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Mastering Tough Conditions Mentally

Mental Strength for Heat, Humidity, and Tough Race Conditions Run Tri Bike Everyday Athlete

Mastering Tough Conditions Mentally

Why Tough Conditions Feel Harder Than They Are

For endurance athletes, difficult conditions are inevitable and completely uncontrollable! Whether it’s a humid summer long run, a windy race day, relentless rain, or oppressive heat during training, external conditions can easily become mental challenges. Learning how to adapt can help an athlete mentally and physically when they encounter these challenging moments.

Heat, humidity, and environmental stressors increase perceived effort, making your body feel like it is working harder, even when your pace or output remains the same. In difficult conditions, focusing too much on the outcome can create additional stress.  For some athletes, this can trigger frustration, panic, negative self-talk, and poor decision-making.  

These are some mental strategies that help athletes respond to discomfort with control instead of emotional reactivity.

Normalize Discomfort Instead of Fighting It

One of the biggest mental mistakes athletes make is interpreting discomfort as a sign that something is wrong. Heat and humidity are uncomfortable for everyone. The goal is not to eliminate discomfort but to tolerate and manage it effectively.


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Stay Mentally Present

Long races and difficult conditions can feel overwhelming for athletes, especially when they think too far ahead. Instead of focusing on the remaining distance, the rising temperature, or the unpleasant conditions, break the effort into manageable segments.

Such as:

  • Run to the next aid station.
  • Focus on the next 5 minutes.
  • Stay steady until the next turn.

Chunking helps the brain stay engaged in the moment rather than focusing solely on the outcome. Process-focused athletes stay engaged in what they can control.

Develop Self-Talk Cues

In harsh or unpleasant conditions, self-talk matters because the brain becomes more negative under physical stress. Short cue words help the brain process information more efficiently.  Athletes can be proactive, though, by preparing phrases in advance, such as:

  • “Breathe”
  • “Strong and steady”
  • “One step at a time”
  • “Focus on the right now”

Build Confidence Through Preparation

Assessing aspects of control is a way for athletes to build confidence. When an athlete examines what’s under their control and what is outside of it, they can become better prepared.  

Additional ways athletes can mentally prepare for races or training include:

  • Training occasionally in challenging weather
  • Practicing hydration and cooling strategies
  • Rehearsing self-talk statements
  • Visualizing difficult moments and successful responses
  • Creating coping plans before races

Control Emotions Early

Hot race and training days can often punish athletes who struggle with emotional control. Some athletes might panic when their pace slows, get frustrated by changes in their metrics, overthink the conditions, or compare themselves to their competitors.  Learning to work on staying calm can help athletes self-regulate when needed.  Some examples include slowing breathing, relaxing shoulders and jaw, and assessing what can be controlled in that moment.  

As most endurance athletes would agree, endurance sports are rarely about perfect conditions. Rain, heat, humidity, and wind develop even when an athlete has done everything according to plan.  Mental skills such as acceptance, self-talk, emotional regulation, adaptability, and present-moment focus are excellent strategies to practice and proactively implement to help an athlete become prepared to respond effectively when discomfort arises.  

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Dr JoAnne Bullard Run Tri Bike Magazine Doctor of Sport and Performance Psychology

JoAnne Bullard is a Doctor of Sport and Performance Psychology and a Certified Mental Performance Consultant through the Association for Applied Sport Psychology. She is also a Certified Strength and Conditioning Specialist through the National Strength and Conditioning Association.

She serves as a tenured Associate Professor at Rowan University and is the owner of Absolute Fitness, LLC.  Her goal is to provide a holistically applied approach for clients through performance psychology consulting. She has experience working with athletes of all ages, including endurance athletes, in individual and group sessions.  Her research areas include mindfulness, performance anxiety, goal setting, coping strategies, and mental well-being of athletes.

She has completed five marathons, numerous half-marathons, and is always looking for her next race.