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The Triathlon Mental Performance Podcast

The Triathlon Mental Performance Podcast

Auteur(s): Neil Edge
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À propos de cet audio

This podcast is for you if you are a Triathlete that is interested in learning about tools and strategies to overcome challenges and to utilize the power of your mind to race faster.

I'm an experienced Triathlon Mental Performance Coach working with both Age Groupers and Pros.

Episodes will cover the following and more.


  • How to improve your mental toughness


  • Removing the possibility of panic attacks in open water


  • Removing the fear of fast descents on your bike -


  • Removing mental blocks to improve your race times


  • Completely remove performance anxiety (you don't have to just cope with it)


  • 4 weeks to race day - Strategies to arrive at your a-race feeling calm and confident, with race day mental strategies


I will also talk about specific tools that you can use to ensure that you race faster.

If you would like to learn more, you are welcome to join my Facebook group with 1100+ fellow Triathletes.

I share daily tips there about the above and more and so please click the following link to join.

www.facebook.com/groups/triathlonmindset

I'm also happy to answer any questions that you have about triathlon mindset and so you are welcome to contact me.

Have a great day.

Neil

© 2025 The Triathlon Mental Performance Podcast
Développement personnel Hygiène et mode de vie sain Psychologie Psychologie et santé mentale Réussite
Épisodes
  • Why Rest Feels Uncomfortable for Driven Triathletes
    Dec 12 2025

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    Episode details

    In this episode, I explore why rest can feel uncomfortable for so many triathletes, even when they know it is essential for performance.

    This isn’t a discipline problem or a lack of understanding. It’s the result of how the brain and nervous system adapt to repeated training stress, predict safety, and regulate emotional stability.

    I explain how training can quietly become the primary way an athlete’s nervous system self-regulates, why removing it can trigger anxiety or guilt, and how this pattern often sits underneath overtraining, injury, and burnout.

    You’ll learn why rest can feel threatening instead of restorative, how cumulative load builds when recovery is resisted, and what high-performing triathletes do differently to absorb training properly and stay consistent across the season.

    The goal of this episode is to help you understand the science behind recovery discomfort so you can train more consistently, protect adaptation, and set yourself up for your strongest year yet in 2026.

    What you'll learn

    • Why rest can trigger guilt, anxiety, or urgency even in disciplined athletes
    • How the nervous system learns to associate training with safety and stability
    • Why rest isn’t interpreted as recovery by the brain when regulation depends on training
    • The difference between physiological recovery and nervous system regulation
    • How overtraining often begins as a protective response, not recklessness
    • Why easy sessions get pushed and rest days become optional under threat
    • How cumulative load builds faster than recovery capacity
    • Why illness, injury, and burnout are often forced pauses, not failures
    • What high-performing triathletes understand about stress, safety, and adaptation
    • Why recovery is an active biological process, not passive time off

    Key takeaways

    • Discomfort with rest is a nervous system response, not a motivation issue
    • Training can become a primary regulator of emotional and physiological stability
    • When training is removed, the brain may interpret rest as threat
    • Overtraining often emerges from fear of rest, not lack of discipline
    • Recovery supports cognitive clarity, hormonal balance, and physical readiness
    • Adaptation happens when stress is followed by safety
    • Consistency across a season depends on how well recovery is absorbed
    • A calm relationship with rest supports long-term performance

    Work with me

    Your fastest year doesn’t come from more training.
    It comes from how well your system absorbs it.

    If you want to improve your mental game so you can train more consistently, race with more clarity, and avoid the cycles that keep holding you back, we can work together.

    My Mental Performance Coaching helps triathletes:

    • Build a healthier relationship with recovery
    • Reduce overtraining and injury risk
    • Improve consistency across long training blocks
    • Strengthen cognitive clarity and emotional stability
    • Perform at their best when it matters most

    📩 Email: neil@neiledge.com

    🌐 Website: www.neiledge.com

    CONNECT

    Private Facebook Group (1,700+ triathletes):
    www.facebook.com/groups/triathlonmindset

    Instagram (daily mental performance tools):
    www.instagram.com/triathlon_mental_performance

    Support the podcast

    If you find the podcast helpful and want to support the work, you can do so here:

    Support the show

    Voir plus Voir moins
    6 min
  • Why Winter Kills Motivation — And How Athletes Build Discipline When It’s Dark and Cold
    Dec 5 2025

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    Episode details

    In this episode I explain why motivation drops during the darker months, and why discipline becomes harder even for committed athletes.

    This isn’t a lack of willpower. It’s a predictable shift in how the brain interprets effort, reward, and environmental cues when daylight is low, mornings are cold, and emotional load is higher.

    You’ll learn how the brain predicts the cost of a session before you even start, why those predictions become exaggerated in winter, and how to override them using simple but powerful mental performance tools.

    This episode breaks down why the first few minutes of training feel so heavy, why motivation can’t be relied on, and how identity-driven action becomes the strongest anchor for consistency in the off-season.

