wondering whether stringing races together actually counts as training. Zoë and TJ define training the way Microcosm uses it, intentional movement with an adaptive purpose, and reframe it as a continuum rather than a binary. They unpack the B race concept, the difference between racing it and running it, the lily pad effect of bouncing race to race without ever integrating what you learned, and the diminishing returns of using events as a substitute for consistency. They also offer a few honest questions to ask yourself, including whether you would still be putting in this volume if nothing were on the calendar, and what it means to build a higher floor in the interstitial periods most runners ignore.
Have a question for the show? Email us at [email protected] and check out microcosmcoaching.com to learn more about working with our coaches.
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Why does your running fitness plateau, and what can you actually do about it? Zoë and TJ break down the five real reasons endurance athletes get stuck, a lack of training intentionality, under-recovery, chronic under-fueling, a mismatch between training and event demands, and failing to apply progressive overload across more than one lever.
This episode also features a coach spotlight with James Nance, a Microcosm coach specializing in multi-sport athletes and RED-S recovery, TJ's mindset heading into race week at Canyons 100K, and a Reddit question on why your legs fall apart after your first 50K.
New to Microcosm? Roster spots are open — email [email protected] or visit microcosmcoaching.com.
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Most runners follow a training plan. Very few understand the architecture behind why it's built the way it's built, and that gap is exactly where progress stalls.
This week, we break down the science of periodization: what it actually is, how to structure a full training year around it, and the most common mistakes that keep athletes stuck in the gray zone. We cover training intensity distribution (pyramidal vs. polarized vs. mixed), block versus concurrent periodization and what the research actually supports, the five phases of a well-built training year, and why your easy days are probably not easy enough. Zoë also shares what she's noticed firsthand after switching to a block-style approach in her own training, the good, the bad, and the PRs.
Before the main topic, we run through a Hot or Not triple-header: Nomeo broccoli sprout shots (real mechanism, no peer-reviewed human data yet), the Apex Narwhal palm cooling device (the Stanford science is interesting, the application for runners is not), and pelvic floor PT, which gets a full endorsement for every runner, regardless of gender or whether you've ever been pregnant.
New to Microcosm? We'd love to be your coaches. Reach us at [email protected] or visit microcosm-coaching.com.
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Most runners ask one question before a race: did I finish my training plan? But fitness and race readiness are not the same thing — and in this episode, Zoë and TJ break down the physiological and psychological framework that actually tells you whether you're ready to toe the line.
They start with the foundational model: fitness + freshness + specificity. Using the Banister fitness-fatigue model, they explain how both signals decay at different rates (fatigue's half-life is roughly 7–10 days; fitness is 40–45) — and why that gap is exactly where your race-day performance capacity lives.
From there, they go sign by sign through five indicators you're ready — including aerobic decoupling and cardiac drift as readiness metrics, what glycogen supercompensation actually feels like during taper, why race-specific physiological systems (VO2max, lactate threshold, SGLT-1/GLUT-5 gut adaptation) can't be faked on race day, and how pre-race anxiety and pre-race arousal are the same physiological state with a different cognitive label.
Then the five signs you're not: climbing out of a fatigue hole your neuroendocrine system is still broadcasting, missing race-specific work that willpower can't replace, running on a pain you've been rationalizing, under-fueling and under-sleeping your way to the start line, and the hardest conversation in coaching — when your goal and your fitness aren't in the same zip code.
They also get into: Hot or Not on energy drinks at aid stations, AI-generated Spotify playlists vs. human curation, multi-day races and FKTs, and Prancercise (yes, really).
Topics covered:
The Banister fitness-fatigue model and why fitness and freshness decay at different ratesAerobic decoupling (Pa:Hr) and cardiac drift as race readiness signalsTraining Stress Balance (TSB): what the +10 to +25 range actually meansGlycogen supercompensation during taper — and why you should not get on a scaleVO2max, lactate threshold, and time-on-feet: the specificity gapGut training: SGLT-1 and GLUT-5 transporter adaptation, and why 12 weeks out is not too earlyPre-race arousal vs. anxiety — the Alison Wood Brooks reappraisal researchHPA axis dysregulation, HRV, and the neuroendocrine signals of a fatigue holeDOMS vs. injury-relevant pain — the checklist coaches actually useWIG, WAG, and WOG: cascading race goals and why rigid goals aren't ambitiousMore at microcosm-coaching.com. Join the Foothills community for $10/month — group coaching, Slack community, and twice-monthly roundtables with Microcosm coaches.
