Running Meditation: Benefits and How To Do It


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Running is my meditation.

I’ve said this many times when trying to convince myself that it’s ok I didn’t stick to my resolution to sit for 5 minutes a day. But I knew there was likely something more to it and that’s why I dove headfirst in to the

Run Mindful retreat

in Malibu a few years ago.

I wanted someone to get me to sit, to FEEL the value of of that time.

Throughout that week, I realized that while running is certainly a time to get my mind right, it wasn’t mediation.


It was mindfulness and sometimes it was purely zoning out.

Il s’avère que la pleine conscience pourrait être l’un des meilleurs trucs qu’un coureur puisse apprendre. Après tout, nous savons que la course à pied est à 90 % mentale, n’est-ce pas ? Voyons ce que signifient tous ces termes, pourquoi vous devriez vous en préoccuper et par où commencer.

Qu’est-ce que la méditation ?

La concentration. En réalité, malgré toutes nos inquiétudes sur la façon de procéder, l’endroit où s’asseoir et la durée de l’exercice, l’objectif final de la méditation est de nous permettre de concentrer notre esprit.

La méditation vous permet de vous plonger dans le moment présent et de laisser tomber les pensées excessives concernant le passé ou l’avenir.

Elle se pratique généralement dans une posture contrôlée, dans un espace et un temps contrôlés. C’est la raison pour laquelle les adeptes de la méditation pourraient dire qu’elle ne peut pas être pratiquée pendant la course à pied. Mais vous pouvez utiliser la méditation pour courir en pleine conscience.

What is Mindfulness?

I’ll be honest, I didn’t really understand the difference because everyone who talked about meditation said it “makes you more mindful”…so therefore wasn’t mindfulness just meditating?

Nope.

Mindfulness is often the result of meditation. It’s how you are better able to show up in your daily life. To not react so quickly to things that might make you mad or sad.

Allowing yourself to be in the middle of a really

bad run

without judging it or speaking harshly to yourself.

Here is a good breakdown of different states:


Relaxing

is when you zone out watching Survivor or find yourself engrossed in a book so intriguing you forget the time. It’s when your mind shuts down and you let go…but that’s not meditating.


Mindfulness

is when you’re aware of the present moment. You don’t judge it as good or bad, you just breathe and accept it for exactly what it is.


Meditation

is sitting with intention and focus. You’re learning how to let go of the monkey mind and find the space between your thoughts.

Now we know the difference, so what’s the big deal? Why is everyone suddenly talking about mediation and mindfulness?

Benefits of Running Meditation

A few benefits as described by Elinor Fish, creator of

Run Wild Retreats

which focus on helping us learn mindful running or meditating during physical training.

Allows Us to Drop Comparisons

Mindful running shifts your focus from how you compare to others to how you compare to yourself. You replace external success measurements (like race results) with internal rewards, like deriving confidence from your own evolution as a runner.

Enjoy the Endorphins

Running triggers the release of hormones and endorphins that are known to bring about feelings of happiness and a sense of well being.

However, it’s possible to miss these effects entirely when your mind is elsewhere and you’re disconnected from the running experience.

Better Running

Being mindful of whether your back is straight, core is engaged, elbows are driving back (instead of outward) can make running feel far easier… running without tension requires less energy to propel you forward.

Finding Flow State

One of the things that endurance athletes often need during the marathon is a flow state. It’s the point where you’re able to let go of the effort, the goal, the pain and simply keep moving forward. Having mindfulness training in your program will make this easier to achieve.

Of course there are truly a million more reasons that apply to your situation, but in general being mindful is going to help you enjoy the run more and focus on the right things.

Benefits of Meditation

Here are just a few more reasons that mindfulness practice is beneficial from

INeedMotivation.com

list of 100 benefits.

5- Leads to a deeper level of physical relaxation.

8- Decreases muscle tension

9-

Helps in chronic diseases like allergies, arthritis etc


12- Enhances the immune system

14- Enhances energy, strength and vigor

15- Helps with weight loss

30-

improved performance in athletic events


31- Normalizes to your ideal weight

32- harmonizes our endocrine system

33- relaxes our nervous system

39- Helps control own thoughts

40- Helps with focus & concentration

41- Increase creativity

49- Develops intuition

50- Increased Productivity

56- Develop will power

61- Increased job satisfaction

66- Helps in quitting smoking, alcohol addiction

69-

Require less time to

fall asleep

, helps cure insomn

ia

71- Reduces road rage

72- Decrease in restless thinking

73- Decreased tendency to worry

78- Grows a stable, more balanced personality

80- Helps keep things in perspective

81- Provides peace of mind, happiness

95- Helps living in the present moment

98- Experience an inner sense of “Assurance or Knowingness”

With all of those benefits, why not take the time we’re spending putting in the miles to get some additional mental and health benefits?

