The Benefits of Choosing Discipline and Self-Control
The Benefits of Choosing Discipline and Self-Control

Discipline and self-control aren’t usually the popular choice. They are similar to basic, essential needs such as protein and water, yet people often get distracted by more appealing things such as flavor. They do, however, play a huge role in the active runner’s life. And those who choose to improve in these areas will promote higher performance running and an overall healthier, well being of life.

When I first started running, I needed to choose discipline. And I say “choose” rather than “have” for a reason. Just because we may not feel as if we were born with discipline doesn’t mean we have to use the excuse of “I can’t.” While it’s true that discipline can be very difficult, the “I can’t” is a lie. Perhaps the “I won’t” is more honest; and this is where self-control comes in, which we will get to in a moment. Discipline looks different for every person because we are all different—with different bodies, different limitations, and different desires. However, we each know best deep down whether we are truly giving it all we have or simply taking the easy way out. In order to improve our running or even begin to run in the first place it requires choosing discipline. Bringing ourselves out of our comfort zones.

To choose discipline is to tell yourself, “Even though I don’t feel like doing this, I’m going to anyways.”  Because more often than not, staying comfortable won’t get us very far; it’ll leave us with a growth stunt. In the moment, discipline seems painful and unpleasant, but later it yields peaceful fruit. When we think of people we admire and look up to—people who are our heroes or we aspire to be—we notice these people because of the discipline they spoke into our lives whether verbally or through their actions. We watch from a distance in awe because they astound us in how they’ve gone perhaps further than we would have. It’s because of their encouragement, motivation, and reaping lessons they have learned we are able to strive for more. That is desiring discipline.

Self-control is equally important and works hand-in-hand with discipline. The difference between self-control and control in general is reality. The reality is, there are things in life we have no control over. Things we may wish we could change, but aren’t able to. This can cause a trap if we aren’t careful. We focus on the lie rather than the truth and before we know it, all our energy goes towards giving doubt and anger attention it doesn’t deserve. A lie may sound like “I can’t run in the rain” where the truth is “The rain makes running more challenging, but I will wear the proper equipment to continue my run.” I learned this lesson the hard way when I acquired my first running injury. I was pushing myself in an unhealthy manner with my running and eventually suffered from Jumper’s Knee. My doctor told me to relax on the running a bit and try aerobics like swimming or biking that were easier on the joints. I didn’t listen. I believed the lie that the only good workout was running and that I was a failure and a wimp for not being able to run anymore. I ran through the pain (smart in some cases of conditioning, but not so much when you’re injured). My Jumper’s Knee did not heal and turned into even more painful shin splints. Because of this, I was banned from running as I could barely walk. It was a long, painful healing process before I was back to the grind.

Having discipline gives us the wisdom we need to discern right from wrong, healthy from unhealthy, and strength from weakness. Having self-control gives us the endurance we need to push through to achieve what is good, right, true, and healthy. Combining the two not only gives us power over our running lives, but also makes us stronger.

 
 
Seen a lot of slim chicks posting their

workouts on here so I thought I'd join 

the fun
Warning : I will bully every one of you

into daily stretches, plyo drills, crazy 

intervals, lifting heavy weights and 

epic long runs
104 °F.....  As my Grandma says, 

"Marathon training ain't for p*ssies."



Crazy old lady is right.

New Featured eBibs

When you decline all social invitations on Friday nights because your long  runs are on Saturday mornings
ULTRARUNNING;  Puking on the most beautiful places on earth
Me before the run: ugh this  is gonna be a tough one Me during the run: ugh  this IS a tough one Me after the run: I'M A  MF BEAST WHO CAN  DO ANYTHING
You ever say to yourself "this is the worst shape I've ever been it" and then a year goes by and you like "No. This is the worst shape I've ever  been in" and then a year  goes by and...
Medical professional: I recommend six to eight weeks of rehab and rest RUNNER: *buys KT tape*
Don't let other people to ruin your  day. Ruin your own damn day
Isn't it cute that you literally tell  your running friend everything like  no embarrassment no shame nothing  hidden. That's a proper running friend.
If you're feeling slow, just know that there's someone out there who's  New Year resolution was  to be able to race at  your recovery pace
Sad that from January 1 bread  and chocolate have calories again
Not to brag but I've run every single day this year
Not sure if I need a puppy or  a runcation or a candle lit bath or  a new tattoo or a shopping  spree or just a movie  night in bed
You haven't known fear until you've tried on a too-small sports bra and  thought you're stuck in it forever
The hardest part of training for a  new race is pretending that I'm still  in shape the first 30-45 days
Telling me I'm fast as f*ck isn't a compliment it's a FACT like thanks for having eyes bro
i f*cked up already, 2021 is gonna be my year i can feel it
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