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Yeah, agree the first few days are where the biggest stoppers are likely to crop up.
I think when you're moving you're probably golden. Your head wants to get this thing done and so you will chug along until you finish. But the recovery needed once you stop is pretty huge. Mentally and physically if you're pushing hard due to time limits or whatever.I started doing these events with a lot of experience so probably had less impact on my body and probably explains why I could do so many. But I'm beginning to think that mentally I might've introduced some kind of PTSD from pushing through all those nights and basically treating myself like shit for weeks at a time. There's definitely an anxiety these days when the prospect of a failed hotel booking is on the cards and a forced overnighter might be required. Maybe it's because I ride a lot with my missus now and I'm concerned for her as well as me. Not sure but I definitely go into events with a better plan than winging it like I used to. So yeah, I wonder if I've caused some issues or if it's just a case of getting older, wiser and not really feeling the need to push so hard? Hard to say.
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Interesting. I get anxiety about where I'm going to sleep if I don't have a plan. Having made some shit choices about bivvy sites in the past makes it worse.
From last year's tcr there was the park in the village in Czech Republic next to house with barking dog and where I got a tick in my neck, and the bench in Romania where I got woken up by the police.
Yes, sure. Ultimately how hard you pedal and how hard the event is are the big factors which dictate what kind of shape you end up in, however long it is. And not that many people plan other goals in the season after the TCR (although I am hoping to test this this year by doing two events).
I was thinking that, if you look at drop out rates from the TCR, most are early on. If you can get through day 3, adapt to the achilles pain or whatever issues get thrown up, you're pretty likely to finish. There's more of an element of just adding extra days, and getting into the right head space to keep repeating it.