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@iwasnotborntorun
Perks of running on a trail: -running through spider webs -mosquitoes -rolling ankles -dirt/mud -no cars -no people to watch u dying
I haven't posted anything for a while, mostly because I went on vacation to Kansas and because of the heat (97 degrees and humid) and unfamiliar territory, I was on a treadmill for a while. (I nearly gave up in the end- treadmills are so awful).Â
Two new personal bests since I've posted, though. I ran a 40 mile week for the first time ever last week, and this week I participated in my high school's first ever Alumni 5K and got a new track PR of 22:28.Â
Aaaaand now my legs are pretty fried. But summer training is going well.Â
bread is so fucking good man I could prob eat an entire bakery in 25 minutes or lessÂ
SHIT RUNNERS NEVER SAY
Day #13
I did my first hill workout of the season, and it killed. We were supposed to go at mile pace for 1 minute up the hill and then jog back down for recovery. I got to 8 reps, stopped for a bit because I was practically hyperventilating, and then finished with 2 more to get to 10 like my coach told me to.Â
This week is supposed to be my first 40 mile week ever, and I'm not sure if I'll actually be able to get that many miles in. We'll see!Â
This workout made me realize that I have soooo much work to do. I don't think I did so badly because I was physically tired so much as mentally. It's hard getting motivated to do another repeat up a hill.Â
When the coach starts telling us a new route
Weâre all just like
you do not want to be the leader when running in the woods
no shaming the slow runners, because everyone runs the same thing and itâs hard for them too
no shaming the fast runners, just because someone is a natural doesnât mean that the person is not feeling the burn
we are family
Day #11
My senior friends and I organized a run with the girls at 9:00 in the morning, and we actually had people show up! We planned it so we'd end at an ice cream place, and my friend bought the three underclassmen who showed up their ice cream.Â
The run itself was in a place I'd never run before, which was fun. But it was hot and I was tired, so I went slow and stopped at four miles.Â
Total mileage for the week: 37.3
Day off tomorrow, yay!
Fun fact- I somehow managed to eat breakfast for every meal of the day. Breakfast was cereal, lunch was a breakfast burrito with scrambled egg, salsa, lettuce, cheese, and vegetarian sausage, and dinner was pancakes, fruit, and real sausage. I love breakfast...
Day #10
My coach organizes a carpool to a nice trail about 45 minutes away from where we live every Friday, and for the first time ever, I went to it. (Mostly just because I knew my friend was going). We started running around 7 in the evening, so it had cooled down quite a bit, and the trail was nice and shady. It's a beautiful place.
(This isn't my picture, but it is of the trail, for the record)
The first half of the run was all on a gradual include, but that meant the second part was downhill, which was good. I got in around 6 miles.Â
Once I got home I ate ice cream with some of my sister's homemade oatmeal raisin cookies, which are just magically delicious.Â
Day #9
Woke up on the earlier side to do threshold miles at the track with some friends. I wanted to do 3 but I was lame and only did 2. Only got in around 5 miles with the warmup and cooldown. I certainly have some work ahead of me to get these workouts where I want them to be, but for now I'm just happy I managed to motivate myself enough to get in a workout before 9 am.Â
Afterwards, my mom, sister, and I made apple-cheese pancakes with little bits of chopped almond in them for lunch, and it was the best ever. We've been using the recipe out of our Moosewood vegetarian cookbook for years and never noticed that the recipe called for nuts at all! We tried it out for the first time and it was so fantastic. We've been missing out.Â
Day #8
Back on the treadmill again. It felt okay, I suppose. In total, today, I got in a tad over 6 miles. We tried to organize another group run but no one showed up! Not such a great feeling.Â
Also, I've gotta stop spending my entire day inside doing nothing. It's really brining me down. I feel much better when I have busier, more active days.
Xc and we know it
So Iâve been getting a lot of questions regarding running and cross country. Iâm so happy that a lot of you are so excited about joining your schoolâs XC team! I really wish I had time to answer all of your personal questions, but I just donât. Lucky for you, I have a WHOLE ENTIRE PAGE dedicated to answering questions about running!Â
 Tips from the one and onlyâŠme :)
One of the things about running is that youâre ALWAYS pushing yourself to your limits, and sometimes past them. I suggest mixing up your running workouts in order to build endurance, speed and strength! Here are a few suggestions:
Run hill repeats. Find a steep-ass hill and run up it..over and over again. It doesnât really matter how fast you go, as long as you KEEP GOING. Itâs important to push yourself,  because part of running is learning how to put up with tired legs and sore muscles!
