In every athlete’s journey, there comes a moment when comfort is no longer an option—when performance hinges not on talent alone, but on the willingness to embrace suffering. It’s in these moments that we truly understand what it means to “go to the well.”
This phrase, often repeated by one of our gym’s long-time members and former ultra-endurance runner, captures the essence of what separates the average competitor from the elite. He’s tackled everything from 50K races to 100-mile slogs—distances that break down the body and challenge the mind. During my own experience running a 50K, he stayed by my side, demonstrating firsthand what it meant to reach deep when the body wanted to give up.
So what does it really mean to “go to the well”? In the most basic sense, it’s the ability to dig into your mental and physical reserves in the heat of competition. For some, that means pushing through stomach cramps at mile 70 of an ultra marathon. For others, it could be refusing to back off during the final minutes of a brutal workout. Regardless of the scenario, the decision is the same: lean into discomfort rather than retreat.
A Choice, Not a Trait
It’s tempting to believe this ability is innate—that some people are just born with that mental switch. But that’s a myth. The capacity to suffer with purpose is not a genetic gift. It’s a skill, and like any skill, it can be trained.
This was especially evident during the recent Sport of Fitness Semifinals. Athletes were tested to their limits—yet the pain they endured often remained hidden beneath composed expressions and efficient movement. Take the run-and-clean & jerk event, for instance. On the surface, it was just another workout. But for those of us watching closely, it was a masterclass in pain tolerance. Athletes weren’t just performing—they were making deliberate decisions to stay in the fire when every part of their body wanted out.
And that’s the secret: suffering in sports is always a choice.
Training the Mind to Compete
This doesn’t mean every training session should be a battle of attrition. Quite the opposite. The point of training isn’t to burn out—it’s to build up. The goal is to strategically introduce discomfort, in small but meaningful doses, so that you learn how to confront it without fear.
You might call it “mental reps”—exposing yourself to the edge just long enough to get stronger, more confident, and more resilient. Just as we don’t max out our lifts every day, we shouldn’t seek the bottom of the well every time we train. The art is in knowing when to push, and when to prepare for the next opportunity to push.
That’s where growth lives: not in the heroic moments that make highlight reels, but in the disciplined decisions to suffer a little more today so you can suffer better tomorrow.
Choosing Not to Lose
Winning isn’t always about crossing the line first. Sometimes, it’s simply about choosing not to lose. The difference may seem subtle, but it’s profound. Not losing means holding your pace when others drop off. It means sticking to your plan even when your lungs scream. It means choosing to stay in it—not because you feel strong, but because you’ve trained yourself to stay.
That mental toughness doesn’t appear out of nowhere. It’s earned. It’s practiced. And it’s rooted in the quiet, consistent discipline of embracing discomfort just often enough to make it familiar.
The Well Is Always There
No matter your sport or level of competition, the well is always waiting. It’s a metaphor for that place inside you where excuses dissolve and decisions are made. It’s dark and demanding, but it’s also empowering. Because once you learn to go there—once you realize you can go there—you’ve unlocked something many never do.
That doesn’t mean it gets easier. It just means you’re no longer afraid of it.
So the next time you train, ask yourself: Am I playing it safe, or am I learning how to suffer smart? Am I teaching myself how to compete—not just with my body, but with my will?
Because in the end, it’s not about who’s the fastest or strongest. It’s about who’s willing to go the deepest.
And the well? It’s deep enough for all of us. But only the prepared know how to draw from it when it matters most.
Train wisely. Suffer smart. Learn to go to the well. And when the moment comes—you’ll be ready.