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The Emotional Crash After Extreme Endurance Events: Why It Happens & How to Recover

February 15, 20253 min read

The Emotional Crash After Extreme Endurance Events: Why It Happens & How to Recover

When the High Fades: Understanding Post-Event Trauma

Completing an extreme endurance challenge—whether it’s a multi-day expedition, an ultramarathon, or an unsupported survival event—can be one of the most exhilarating and life-changing experiences. But what happens when the event is over, and instead of feeling triumphant, you feel emotionally drained, disconnected, or even traumatised?

Many endurance athletes and adventurers experience post-event blues or trauma, often struggling with the unexpected emotional crash that follows. This response is not a sign of weakness—it’s a normal reaction to extreme stress, prolonged physical exertion, and the sudden transition back to everyday life.

Why Do We Feel This Way After an Extreme Event?

1. The Aftermath of Survival Mode

During high-stakes endurance events, your brain operates in survival mode, driven by stress hormones like adrenaline and cortisol. This keeps you focused and determined. However, when the challenge ends, those hormones plummet, often leaving you feeling emotionally numb, exhausted, or anxious.

2. Sleep Deprivation & Cognitive Disturbances

If your event involved sleep deprivation, the effects can be extreme. Lack of sleep over multiple days can lead to hallucinations, emotional instability, and difficulty processing reality. Even after returning to normal conditions, your brain may struggle to recalibrate.

3. Physical Exhaustion & Nervous System Overload

Your body has been through intense physical stress. Beyond muscle fatigue, extreme exertion can cause nervous system burnout, leading to symptoms like emotional fragility, lack of motivation, and even depressive thoughts.

4. The Contrast Between Intensity & Normal Life

During the event, every moment was filled with purpose—every decision mattered. Returning to everyday life can feel dull or even meaningless in comparison. This drastic shift can create a feeling of emptiness.

5. Processing Trauma & Psychological Impact

If you faced life-threatening situations, extreme hardship, or prolonged suffering, your brain is now trying to process what happened. Some people experience flashbacks, anxiety, or intrusive thoughts as they mentally replay the event to make sense of it.


How to Recover & Rebalance After an Extreme Event

1. Prioritise Deep Rest & Nutrition

  • Your body and brain need to recover fully, especially from sleep deprivation. Give yourself permission to sleep as much as needed.

  • Focus on nutrient-dense meals to replenish depleted energy stores.

2. Talk About It & Process the Experience

  • Speak to trusted friends, fellow athletes, or a professional to help verbalize what you went through.

  • If you’re struggling to make sense of the experience, writing in a journal can be a powerful way to process emotions.

3. Allow Time for Emotional Adjustment

  • You may feel emotionally fragile or disconnected—this is normal and will pass with time.

  • Avoid jumping straight into the next challenge. Give yourself grace and space to reintegrate.

4. Engage in Gentle Movement & Nature

  • Rather than stopping all activity, opt for light movement like walking, stretching, or swimming to help your body recalibrate.

  • Spending time in nature (without extreme conditions) can be grounding and healing.

5. Reframe the Experience

  • Instead of focusing on the hardship, reflect on what you learned about yourself.

  • Consider how this challenge has made you stronger, more resilient, and more capable.

6. Seek Support if Needed

  • If you experience persistent anxiety, emotional numbness, or distressing flashbacks, consider speaking with a trauma-informed therapist.

  • You are not alone, and reaching out for help is a sign of strength.


Final Thoughts

Feeling lost, low, or emotionally shaken after an extreme event is a natural response to an unnatural experience. Your body and mind need time to reset. The key is to recognise these feelings, prioritise recovery, and allow yourself the space to process everything you’ve just accomplished. With the right approach, you’ll not only recover but come out stronger for the next adventure.

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At Do3 Coaching we use the TrainingPeaks coaching platform to help us deliver our training plans.  TrainingPeaks provides a complete web, mobile and desktop solution for enabling smart and effective endurance training whether you are at home, at work or traveling - you will always have access to your plan. The TrainingPeaks platform allows cutting-edge scientific analysis and planning of your training programme to ensure you get the most out of your workouts. It is used by Tour de France teams, Ironman World Champions, Olympians, and age group athletes and coaches around the world to track, analyse and plan their training. 

