Most runners don’t struggle with fitness — they struggle with what happens mentally and physically under pressure, fatigue, and expectation.
Running exposes how the mind responds over time. You can feel strong in training, but in races or key sessions:
- Pacing changes
- Doubt creeps in
- Breathing tightens
- Focus narrows
- Effort feels harder than it should
This isn’t a lack of fitness — it’s how the mind and nervous system behave under load.
I work with runners in Reading, Didcot, and online to improve performance using NLP, hypnotherapy, mind-body coaching and flow-state principles.
MAIL@THEEXCELPRACTICE.COM OR CALL 07807 540142
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Common Running Performance Issues I Help With
Runners often describe patterns such as:
- Strong in training but underperforming in races
- Starting too fast, then fading
- Overthinking pace, splits or distance
- Anxiety before races or key sessions
- Losing rhythm mid-run
- Hitting a mental “wall” before physical limits
- Negative self-talk during effort
- Difficulty staying focused over distance
- Comparing to others and losing composure
- Lack of enjoyment despite good fitness
Most of these are state-based, not fitness-based.
Running-Specific Performance Problems
Running places unique demands on the mind over time.
Pacing & Emotional Control
Many runners don’t pace physically — they pace emotionally.
Early adrenaline leads to:
- Starting too fast
- Over-committing effort
- Ignoring internal signals
- Paying for it later
We work on:
- Internal pacing awareness
- Effort regulation
- Staying controlled under race conditions
The “Wall” — Mental vs Physical Fatigue
What feels like physical exhaustion is often a mix of:
- Mental fatigue
- Breath disruption
- Emotional resistance
- Loss of rhythm
When the nervous system shifts into threat mode:
- Breathing becomes inefficient
- Tension increases
- Perceived effort spikes
- Performance drops
This is trainable.
Overthinking & Loss of Flow
Running well requires rhythm and automaticity.
Under pressure:
- Runners monitor too much
- Try to control every variable
- Lose natural movement
- Disconnect from feel
We work on restoring:
- Flow
- Rhythm
- Task-focused attention
- Trust in the body
The Mental Game in Running Performance
At higher levels of running, performance is shaped as much by mindset as by physical conditioning. Elite runners consistently train their mental approach to manage effort, regulate emotion, and stay composed under fatigue. Athletes such as Eliud Kipchoge and Deena Kastor have spoken about the role of mental control, belief, and focus in sustaining performance over long distances, while endurance athletes regularly develop strategies to stay present and composed when effort intensifies.
Rather than relying on motivation, runners use practical mental tools such as controlled self-talk, segmenting distance, and managing internal reactions to discomfort. The “wall” is often experienced as much psychologically as physically — influenced by perception, tension, and cognitive load. When runners learn to regulate their state, maintain rhythm, and reduce internal interference, performance becomes more consistent and sustainable across both training and racing.
How Coaching Actually Works
You don’t need to “push harder” or force motivation.
We work on:
- Nervous-system regulation
- Reducing mental interference
- Breath and rhythm control
- Confidence under fatigue
- Letting go of over-control
- Identity as a runner
- Performance under pressure
- Flow-state access
Runners describe it as running that feels:
✔ smoother
✔ calmer
✔ more controlled
✔ less forced
Who This Is For
This approach helps if you:
- Train well but race below your ability
- Struggle with pacing or consistency
- Experience anxiety before races
- Overthink during runs
- Lose confidence mid-effort
- Want to improve focus and endurance
- Want to enjoy running again
This applies across all levels — from casual runners to competitive athletes.
Tools & Methods Used
Sessions may include:
- NLP for thought and state patterns
- Hypnotherapy for deeper pattern change
- Breath and nervous-system work
- Focus and attention training
- Flow-state development
- Emotional regulation tools
- Identity and belief work
- Aphantasia-adapted methods (no visualisation required)
This is practical, applied performance work — not theory.
The Mental Game in Running Performance
At all levels of running, performance is shaped by how well the mind and body work together under fatigue, pressure and expectation.
Runners who perform well consistently are not just fitter — they are better at regulating effort, maintaining focus, and staying composed when things become uncomfortable.
These are trainable skills.
For longer distances such as half marathon and marathon, additional factors such as sustained focus, pacing discipline and fatigue management become even more important.
👉 See Marathon Performance Coaching
Expected Benefits
Runners commonly report:
✔ Better pacing and energy control
✔ Reduced anxiety before races
✔ Improved consistency
✔ Greater focus over distance
✔ Less mental fatigue
✔ Faster recovery after dips
✔ More confidence under pressure
✔ More enjoyment in running
Performance improves when interference is reduced.
Sessions & Locations
I offer running performance coaching:
- Reading, Berkshire — Mon–Fri
- Didcot, Oxfordshire — Tuesdays
- Online (UK & International) — Zoom or Teams
Supporting runners across Reading, Caversham, Tilehurst, Woodley, Earley, Wokingham, Didcot, Abingdon, Wallingford, Wantage — and internationally.
FAQ
Do I need to visualise?
No — all methods are adapted for different thinking styles.
Is this sports psychology?
It overlaps, but includes mind-body and subconscious approaches.
Can this help with races?
Yes — especially pacing, anxiety and consistency.
How many sessions?
Typically 3–6 sessions depending on goals.
Does this work online?
Yes — extremely effectively.
Next Steps — Run Closer to Your Actual Ability
If you’re ready to:
- Run with better control
- Handle pressure and fatigue
- Improve pacing and consistency
- Reduce overthinking
- Enjoy running more
…performance coaching can help you get there.
MAIL@THEEXCELPRACTICE.COM OR CALL 07807 540142