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The Hypnosis for Running blog entries here have been sparse over the Summer to say the least. Following injury, the demands of Fatherhood, a very busy work schedule and a whole host of other excuses that we all offer up from time to time, my training miles and hours had dipped and my focus has been elsewhere throughout the Summer months.

Following that though, I am back with a vengeance as of today. There’ll be two entries here today, with my race report for last weekend’s Bournemouth marathon being posted shortly. I now have my marathon training schedule tuned and I head into Winter with the Portsmouth Coastal marathon to compete in this December before attempting a PB at London marathon 2014. I’ll be charting my progress here along with a number of other articles, strategies and psychological techniques to employ for training and advancing performance.

Today though, I wanted to share with you a book review written by an extraordinary man. William Sichel is an Ultra Distance Runner and Multiple World Record Holder (at his ultra running blog you can read about his ongoing attempts to achieve 165 ultra running records by his 65th Birthday!).

WilliamSichel

Here is his review of my book:

Hypnosis for Running – Training Your Mind to Maximise Your Running Performance

I don’t think I have ever met another sportsman, from any sport, who didn’t think that mental strength, mental power and mental qualities played a key part in performance not only for themselves but for others in their sport too. Yet, if you asked me how many people I knew who had a planned mental training programme running in parallel with their physical training schedule, I would raise only a few of the fingers on one hand!

I wonder why this is? Possibly because 99% of the material available about ‘training’, in print and on the web, only covers physical training. So we are overwhelmed with all manner of advise and learned articles on all aspects of how to play better or run faster and longer but almost nothing on the all important mental aspects.

Now that has all changed with the publishing of the book Hypnosis for Running: Training your mind to maximise your running
performance by Adam Eason, hypnotherapist, author, experienced marathon runner and UKA Coach.

This is a significant work and will go some way to addressing the paucity of literature geared to enable runners to maximise their
mental performance. Make no mistake these 367 pages are geared to runners wanting to take practical steps to develop a mental training programme covering all aspects of improving their physical performance through improved thought processes.

This is the kind of book you will always have on your bed-side table ready to dip into any of its 18 chapters. There are extensive chapters on setting goals, understanding of hypnosis, runner’s internal dialogue, relaxing, banishing excuses, getting in the zone, as well as suggestions for formulating a mental training programme to run a long side your physical training plans. In particular I thought the chapters on ‘Belief of a Runner’ and ‘The Mindful Runner’ were the best material I have ever read on those subjects.

I mentioned that this was very much a practical book that runners will use on a daily and weekly basis – a constant source of ideas and reference. In these pages there are countless suggestions for self-hypnosis sessions to try and not only whilst sitting comfortably at home.

Adam, an accomplished marathon runner himself, is proud of the fact that this book is very much research-based and not just his own ideas, although he does provide those too. Practising self-hypnosis whilst actually running is also covered and this is an area I will use a great deal myself in my extreme ultra endurance runs. Adam’s practical approach to using self-hypnosis comes across in all aspects of this book and that is one
of the reasons I feel that this is such a useful book for us runners to have access to.
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If you’d like to know more about William’s running, his events and his ongoing record toppling exploits, you can follow him at twitter, like him at Facebook and watch him at YouTube. I find him incredibly inspiring.

As for me, I’ll be back here again very soon as we get the motor re-firing in more than one way.