Fartlek training. Basically during your run, jog for 5 minutes, then sprint for 15 seconds. After your spring, go right back into jogging. Repeat this until you reach 30 minutes.
Strides. These can be done before/after your run. Mark out 100meters or so and sprint it. Jog back to where you started, and do it again until you reach 4 to 5 times. (This helps with speed at the beginning of races.)
Strength training. Youâll need to build up those muscles in your legs! I suggest this POP Pilates video for calves and thighs.Â
CORE. The fastest runners have insanely strong core muscles. This means you not only need to build muscle in your legs, but also your core, or âabsâ. Check out Gain Fitness to find workouts to target this area.
Arms. Strong arms also benefit runners. Start doing push-ups and use the Gain Fitness website to find upper body workouts!
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This list was made by Steph, not me. Go check out her blog!
These links are pulled from everywhere: LiveJournal, Active.com, RunnersWorld and beyond. I found them useful when I was beginning running, and I hope other beginners will, too. This is not a full, comprehensive list of âeverything about running ever,â but I hope to shed some light on good places to look for information for beginners.
Good Places for Beginning Runner Q&A
Beginners Running Q&A Blog
Forum for Beginning Runners (RW)
Runners Community on LiveJournal
General Advice
âNewbieâ Advice (by supermanz)
Breathing Tips for New Runners
Basic Gear for Beginning Runners
27 Ways to Run Better Every Day
Running Basics Explained
Base Training Explained
Stride Rate and Length, Explained
How to Find Good Form (Midfoot striking)
Training Plans
Couch-to-5k Plan
Free RW Training Guides
Hal Higdonâs Training Plans
Coaching by Pfitzinger
âThe Healthy Runners Marathon Training Planâ by LiveStrong
Injury Prevention
How to Avoid Injury (RW)
Injury Diagnosis
How Injury Happens/How to Avoid It
Barefoot Running
General Discussion on Barefoot Running - What and Why?
Article on Barefoot Running (Science Daily)
Finding âBarefoot Shoesâ
Barefoot Running University
Minimalist Running
Fun/Useful Stuff
What to Wear for Runners
MapMyRun
Free Workout Mixes by Podrunner
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Additional tips from Vivian :)
Step 1: Put on some shoes.
Step 2: Open the door.
Step 3: Go!
Some other steps that might be usefulâŠ
Run for a reason. Whether itâs distance or time or to clear your mind of all the crap that happened during the day. Do it for a purpose, and donât forget that purpose.
Push yourself. Do a little better every day. This doesnât mean you have to increase time or distance every day. Just improve your mindset a little day by day and you will the PRâs will come.
Save a little energy. There is absolutely no point in hurting yourself so much that you canât drag yourself out of bed tomorrow to do it all over again. Toe the line between possible and impossible; keep your sights on the incredible, and some day itâll be here.
Wear the right thing. Running makes you sweat, and sweat, although sexy, can also hinder your progress. You want wicking material (ie spandex, polyester). You also want good shoes. Not $200 shoes, but not $10 Target shoes either.
Write down your progress. Itâs so much more motivating if you have a record of how far, literally, youâve come. Anything you to do help you reach your goals is upward trend.
Youâre out the door, what now?
Focus on your breathing. Every living thing is breathing. Your lungs are breathing, the trees around you are breathing, even houses breathe. Breathing is natural. Focus your energy on inhaling and exhaling to fuel your muscles with oxygen.
Plan beforehand. One of the worst feelings in the world is to be partway through a planned run and feel (1) like you have to poop, (2) like you have to pee, or (3) like youâre breathing sandpaper. Avoid this problem by pooping, peeing, and drinking water before going on the run. Trust me, just do it.
Take a break if you need it. I do it. Marathoners do it. Everyone does it.
Okay, back from the run, riding the highâŠ
Stretch. Your muscles are warm now, and itâs a good time to stretch. Calves, hammies, quads.
Chocolate milk is the best recovery drink. So everyone says, and I havenât done any research on this, but itâs worked for me.
Smile! Exercise makes people happy. Other people see it on your face, and theyâll be happier too.
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Running (Training Plans) from Ela!
