Why I Fail

On Saturday, I failed to perform in Jena. Am I devastated? No! But I’m absolutely disappointed and a little embarrassed (although whatever, my process is my process). I threw well in Rome. I threw well in Halle. I had an overall great trip to Europe for three weeks! But finishing it off that way leaves a bad taste in my mouth, and motivation to understand my own brain and failures moving forward in this long season. I want to share two big reasons why I fail. These aren’t specific to Jena: I do the same technical things wrong consistently, and I let self-doubt creep in after being alone for a while.

Ich liebe Hallesche Werfertage!

Ich liebe Hallesche Werfertage!

Trusting myself has always seemed normal to me. I blame good parenting! I know I put the work in. I know I have what it takes. I know that I care the most about the outcome (team situations were frustrating for me and I’ve been let down by people). But when I have any little dent in my independence armor and there’s someone there to lean on, I leeeeaaaan.

It’s my problem, not those willing and helpful peoples’ issue. I need better blinders, and to trust my own instincts, not necessarily in competition (I’m good at that), but when things don’t go as planned surrounding it. Long travel day? Go to the pool instead. Only bus later than I hope to go to the meet? Roll with it and shorten the warm-up when I know I’ll have a warm place to do so (prioritize the throwing stuff). Extra worried about my body throwing twice within 3 days? Strengthen the mind with visualization rather than just ignoring the negativity. And do all the mobility and core rather than just resting and hoping to feel better! I’ve always been good at following instructions. I’m coachable! And I highly value Jamie’s input into my training and competition preparation plan. But I also know he’s open to my feedback. For whatever reason, when I don’t feel good but know I have a meet coming up, I put my head down and stick stubbornly to the plan rather than expressing what I know, 99% of the time, we’ll both agree with. I should have gone to the pool on Friday after leaving the Rome hotel at 7:30am and arriving in Jena at 5:30pm, sweating all day. I could have done some core in my room first, then swam some laps, sprinted a little, and relaxed, weightless. I didn’t. Dummy.

There’s this saying that the hay is in the barn. Have you ever been around a farm? Animals need more than hay. My Mom’s horses get a carefully concocted mixture of hay, fancy hay, beet pulp, grains, various vitamins, and of course, love. The hay may be in the barn before big competitions (whatever “big” means to you: Every meet can feel big at this level), but you still need grains to finish the job. To do it right. I’ve ignored that instinct one too many times, and I’m finally processing it. Before Zurich and after Rovereto last year, I was finally brave enough to focus fully on what I wanted, and harvest the grain of mental fortitude and specific mobility and stability in those last days and moments. To do things I know make me feel invincible in this post-ACL, different-for-me era. I can be more successful. I just also have to be braver in looking my big, scary goals in the face and taking care of the details that can get me there.

My technical mistakes are always the same. They present themselves as “losing the tip” or “forward,” which in Jena’s left head/crosswind was a disaster. But actually it all starts for me with my right foot. And really my left foot. I spent 8 years solidifying a habit of striking backward with my right leg after my impulse, which I could get away with because of the gift of shoulder mobility. I look forward to lumbar arthritis as a result of hyperextension of that area for close to a decade as well (and more since I’m still not 100% disciplined). Anyway, with tiredness and some soreness (I’m very good at managing stiffness/being dinged up in one area, but 2/3/4 gets harder) comes timidity and lazy legs. Even though I know my legs were the reasons for 62.08m in Halle and 63.11m in Rome, I willed them to go and they just wouldn’t!

On Saturday, I let people (who are not Dana) tell me what to do. I already know what to do, and what they told me would have been accomplished by my strategy (specifically steps 2 and 3), but I allowed myself to be distracted by input.

I need to:

1.       Gradually accelerate down the runway.

2.       Hit a strong impulse after already using my left leg as a driver in crossovers.

3.       Be patient in my tunnel of power (knee up/toe up and left arm closed), wait for the ground with my right foot.

4.       Drive my right knee to the ground immediately upon right foot contact while keeping left arm closed.

5.       Keep the handle of the javelin “hidden” from the sector right behind my head.

6.       Be a freaking tree in my left leg.

7.       Push my chest forward after all of that happens.

8.       Watch the jav soooooar.

Everything happens if I hit an impulse and actually wait for the ground. But when I allow myself to be distracted, I focus on the end result rather than the key step that will lead to that result. In a headwind, that’s “keep the tip down,” “control the tip,” and “tip by your eye.” When I think about that cue, my only focus becomes keeping my chest up, which gets me tall in my legs and forward, not allowing good, powerful leg action. Inactive legs mean no impulse, and the body’s rush to create speed with a pawing right foot and pressure behind me rather than under me, forcing me forward more. A pushy right means I don’t have to snap a solid block down, because I feel support from a leg (the right). The left arm swings open for balance and because there’s time, and the right arm follows suit by swinging around. I try to maintain connection with the implement by extending/breaking my wrist, both skyrocketing the javelin and not applying energy to it.