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We will programme your personal data into TrainingPeaks and include things like heart rate and power zones. This allows much more detailed analysis of your workouts so if needed adjustments can be made as your training progresses.

With TrainingPeaks Premium we can analyse your training in fine detail. This includes monitoring your fatigue levels, training workload and overall changes in fitness. These things allow us to balance the training load in order to maximise your training time and reduce the likelihood of overtraining and excess fatigue.

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS.

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Do you have to swim front crawl in triathlon?

In short no, you can swim any stroke you want as long as you make it to the end of the swim by cut-off time. However BTF rule 4.1 states: “Backstroke is not permitted in pool swims; any competitor wishing to use backstroke at an open water event must indicate this to the Event Organiser before entering the water.” Backstroke in open-water can also lead to some sighting issues though.

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Can I use pool goggles for open-water swimming?

Of course, you can. But open-water-specific goggles do tend to come with larger lenses, which therefore provide better peripheral vision. The other area to consider is the lens color, to cope with the different lighting conditions outdoors.

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Apart from aerobars, what else makes a tri-specific bike different from a road bike?

In short the frame geometry. Typically that means shorter head and top tubes that you’ll find on a road bike, and a seat tube that’s closer to vertical. All this is to get your upper body lower and further forwards. This makes you more aero but also opens up your hip-leg angle to make it easier to run after the bike.

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What’s the difference between clincher and tubular tyres?

The most common is the clincher, which consists of a tyre and an inner tube fitted into the clincher wheel’s rim. Tubs (or tubulars) is a one-piece system where the tube is sewn inside the tyre. You glue this onto the rim of a tubular wheel. You can pump tubs up to a higher pressure than clinchers, which potentially means more speed.

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What’s a negative split?

A negative split – most commonly used in relation to the run – is where you pace to make sure that the second half of the respective discipline is faster than the first. It’s a common tactic to ensure that you don’t go too hard too early and ‘blow up’ further into the race. It’s especially important if you’re not good at pacing yourself.

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When I’m running in zone one, it feels really slow. Is that right?

Yes. Base training is all about keeping your heart rate down and building fitness, not about speed. So you may well find that you’re running slower than usual but that means you’re doing it correctly!

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Frequently Asked Questions

In short no, you can swim any stroke you want as long as you make it to the end of the swim by cut-off time. However BTF rule 4.1 states: “Backstroke is not permitted in pool swims; any competitor wishing to use backstroke at an open water event must indicate this to the Event Organiser before entering the water.” Backstroke in open-water can also lead to some sighting issues though.

Of course you can. But open-water-specific goggles do tend to come with larger lenses, which therefore provide better peripheral vision. The other area to consider is the lens colour, to cope with the different lighting conditions outdoors.

A catch-up drill is a swim drill to lengthen your stroke. One arm should be out in front, while the other goes through the whole stroke motion and ‘catches up’ to it. Then switch arms and repeat. it’s similar to your normal stroke action, just with one arm waiting on the other before starting to move.

In short the frame geometry. Typically that means shorter head and top tubes that you’ll find on a road bike, and a seat tube that’s closer to vertical. All this is to get your upper body lower and further forwards. This makes you more aero but also opens up your hip-leg angle to make it easier to run after the bike.

Functional threshold power (FTP) is your maximum sustained effort over a 45-60 min period. You can work it out by performing a 20min bike test and calculating 95% of your average power output for the ride. You will need a power meter (or a sophisticated indoor trainer such as a Wattbike) to obtain these results.

The most common is the clincher, which consists of a tyre and an inner tube fitted into the clincher wheel’s rim. Tubs (or tubulars) is a one-piece system where the tube is sewn inside the tyre. You glue this onto the rim of a tubular wheel. You can pump tubs up to a higher pressure than clinchers, which potentially means more speed.

A negative split – most commonly used in relation to the run – is where you pace to make sure that the second half of the respective discipline is faster than the first. It’s a common tactic to ensure that you don’t go too hard too early and ‘blow up’ further into the race. It’s especially important if you’re not good at pacing yourself.

Yes. Base training is all about keeping your heart rate down and building fitness, not about speed. So you may well find that you’re running slower than usual but that means you’re doing it correctly!

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