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Zoë and TJ are back from Italy and kicking off April with a packed episode. First up: coach Kyle Jones: a masters athlete and ultra running specialist with a focus on helping athletes who are all in on the long game, whether that's accumulating volume safely or solving the full puzzle of race-day logistics that go far beyond training.
Then it's Hot or Nots. On the docket: incline stretch boards for calf and Achilles work (the evidence is real, but eccentric loading beats passive stretching for most underlying issues), packaged Rice Krispie Treats as race fuel (the macros check out — 27 to 30 grams of carbs, glucose plus fructose, low fiber — but the chewability at mile 50 is another story), Ziploc bags in ice bandanas (hard pass: the evaporation is the whole point), hybrid athletes as a category (the jury is out, but the coaches aren't your girls if high rocks is your thing), run clubs (yes, with a firm caveat on effort), and microdosing during ultras (the research case for decriminalization is strong; the research case for running 100 miles on psilocybin is still pending).
The listener Q this week tackles one of the most common rules in running: you don't need to fuel for efforts under 90 minutes. Zoë and TJ break down why that's only half the story. There are actually two separate mechanisms at play — the metabolic pathway most runners know, and a neurological pathway most don't. Receptors in the mouth and upper GI tract signal the brain the moment carbohydrates are detected, easing the protective fatigue response before a single calorie has been absorbed. This has been demonstrated even when athletes swish a carb solution and spit it out. For high-intensity efforts like a hard half marathon, the case for fueling is stronger than the 90-minute rule suggests — and the practical takeaways are in the episode.
The back half is a full race debrief on Chianti. Zoë ran an hour faster than last year and still came in 13th. TJ walks through how to approach a post-race analysis when the headline result doesn't tell the full story — and how Zoë's coach surfaced a key data point she almost missed entirely: cardiac drift. In 2025, Zoë's cardiac drift was 9.54% over the course of the race. In 2026, it was negative 1.39%, meaning she was actually able to access higher heart rates at the end of the race — a direct signal of aerobic durability built by keeping easy days genuinely easy, week after week. The conversation covers what cardiac drift actually measures, why gray zone training works against this adaptation, and what the terrain-specific limiter was that explains the placement gap.
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If you've ever thought "I'm not dieting, I'm optimizing", this episode is for you.
We're dropping this one from the Your Diet Sucks vault because we think it belongs in the feed of every endurance athlete. We brought in coach TJ David, former professional skier and elite endurance athlete, and Sean Van Horn, elite athlete, Kylee Van Horn's husband, and someone who spent six years not telling a single person he was struggling, because the way it shows up in men doesn't look like what we're trained to recognize.
It looks like discipline. It looks like being serious about your sport. It looks like The Rock's morning routine and Chris Froome dropping weight before the Tour. From the outside, and often from the inside, it looks like exactly what you're supposed to be doing.
That's the trap.
We get into the data (it's stark,and most of it is probably still an undercount), the cultural pipeline from GI Joe to fitness influencers to the manosphere, why the diagnostic tools were literally designed for someone who is not you, and what coaches and training partners can actually do when they see it in someone they care about. Sean also shares his own story, which takes guts, and is worth your full attention.
You don't have to identify with any particular label to get something out of this one. If you train hard, care about performance, and have ever used food or exercise as a way to feel in control of something, this conversation was made for you.
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Meet coach Kyle Jones, a master's athlete dedicated to helping other runners achieve their biggest goals, no matter their age. See more and book a free consultation call at microcosm-coaching.com.
Every few months, a new training idea goes viral, and suddenly it's everywhere. Zone 2. Cycle syncing. Ketones. Heat suits. Ninety grams of carbs an hour. The science behind most of these things is real. That's not the problem. The problem is that real science is getting stripped of context, flattened into a hot take, and sold to athletes who haven't built the foundation that makes any of it matter.