How to Meditate While You Run

The goal of our time is learning to focus our attention. So don’t get too worried about that it looks like, just try some of these tips as a guideline to start.

Just like a sitting meditation, start with a short duration and build over time.

This is not to say you can no longer chat with a friend, listen to Eminem during speed work or dial in a

podcast

. Consider using mindfulness as you start the run or throughout to help you reconnect.

Option 1: Self Guided Meditation

  1. Pick an easy run day and start your run like normal
  2. At some point, shut off the music and start to simply let go
  3. I often focus on the ground 30 feet ahead. That consistency will help you start to get in to a zone.
  4. Keep your gaze there.
  5. You could choose to focus on your breathing, but I find this often leads to overthinking about it while running. So instead, I recommend counting your footfalls.
  6. Count to 10 and then start over.
  7. Eventually let go of the counting and just keep your gaze softly focused in front you.
  8. As your mind starts to wander to things you want to solve or worry about, just let it go.
  9. Don’t have a goal for the meditation, there is no winning at this.
  10. Just keep yourself focused

Option 2: Self Guided Focus

If you feel like every time you try to let go of thoughts it backfires, then instead try working on a focused meditation. Another tool you could try is “noting”.

  1. Instead of blocking out your surroundings, make them part of the process.
  2. They are no longer distractions, but simply things you notice.
  3. Don’t focus on any particular thing, but note it.
  4. Truck, fire hydrant, random shoe in the road.
  5. Nothing holds your attention it just comes in and goes out.
  6. As you find yourself starting to hold on to any specific thing, simply thing about letting it go.
  7. Continue coming back to your body in this comfortable pace.

Option 3: Guided Running Meditation App

David has long told me he likes the coaches talking to him in the

Nike Run Club App

. But it only got my attention once they partnered with

Andy Puddicombe the Founder of Headspace

!

Now you can pull up a run and have Andy quite literally help guide you through a meditation on your run. His voice is delicious, and he does a great job of balancing the talking with time that’s quiet so you can get in to your own headspace.

Tips for Beginning Meditation

As with training for a race don’t expect to be perfect on day one or even to hit 20 minutes immediately. Instead, think of it like running…you start with one minute and build on that.

If you want to improve your run meditation, then you really need to spend some time sitting in true mediation.

Use the following tips to get started with less frustration.

In order to get in a place where you can let go of thoughts, it helps to have a routine or something that creates a break between your activities and simply being.

#1 Set a Timer

Set your timer for 1 minute on Monday, 2 minutes on Tuesday and so forth. The idea is to keep you from breaking your mediation to check the clock!

Maybe at the end of a week you find that you can’t handle more than 5 minutes, but that’s ok. In those 5 minutes you will have made a difference already in your mindset and physiology.

#2 Focus On Something Across the Room

This tip helped me tremendously! Instead of just closing your eyes, start by focusing on a point across the room. Slowly let your gaze soften and then your eyes to eventually close.

#3 Focus on Your Breathing

When you start out one of the easiest meditations is simply to think “in” and “out” with each breath.

Start out by breathing deep in to your belly to start out and then let your breath normalize.

#4 Let Your Thoughts Go

Meditation is thought of as a process of

NOT thinking, but it’s more about letting go of the thoughts that come through and not hanging on to them.

Ways to let go include imagining your thoughts in a bubble that is floating away or taking a broom and sweeping away thoughts as they come up.

#5 Chant A Single Word

Consider chanting OM like you would in yoga or picking a specific word like love, happiness or freedom.

It’s impossible to be thinking and focusing on a single word at the same time. Starting your meditation this way can help you to stop the initial chatter in your mind.

#6 Use Guided Meditation

Instead of trying to go it alone, use a free tool like the Headspace App. You can figure out what type of mediation works best for you this way. Maybe you like visualization or chimes or simply complete silence.

How to Handle Ideas that Pop Up During Meditation?



If you find that amazing ideas keep popping in your head then keep a pad of paper nearby and write them down. Try not to turn your meditation in to a to do list, but it’s not uncommon for it to help your creativity flow. Without being hindered by tasks your brain is able to tap in to other areas.




Start meditation with these easy tips #mindfulness for better running!



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It might be uncomfortable. But I know all of you can handle discomfort because you sign up for races, you hit the gym and you make choices each day that may not be the easiest, but are ultimately in your best interest.

While you could skip the meditation and just focus on the mindful running, the truth is the two go hand in hand. Each one will make you better at the other and both will make you better at life.


Have you ever tried meditation?


Do you feel mindful during your run?


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