My face sometimes.

My face sometimes.

It’s tough to break the self-doubt cycle in the midst of a competition, especially when you have excuses (four travel days and three meets in a week, end of 6-week trip, two days after the most intensity my body has felt in throwing in months, headwind, etc.). But I’m sick of it. Details are important and empowering. Let them be by allowing yourself to pay attention to them. Trust yourself, even when you’re tired, by practicing mental toughness, however you harness it. Change your cycle. Be better!

Representing Others

I’ve struggled from the get-go with the enormous idea of representing the United States on a global scale. From the outset, that was too much, too big, too fast, too scary to be my life. It took me a long, long, long time to get comfortable conceptualizing the fact that I was representing my Grandma. Russ. My friends. Rather than The Country, and allowing that sharper focus to fuel me instead of letting the pulled-back version crush me. 

I’m more comfortable with the big picture now, because over time, I’ve figured out that attention is positive: People want to see something amazing. I want to do amazing things, so we’re all on the same page. 

In 2018, I got new stimuli. I finally stepped away from a coaching situation that hadn’t been serving me for years, but wasn’t really a problem until 2017. Dana is patient and honest and tough and has a specific idea of how she wants me to throw, and Jamie knowing me for a decade now means the changes we made in my training had me finally prepared at the right time. Rejuvenation is not an understatement. I felt completely different, and a big part of that was being 100% sure that my team and I had the same goals and communicated about them clearly. We have shared values in how we work together. We fit. 

I want to “fit” with other things I align myself with. I want to continue experiencing the positive stimulus of newness that I’ve recently remembered is powerful and helps me thrive. I want to be in the business of representing things that I truly believe in, not that I’m just in the habit of doing or wearing or buying.

I want to further define the faces I’m representing. I want to bring things that we’re all likely passionate about into the spotlight, and relate those things to my career. It doesn’t matter if this idea brings $5 or $500 to the organizations I have in mind, as long as I know on the runway in competitions around the world that my performances will contribute to something more than just my mortgage and Maddie’s kibbles.

I don’t know about you, but I tried REALLY hard at my elementary school jog- and swim-a-thons. Something about knowing specifically who had pledged to support me gave my willpower a huge boost! 

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In the Trond Mohn Games, I wore a 4Ocean bracelet and my Dave bracelet. I put a sticker made by Lauren McCluskey’s family on my shoes to bring her back to the javelin runway in a small way after a tragic and far-too-early death. I’ve had a pair of shoes painted to represent a lot of things that I believe in, and I can’t wait to sport them throughout the world in 2019 (and give you a tour of their meaning when I get home). There are so many things that are bigger than me and sport, and I want to keep them in my consciousness as I continue to do this thing that I love. Athletes in bigger, more popular American sports get to start their own foundations and contribute significant funds to those causes. I’ve made a better living than I ever thought possible throwing the javelin, but not enough to do something like that. So support me, sure, please, but mostly help me feel like I’m making a bigger difference than JUST representing the U.S. in javelin competitions. Help me achieve my athletic dreams, but also dreams about contributing to positive movements in the world. 

I’ve written about representing others before, and a big part of what I think about at practice often remains the military since I wrote that Facebook post long ago. I want to take that a step further by inviting you along. 

I’m not afraid to feel deeply. In both directions. I love the richness of emotion actually, and I think I have sport to thank for learning that in a lot of ways. I want to further enhance the experience. Tying meaningful organizations to my performances feels like a significant way to do it. 

Each meet this season, you can pledge a flat donation or a per-distance rate to contribute to a cause via the campaigns I create at PledgeIt! I want you to know beforehand what you’re contributing to, and I’d be thrilled to get information from you on stuff you’re passionate about. 

I’m starting with Semper Fi Fund. They support military veterans in many ways after they come home from war. My friends who have served tell me they’re the best: They do what they say, tirelessly and in creative ways to actually make a difference. They’re female-founded. Their mission to serve those who protect us makes me proud to be an American. Pledge or donate here!! I’ve linked both the Rome Diamond League on Thursday and Saturday’s JenJavelin Festival to this campaign. I’d love your help!