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Ran a 10k - Official Thread (4 Viewers)

@pbm107 everything okay? Noticed you hadn't logged much lately and unlike me, that's not normal for you.
Dealing with some knee soreness, I don’t think it is anything significant but annoying nevertheless. I am trying to be cautious with it, but getting frustrated with the minor injuries that seem to being occurring now more than ever. Thanks for asking and hope that your body allows you to train as much as you’d like.
 
@pbm107 everything okay? Noticed you hadn't logged much lately and unlike me, that's not normal for you.
Dealing with some knee soreness, I don’t think it is anything significant but annoying nevertheless. I am trying to be cautious with it, but getting frustrated with the minor injuries that seem to being occurring now more than ever. Thanks for asking and hope that your body allows you to train as much as you’d like.
My body's not allowing me to do what I want, but I've found a routine that's...good enough. While I've gained way too much weight, a lot of it is good weight. Pre-vacation I had a 6 week stretch in which I got at least 4 strength training sessions in each week. Squat isn't up to what I want it to be, but I think I departed for the beach ready to take a leap once on the other side (starting in about 2 hours). Upper body strength is as strong as it's been since my personal training days and that will only grow as I level up leg strength. And most importantly, I'm able to do most other activities I want to do, and do them well - golf, basketball, whiffleball, backyard QB'ing. That said, my balance is a mess (limited water activities) and nagging aches (feet, calves, hip, back) still surface when I spend too much time on my feet. I've decided to shift my focus towards that when the weather turns late calendar year. In the meantime, hoping to at least net 15-20 mpw around everything else I'm doing, but it'll be mostly of the recreational jogger miles. C'est la'vie
 
I had 85/76 this morning for a 161 SI, but I see that’s not even good enough for bragging rights around here :kicksrock:
I wouldn't call it bragging rights as much as me continuing to not learn my lesson about setting an alarm in the morning.
Unfortunately the group I’m mentoring meets on Monday evening. I figured I’d be ok to run 4 before we met to run 6. 93° with a dew point on the 70s sucked. It got better when the rest of the team showed up and we ran at 6 - it dropped to 88°

Tonight we ride at 530, when it will be 93° with 76° dew point. So, 169 should be glorious.

Sunday’s ride started at 73°, 94% humidity (I didn’t look at dew), ended around 90°. And I learned the dollar general is a lifesaver when I bought an energy drink and Gatorade.
 
Hey guys, remember me??! :bye:

Even though running sucks, been very slowly getting back to it so I don't kill myself in November.

Texted a couple of you about this, but I've decided I'm going to try a run/walk approach for NYC. I've seen others do it in races and read a bit more about it recently and it's supposed to help limit injury and overall easier on the body and it just makes too much sense for me at this point, especially the paces I would be "running".

I have no time target. Just finish. Initially figured I'd train and run this as a HM and then just walk and/or run whatever I could to the end. But, now with this, it also let's me actually try it with training. And with this stupid heat....

So I did it yesterday for the first time. It's interesting. Reminds me of when I did MAF for a bit. It's mentally engaging and I definitely felt better and enjoyed it than if I just straight ran. Did 2 miles of it yesterday morning and another 3 last night.

Anyway, I used ChatGPT to give me a plan and looking at it, it seems reasonable. I'll post it separately in a moment and welcome any feedback to this nonsense.

I see some of you are still running. That's cool.
 
Great to see you back in the thread and also back on Strava with some runs.

The run/walk idea always made a lot of logical sense to me, so I'm curious to see how it works out for you, especially since you have some full run marathons in your past to compare it to. For myself I'd worry about fighting the inner voice to extend the walk breaks as I got tired, but maybe like anything else you just get used to the routine?

One thing I did notice with briefly doing run/walk in my training before the 40 miler is that it didn't help much as far as making the heat more bearable, which surprised me.
 
Hey guys, remember me??! :bye:

Even though running sucks, been very slowly getting back to it so I don't kill myself in November.

Texted a couple of you about this, but I've decided I'm going to try a run/walk approach for NYC. I've seen others do it in races and read a bit more about it recently and it's supposed to help limit injury and overall easier on the body and it just makes too much sense for me at this point, especially the paces I would be "running".

I have no time target. Just finish. Initially figured I'd train and run this as a HM and then just walk and/or run whatever I could to the end. But, now with this, it also let's me actually try it with training. And with this stupid heat....

So I did it yesterday for the first time. It's interesting. Reminds me of when I did MAF for a bit. It's mentally engaging and I definitely felt better and enjoyed it than if I just straight ran. Did 2 miles of it yesterday morning and another 3 last night.

Anyway, I used ChatGPT to give me a plan and looking at it, it seems reasonable. I'll post it separately in a moment and welcome any feedback to this nonsense.

I see some of you are still running. That's cool.
I'm sure you've run across Jeff Galloway in your research. I tried the method back in the day and it didn't work for me then but I didn't invest any mental capacity into either. It's just a weird change when you're used to running a straight 10k or whatever. It really is mentally challenging to stop mid stride and walk for XX amount of time then pick up running again in XX amount of time, yada, yada, yada. But when you are sorta kinda starting over or after a long layoff, I could definitely see the merit to it, especially if you're just trying to finish a race with no time expectation.

Good luck, saw you on Strava the other day and thought maybe you hit your watch when you were being chased by the cops or something :thumbup::boxing:
 
Great to see you back in the thread and also back on Strava with some runs.

The run/walk idea always made a lot of logical sense to me, so I'm curious to see how it works out for you, especially since you have some full run marathons in your past to compare it to. For myself I'd worry about fighting the inner voice to extend the walk breaks as I got tired, but maybe like anything else you just get used to the routine?

One thing I did notice with briefly doing run/walk in my training before the 40 miler is that it didn't help much as far as making the heat more bearable, which surprised me.
It does wonders getting my HR back down, which is always an issue for me. The heat itself doesn't bother me. The constant fluid loss from sweating does.

And honestly, if I end up walking longer/more during the race, I don't care. But, that's also why I'm going to train doing it.

Doing a 15-16 min/mile walk pace actually isn't "easy", so I'll play with it as the distances get longer, but I think it'll work for me.

Plus, I think I'll really enjoy the "race" more in this setting being able to take it all in with the location and everyone around. It's why I even agreed to do this one.
 
Great to see you back in the thread and also back on Strava with some runs.

The run/walk idea always made a lot of logical sense to me, so I'm curious to see how it works out for you, especially since you have some full run marathons in your past to compare it to. For myself I'd worry about fighting the inner voice to extend the walk breaks as I got tired, but maybe like anything else you just get used to the routine?

One thing I did notice with briefly doing run/walk in my training before the 40 miler is that it didn't help much as far as making the heat more bearable, which surprised me.


Plus, I think I'll really enjoy the "race" more in this setting being able to take it all in with the location and everyone around. It's why I even agreed to do this one.

Adopting the "I don't care about my time, I'm just going to enjoy it" approach for Boston was awesome. You've already proven you can race a marathon, nothing to prove here. So your plan to enjoy it is a good one. If I ever got into NY, I'd do the same.
 

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