Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Run through the pain... Think again!


For the past week I have been reduced to no running. My IT bands have all but locked up causing major discomfort in my hips and knees. At mile two of the Cherry Blossom 10 Miler, I finally throw in the towel. My mom and others tell me that trying to run 12 marathons this year is too ambitious and I was bound to hurt myself. I totally disagree…

Since my embarrassing walk back to the start line of the Cherry Blossom I have reflected on how I allowed my self to get to this point. Notice I said, “How I allowed myself.” It is my firm belief that we have total control over our injuries. In my opinion and experience thus far I have determined that it is not the training or the demand of the sport that causes injuries - it is a lack of focus.

Discipline and steadfast devotion to a long-term goal helps me stray away from over-doing one particular workout or ignoring a persistent soreness. My current injury is a direct result of my lack of focus on the long-term goal of running 12 marathons this year.

Here’s how…

Running Phoenix Marathon at a slow-consistent pace resulted in no injuries, no soreness, and (most importantly) no deviation from the plan.

While training for the Los Angeles Marathon, I hit the weights irregularly hard. This was a product of “feeling good” ONE day. I did too many sets of calf raises with too much weight, which resulted in a slightly strained calf.

Thinking this soreness would eventually work itself out, I continued to run harder. In the Los Angeles Marathon I set a PR. I ran way too fast for a sore body and calf. This effort, on ONE day, caused a chain reaction.

The continued training on this sore calf caused a shift in my gait, which caused other (stronger) muscles and tendons in my leg to work over-time. Eventually, my IT band and knees were so sore that I resorted to walking two miles back to the start of the Cherry Blossom.

My point: the entire chain of events can by traced to one common theme – loss of focus. I lost focus on that one day of weight training and I lost focus at the Los Angeles Marathon. Both incidents and my own stubbornness caused this injury, and as a result I will not be able to run the full 12 marathons. On the other hand, I now have new goals: to rebound from this injury and run faster in one specifically targeted race: Chicago.

The more I run (or more importantly, don’t run) the more I learn. Marathoning is an older person sport. This is true because it takes time to put aside youthful indiscretion and remain true to a lasting devotion to your goal.

Monday, April 2, 2007

Cherry Blossom 10 Miler - Washington, DC

Race Day:
4/1/2007

Weather:
Overcast and windy. The weather gods spared us, however, and held back the rain.

Course:
Other than the fact that the large majority of the course was doubling back on the same road, I dont have any complaints. It was a perfectly nice course that I would have enjoyed more if I had been in better condition to run.

Personal Experience:
A race I probably should have "no showed" for, the Cherryblossom 10 miler was a painful experience. Lesson learned: never sign up for a race the week after a marathon. While you might be able to run 10 miles, the added pressure of not wanting to DNF keeps you from holding back when appropriate. Mark had the right idea when he bailed at mile 2. My pride just got in the way and I lumbered across the finish line with pain in more places than I care to list.

Conclusion:
Maybe I'm spoiled from running marathons, but I'd say there wasnt anything all that special about this race. One thing that I will mention that I thought was an excellent idea ... seperate starts for groups based on estimated finishing time. At no point on the course did I feel crowded to the point that it might slow down my pace.

Final Grade: B