In this episode, Zoë and TJ break down five ideas that are genuinely overhyped, not because they don't work, but because the way they're being applied and marketed almost always skips the part where they actually become useful. They cover the five-zone model and why zone obsession can accidentally produce the worst possible training distribution, the booming female-specific training industry and what the 2025 research actually says about cycle syncing, performance supplements like creatine, sodium bicarb, and ketones and where the hierarchy breaks down, the ninety-gram carb protocol and why it's solving a problem most recreational athletes don't have, and heat training protocols and how fitness alone outperforms heat exposure for the vast majority of athletes.
The through line across all five: marginal gains are real, but they sit on top of a foundation. And if the foundation isn't there, no intervention is going to save you. Sleep, consistent training, fueling the work, and getting your brain right, those are the levers worth pulling first.
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Running twice a day sounds serious, but is it actually right for you? This week, Zoë and TJ dig into the full science of doubles: what they are, what they're definitively not, and how to know if you're actually a candidate. Plus, a round of listener-submitted Hot or Nots and a great question about why early morning runs feel so much harder.
First up, meet Coach James Nance, a multi-sport specialist who coaches cyclists, runners, and skiers through big goals without burning them out. He's based in Fort Collins and has a knack for athletes navigating injury cycles, overtraining, and RED-S. If any of that sounds like your situation, reach out at [email protected].
Then, a deep-dive Hot or Not round featuring listener submissions: inversion tables (the effects last minutes, not months), muscle scraping (the original theory has been pretty much debunked), CBD and THC cream (weak evidence, real anti-doping risk), and Superfeet insoles (a rare instance where the research actually delivers, prefab orthotics perform as well as custom at a fraction of the cost).
Before the main topic, TJ answers a listener's question about why Zone 2 feels brutally hard at 5 a.m., and it turns out it's not just you. Core temperature, sleep inertia, cortisol, glycogen state, darkness, and cold all compound to inflate your RPE before you've even hit the first mile. There's real science here, and real solutions.
Then: doubles. An elite running a morning threshold session and an afternoon shakeout is doing something fundamentally different than a recreational runner cramming two hard efforts into a day. Zoë and TJ break down the physiology of why doubles work when they work (hint: PGC-1α, mitochondrial biogenesis, and aerobic signaling), who's actually a candidate, the gray zone trap, the ego trap, and why energy availability is non-negotiable if you're going to add volume this way. Bottom line: doubles are a tool, not a trophy.
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We brought in the person we trust with our own training. Cliff Pittman is the Director of Coaching at Carmichael Training Systems, which means he's essentially a coach of coaches, overseeing the education and development of CTS's entire coaching staff. He's also, full disclosure, our coach. So we wanted to have an honest conversation about what coaching actually is, what it isn't, and the massive gap between what athletes see and what goes on behind the scenes.
Cliff walks us through the three pillars of good coaching: personal connection, evidence-based training, and data-informed decision making. We get into the invisible daily work that most athletes never see, why individualized coaching matters so much more than a static plan, and when a good coach should say "that's above my pay grade." We also dig into scope of practice, the uncomfortable gap between what athletes expect coaching to cost and what it actually costs, and how to find a coach who's the right fit for you, not just the most credentialed person on paper.
Whether you're currently coached, thinking about it, or coaching athletes yourself, Cliff brings a perspective shaped by a decade in the military, executive coaching, and now leading one of the biggest coaching organizations in endurance sports.
Plus, a quick introduction to Microcosm coach Zack Russell at the top of the show.
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Is your watch making you a worse runner? We dig into two powerful books — The Way of Excellence by Brad Stulberg and The Score by C. Thi Nguyen — to unpack how metrics, Strava segments, and training scores can quietly hijack your motivation and identity as an athlete.
We also tackle a wild listener question: a 23-year-old running 30 hundred-milers a year. We break down the real physiology — rhabdomyolysis, acute kidney injury, endocrine suppression — and the psychology of the attention economy, dopamine loops, and identity fusion.
Plus Hot or Nots on running onesies, ankle weights, and legs up the wall. And meet Microcosm coach Kristin Layne, who specializes in multi-sport coaching for busy athletes.
Key topics: value capture, intrinsic vs. extrinsic motivation, the 4 phases of competence, running by feel vs. running by data, RPE, and defining success on your own terms.
Books discussed:
The Way of Excellence — Brad StulbergThe Score — C. Thi NguyenWant coaching? [email protected] | microcosm-coaching.com
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