The 5K â Prepare to race this classic distance with a training program that carefully balances both mileage and speedwork.Â
The 10K â Most runners considering the 10K already have the miles under their belts to compete adequately in the distance. The Cool Running training program enhances that endurance while sharpening the pace through speedwork.Â
The Half Marathon â The 21K distance provides a challenge beyond the popular 10K while allowing for more flexibility than marathon preparation. Our 12-week training program will get you ready.Â
The Marathon â As more and more runners turn to the marathon to prove their running mettle, a sensible training program is more important than ever for building safely to peak performance.Â
Speedwork for Beginners â A speedwork program for beginning runners.
Speedwork for Intermediate Runners â A speedwork program for beginning runners.
Speedwork for Advanced Runners â A speedwork program for advanced runners.Â
Speedwork for Competitive Runners â  A speedwork program for competitive runners.
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Tips from boostyouresteem.tumblr.com :)
Get a running app. Every smart phone has at least one available for free. Guessing your pace is isnât going to cut it if youâre counting calories or training for a marathon.
If youâre running marathon length races, a break during the first mile or two is the most important.
Pace yourself. It doesnât matter if there are 50 people ahead of you or 50 people behind you. Donât judge yourself by their standards. You have your own pace and it works for you.
Pay attention to your breath. Inhale left foot, exhale left foot.
Forget yogic breathing. It doesnât apply here. In and out through your mouth.
No matter how much you think you sound like Vader, you breathing arenât nearly as loud as you think you are. Donât hold back. If you donât get enough oxygen, your muscles fail.
Donât slam your feet on the pavement. Keep it as light as possible. If youâre on a treadmill, the entire gym shouldnât be able to hear it.
If you canât figure out if youâre a mid-foot striker, heel striker or toe striker, it doesnât really matter. Unless your legs are killing you, just keep going. If you focus too much on your legs, youâre probably going to eat it.
Run against the traffic.
Only put a headphone in one ear, you want to hear a car before it makes you roadkill.
Ladies, loop your headphones through your sports bra. Fellas, run it under your shirt. If youâre going shirtless, hook the extra cord up in the armband so it doesnât bounce around and hit you in the face.
Make a playlist before you go. Donât rely on shuffle. Get a good selection of high bpm songs, or something that will make you angry/excited. You donât want to pause and let your heart rate/stride falter while you try to skip all your Death Cab for Cutie songs.
Take rest days.
Mind over matter. Your legs donât really hurt that badly. Yes, you can breathe. Keep going.
But listen to your body. If you legs are honestly giving out, head home.
Hydrate but donât water log.
If your endurance is terrible, work it up with stationary bikes or cardio classes. Get your aerobic ability and actual fitness level up.
Stretch your calves with toe raises. Rock back on your heels and bring your toes up a few times before you run to reduce shin splints.
Strength train. Youâll get less shin splints as you build up the muscles in your legs.
Find good sneakers and pay good money for them. You can get all your other gear for cheap, but go name brand and take time to find a shoe that works for you. Some podiatrists will even fit you for what type of shoe you should wear.
Stick reflective tape to your heels if you run at night and bring a flashlight so you donât turn an ankle.
Pay attention. Be alert. Donât get hit by the train that runs through traffic near the Fens. Run as if no one sees you. Make it your responsibility to keep yourself safe.
Day 7
Finally one of those days that remind me why I run on the team!
It was quite a day today.We had an optional practice scheduled for 6:30 (and we showed up at 6:00 because we didn't actually know when it started) and we were supposed to do hill repeats, but we only managed to get in a 10:00 warmup before we started seeing lightning in the distance. Since the coaches like it better safe than sorry, we all just went back to our cars and tried to wait it out. It didn't get any better, and it actually started torrentially downpouring, basically. So, practice was a fail. But I had fun hanging out with my friends huddled in the car, anyhow. On the way back, we literally saw lightning strike a tree right next to us! There were sparks and flames and everything, and we were just screaming! Luckily it appeared nothing actually caught on fire.Â
My sister, and friend, and I decided to go on a night run instead of going to the gym like most other people, and it was great. We went a nice, leisurely pace for 1:04:00 and we ended up getting in over 7 miles. We had a great conversation as we ran. I'm so bummed that we didn't have a workout, can't you tell?
TL;DR- Running with friends is awesome, and hill repeats are fun to not do. Also lightning is scary.Â
Thereâs truly nothing like the running community. As fiercely competitive as it is on the track, we are the most loyal and supportive people I know. Running has given me some of my best friends, opportunities and more life experiences than I can explain.