Hey. I thought I'd give this a shot, just a general chat thread about running... eg. How was your run today, how are you tracking, how's your training going for that race that you decided to go for etc... if it's popular, maybe someone knows how to write a bot to post weekly or monthly? (I don't)
First time running in over a year today. Recently lost 40 lbs 5-10 of it from having covid the last couple weeks but I managed to go 2 miles and only felt like dying a little lol. So I count that as a good start.
Not much of a runner, but ive been finally consistent doing weight training in the gym and I try and finish off around 2 workouts a week with a mile run. I always hate it, but very much looking forward to the day it doesn't hurt. Hopefully soon enough I'll be running a couple miles easy.
I remember those painful early days. It might sound counterintuitive, but the more I run the more I enjoy it. Add more miles if you can. Go slow and easy. You'll start enjoying, or at least not hating it, sooner than later.
I was making good progress on a half marathon plan. Halfway through, got up to 9 miles on my long run. Very slow pace intentionally but also because I'm slow and new to running. I took a full week off because stress is starting to effect me physiologically. Yesterday was my first run back, also got a running coach, and it sucked!
One mile warm up, repeated a fartlek 3 times of 3 minutes on, 1-1/2 minutes jog, 2 minutes on, 1 minute jog, and 1 minute on, 30 seconds jog. Another mile cool down. Got caught in the rain on the coold down too, lol.
My hamstrings are shot. Tomorrow I have another tasty one that I am but also am not looking forward to.
Thanks. I hope so! I hope my body can handle it though. I'm fit, but not running fit, and I think with mental stress my body is having a hard time recovering.
I'm not sleeping very good and my Garmin watch shows my HRV dropping. Any advice?
I've been feeling mostly poor lately on runs but first misty run of the year today, was brilliant. Like running through misters that people are so grateful for at races...but it's your whole run. PNW USA FTW
Dealing with shin splints for the first time in my life. This time last year I ran a sub-4-hour marathon and my overall volume has been way down since then so I'm really struggling to find a balance between enough running to keep me happy and satisfied without exacerbating the injury. It's frustrating to see myself struggling with efforts that were once my easy days.
I have 33 weeks until a 50k trail run, so hopefully that's plenty of time to heal up and get back to a good training volume.
Its a pain in the ass, but you will get through it! Just started running again after 3 months of on and off running and even 7 weeks of fully stopping. Trying to Balance my running now with more biking and strength Training.
Six weeks ago I finished my couch-to-10k training, and ran my first 10k after a gap of 3.5 years. It went well, but the fatigue lasted for two weeks. Afterwards, I fell sick and couldn't start running for two more weeks. Finally last week, I started training again, for a faster 10k. And I realised that running couple of times a week actually makes me feel more rested and full of energy, as compared to a more sedentary life.
I like to mix up long runs with some long intervals at a quicker pace. They don't need to be fast or terribly long. Just something to anticipate and give me a feeling that I'm progressing through the workout-milestones.
I'll probably be a bit less conservative with my pace once I've got one or two marathons under my belt and feel more comfortable with the distances, but for now I'm determined not to injure myself!
I got a bug of some kind last Friday, and though I feel better, I'm not quite there, and exercise is still taking it out of me, so I've stuck to cycling this week. Will get back out there this weekend
I've gained about 30 lbs (14kg) over the last two years. I fell out of the habit when I got my first job out of college, but now that I'm not working remotely I have a better schedule, yet I still have trouble maintaining motivation long enough to make a habit of it.
I love running, but I can't seem to make myself do it. With winter closing in again I worry that I won't be able to muster the strength to go run outside again until the spring.
Any tips or inspiration anyone could share would be appreciated.
This is good advice. I just take one step at a time: coffee and snack, running clothes, shoes, out the door, warmup, and then a bit of running. Usually, but not always, I keep going.
In larger perspective, I follow a program of scheduled workouts. And set a goal of some sort at the end. There's lots of programs out there.
Lower the barrier (get clothes out etc before hand), make it novel; pick somewhere different to run (if you've the time for some travel), reward yourself after, set a goal (either running metrics or like "I want to see the pretty garden anyway so might as well run there).
Treadmills suck but are better than not running if the weather sucks.
Find some nice tunes or podcasts or audiobooks and only listen while running to make it more exciting.
Also acknowledging that for a little while it's going to suck and be hard and just being ok with that can be useful. Until you get fitter and get the habit it's hard, it's ok to find stuff hard. Sometimes just accepting that makes doing something transiently hard easier.
I've been trying to get back into it more. It's hard after college when all the running friends you had have moved away, and work takes up way more time. I've been doing about 30-40 minutes every other day. I find it a lot harder to regulate me pace when I run less.
I need better shoes. Any recommendations? I don’t do much but I have some older Merrels I need to replace. I haven’t tried on clouds but hear they’re great
No recommendations other than to go to a shop that will fit you, IE. Observe your running style on a treadmill, then fit a shoe that's appropriate to your gait.
My milage has dropped a fair bit recently with my eldest starting school and our routine being upended. Each run is feeling harder but I keep telling myself that there is no optimum routine any more and if I miss the 'best' time to run, that just means I need to look for the 'next best' time... Crammed a 5k into my lunch break yesterday and I am proud of myself.
I ran my fastest 5k a couple of days ago. Just left the house feeling good. Wasn't intending to go at such a quick pace. Had been doing around 5:50 -6 min KMs since I put the shoes back on around 4-5 months ago.
This was like 5:29min/km average.
Was very surprised. Feel like I'm getting better.
Pretty well. I've been increasing distance and time after some tendonitis and everything seems to be going ok.
I'm not very interested in racing much more than myself so atm I'm working on getting up to 10 km's. Yesterday I did my longest in both time and distance with 1:20 9 km. Not prize winning but significant for me, that's on hilly sandy trails as well so I feel I'm probably pretty close to my goal.
Still having difficulty building up speed but I'm happy with my progress and don't want to push too hard all at once and end up on time out again.
Taking a break because I am feeling my knee on the outside, and I do not want to get a runners knee. I was thinking of two weeks but not sure. Anyone experience with this? When should I be okay again to run?
Just started the other day, and my legs hurt 🫠 my right knee has been acting up so I'm not sure what the best stretches are to warm it up. It mostly twinges when I stand up after squatting or bending over so that's neat. Happy 36th birthday to me 😅
I've taken a week for "rest" after running steadily since February and four races in September.
I've done some short runs. But mainly, I've spent the last few days testing some strength workouts and working on changes to my form. (In particular, trying to ensure my glutes are engaged and my hips beneath me.)
Fitness test tomorrow and then a speed block to get ready for a shift to skate skiing!