    The goal is to help you understand the science behind discipline so you can train with clarity, confidence, and stability, even when conditions aren’t supportive.

    What you'll learn

    • Why winter creates inflated effort predictions that shut down motivation

    • How low light, cold temperatures, and environmental uncertainty shape your brain’s decision-making

    • Why hesitation isn’t a lack of commitment but a protective neurological response

    • How expected dopamine drives motivation, and why it drops in the off-season

    • The science behind predictive fatigue and why your brain gets the “cost” of a session wrong

    • Why the first 5 minutes of training feel harder and what’s actually happening in the nervous system

    • How to use the 60-second override to break morning resistance

    • Why identity-driven behaviour outperforms motivation in winter

    • How to stabilise action when emotion is inconsistent

    • Why winter consistency is built through structure, not willpower

    Key takeaways

    • Motivation dips in winter because the brain can’t see immediate reward, not because you’ve lost commitment

    • You’re reacting to predicted effort, not real effort

    • The brain exaggerates the cost of a session before you start, especially in the dark

    • The first few minutes of any winter session are a cognitive warm-up, not a measure of readiness

    • Discipline becomes easier when the task is reduced to 60 seconds

    • Identity stabilises behaviour long before motivation appears

    • Consistency is built by working with the brain’s systems, not fighting against them

    • Winter is where long-term confidence and discipline are developed

    Work with me

    Consistency in winter isn’t built on motivation, it’s built on understanding how the brain works and using structures that support discipline and clarity.

    If you want to build the psychological systems that drive stable performance year-round, my Mental Performance Program will help you:

    • Strengthen discipline through brain-based tools
    • Build identity-driven behaviour that holds under fatigue
    • Train through the off-season with clarity, structure, and emotional stability
    • Understand predictive fatigue and remove the friction that blocks consistency

    📩 Email: neil@neiledge.com

    🌐 Website: www.neiledge.com

    CONNECT

    Private Facebook Group (1,700+ triathletes):
    www.facebook.com/groups/triathlonmindset

    Instagram (daily mental tools):
    www.instagram.com/triathlon_mental_performance

    Support the podcast:
    www.buymeacoffee.com/neiledge


    Support the show

    Voir plus Voir moins
    9 min
  • What If You Could Measure Resilience?
    Nov 14 2025

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    Episode Details

    I explain why resilience is the defining skill for every triathlete, not just the ability to push harder, but the capacity to recover, adapt, and grow stronger after setbacks.

    You’ll learn how resilience is built through the nervous system, why it’s measurable, and how daily awareness and tracking can turn mental strength into a physical advantage.

    This episode explores how to recognise the signs of fatigue early, how to respond when motivation drops, and how using tools like HRV4Training helps you align training and recovery with your true physiological readiness.

    What You’ll Learn

    • What resilience really means in triathlon, not toughness, but adaptability under physical and mental load.
    • How your nervous system determines how fast you recover from stress and effort.
    • Why tracking physiological readiness gives insight beyond motivation or mood.
    • How HRV tracking can reveal early signs of accumulated strain before burnout or injury appear.
    • Why resilience is visible in patterns, not single numbers, and what those patterns mean for long-term progress.
    • How self-awareness and physiological data combine to build consistency and control.
    • Why high-performing triathletes use mental and physiological tracking together to manage energy, not emotion.
    • How developing a calm, adaptable nervous system improves both training efficiency and race-day execution.
    • Why resilience is a measurable skill that can be strengthened through awareness, recovery, and daily rhythm.

    Key Takeaways

    • Resilience isn’t grit, it’s your system’s ability to recover and adapt after stress.
    • Building resilience means training your body and mind to reset faster, not just push longer.
    • HRV tracking gives objective insight into how your system is coping, not as a score, but as a story over time.
    • When you understand your patterns, you can align training with readiness instead of emotion.
    • Consistency is the real outcome of resilience, fewer setbacks, faster recovery, stronger performance.
    • True progress comes from respecting your rhythm, not forcing it.

    Work With Me

    Resilience isn’t built on race day, it’s built in the quiet, consistent days of training.

    If you’re ready to build the psychological and physiological systems that drive consistent performance, this is where to start.

    My Mental Performance Program helps you:

    • Build measurable resilience through daily structure and nervous system awareness.
    • Develop mental tools to stay composed, clear, and consistent through fatigue.
    • Align physical load with psychological readiness for sustainable improvement.

    📩 Email: neil@neiledge.com

    🌐 Website: www.neiledge.com

    Connect

    Private Facebook Group (1,700+ triathletes): www.facebook.com/groups/triathlonmindset

    Instagram (daily tools): www.instagram.com/triathlon_mental_performance

    Buy Me a Coffee (support the podcast): www.buymeacoffee.com/neiledge

    Support the show

    Voir plus Voir moins
    5 min
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