Tips for a ROOKIE REGISTERED for a FULL MARATHON
Replies
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Hello All! I REALLY appreciate the honesty. Some of you probably think Im a little dumb for doing this race,.....
See this right here, no one thinks that. No one is calling you dumb or thinking you're dumb. What they are doing is trying to keep you from getting hurt. There are a lot of experienced runners in here giving fantastic advice for free, and the consensus is that a half marathon is much more appropriate goal. And guess what? Running a half marathon is still a kick *kitten* accomplishment. I've never done it, and God willing, I never ever ever will. You'll have me and about 95% of the human race beat by miles.
It's not dumb to shoot for the moon. We all admire what you've done so far and what you hope to accomplish. What would be dumb, however, is to ask for advice, then receive a ton of great advice from people with experience, and then throw that advice out of the window.
^^^ This! You asked for the good, the bad, and the ugly. You got what you asked for. Sometimes it's hard when we don't hear what we want. I've been there. Switching to a different distance is not failure. I haven't read a single post here telling you to not run. A lot of people have been warning you about injury, illness, and other 'out of our control' circumstances that can interfere with training. That's just the reality of things. Be smart. Train safely. Give yourself plenty of time to build up your strength and get consistent miles in each week. Eat well. Get plenty of sleep. Stretch. Allow for recovery. Let other runners help you reach your goal by allowing them to advise you and learn from their experiences. What I learn from other runners is invaluable and way easier than what I have learned from my own mistakes. Becoming a runner is a journey, a beautiful journey, and it's totally worth it.
I think the intent is that you run, become a runner, complete a marathon and be proud of yourself. All things in their season, though.0 -
If you want my practical advice - I'm in the "switch to a half" camp.
But.. there's something about the human spirit which carries us through even the toughest times, if we're determined enough. I don't think the full marathon will be impossible. It'll be painful, it'll come with a lot of challenges and ups and downs and all the rest of it. And finishing will be fantastic - I wish you all the best.
However, don't be so determined that you ignore everything else around you. Listen to your body. Be brutally honest about your own limitations. If you feel injuries coming on, then stop training. If you have to repeat a week, then repeat it. As nice as a solid training plan is, *kitten* happens and that plan could end up in tatters.
Ultimately, I wish you nothing but good luck0 -
One step at a time. Best wishes on your journey. Remember, you have not been running. Start slow and build yourself up. You can do this.0
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Have a back up plan. I had friend try to run one and felt fully prepared. On the day of the marathon, she got some major blisters and foot pain about 15 miles into it. Couldn't finish because of the pain. Good thing she had some friends there to drive her back to her own vehicle. Couldn't imagine having to walk back the last 11 miles.
You may or may not finish. If you don't, don't get stuck out there.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
Good tip My fam will be out there and my brother is running it too.
don't have a backup plan...plan to train for a half, then six months out train for the whole...you'll do it. Even if you walk the second half, you can complete your distance! Be confident! Completing is your main goal on the first try. I can't wait to read about your 8th marathon completed in under 4hrs in two years' time! :flowerforyou:
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition0 -
Have a back up plan. I had friend try to run one and felt fully prepared. On the day of the marathon, she got some major blisters and foot pain about 15 miles into it. Couldn't finish because of the pain. Good thing she had some friends there to drive her back to her own vehicle. Couldn't imagine having to walk back the last 11 miles.
You may or may not finish. If you don't, don't get stuck out there.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
Good tip My fam will be out there and my brother is running it too.
don't have a backup plan...plan to train for a half, then six months out train for the whole...you'll do it. Even if you walk the second half, you can complete your distance! Be confident! Completing is your main goal on the first try. I can't wait to read about your 8th marathon completed in under 4hrs in two years' time! :flowerforyou:
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
Some people you just can't reach.
She can't run 30 seconds now but is somehow convinced that her body will adapt to the point where it can handle 26.2 miles in less than a year ... that she'll enjoy the activity enough to endure the hours of training necessary to reach that goal ... and that she'll have no hiccups in the plan along the way. Her approach is all or nothing. Succeed or fail. That line of thought leaves no room for only making significant progress towards a life goal if something happens and she doesn't finish the marathon as planned.0 -
Have a back up plan. I had friend try to run one and felt fully prepared. On the day of the marathon, she got some major blisters and foot pain about 15 miles into it. Couldn't finish because of the pain. Good thing she had some friends there to drive her back to her own vehicle. Couldn't imagine having to walk back the last 11 miles.
You may or may not finish. If you don't, don't get stuck out there.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
Good tip My fam will be out there and my brother is running it too.
don't have a backup plan...plan to train for a half, then six months out train for the whole...you'll do it. Even if you walk the second half, you can complete your distance! Be confident! Completing is your main goal on the first try. I can't wait to read about your 8th marathon completed in under 4hrs in two years' time! :flowerforyou:
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
Some people you just can't reach.
She can't run 30 seconds now but is somehow convinced that her body will adapt to the point where it can handle 26.2 miles in less than a year ... that she'll enjoy the activity enough to endure the hours of training necessary to reach that goal ... and that she'll have no hiccups in the plan along the way. Her approach is all or nothing. Succeed or fail. That line of thought leaves no room for only making significant progress towards a life goal if something happens and she doesn't finish the marathon as planned.
The thing that makes me sad is that there are so many surprises and victories as you move through the process of "Starting to run." to "I've been running." to "I'm an (eek) runner." to "I'm a runner and you are too." to "How can I even call myself a runner if I'm not doing 20 miles a week?"
I'd worry that the glory of the first day and the first 5 minutes and the first 10 minutes and the first 5k and the first 10k and the first 7,8,9,10,11 miles are all going to get swallowed up in the "am I progressing enough to do 26.2 in a year?" And that's NOT the mindset that's going to keep you motivated and uninjured through C25k, let alone those lonely long-run miles.
I have had terrible MONTHS. I've had WEEKS of no progress or when I've moved backward. And then the magic day when all of it falls off and I'm better than ever. For a run. And then two runs. And then a week of runs.
What keeps me going is knowing that I don't need to be another runner than the one that I am...and if you asked me whether I was capable of running two years ago, I probably would have started crying because you were making fun of me. I hadn't been able to run for more than 15 seconds in my life, and how would I be able to at my fattest? Contrasting that person with the runner I am today always gives me chills.0 -
Have a back up plan. I had friend try to run one and felt fully prepared. On the day of the marathon, she got some major blisters and foot pain about 15 miles into it. Couldn't finish because of the pain. Good thing she had some friends there to drive her back to her own vehicle. Couldn't imagine having to walk back the last 11 miles.
You may or may not finish. If you don't, don't get stuck out there.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
Good tip My fam will be out there and my brother is running it too.
don't have a backup plan...plan to train for a half, then six months out train for the whole...you'll do it. Even if you walk the second half, you can complete your distance! Be confident! Completing is your main goal on the first try. I can't wait to read about your 8th marathon completed in under 4hrs in two years' time! :flowerforyou:
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
Some people you just can't reach.
She can't run 30 seconds now but is somehow convinced that her body will adapt to the point where it can handle 26.2 miles in less than a year ... that she'll enjoy the activity enough to endure the hours of training necessary to reach that goal ... and that she'll have no hiccups in the plan along the way. Her approach is all or nothing. Succeed or fail. That line of thought leaves no room for only making significant progress towards a life goal if something happens and she doesn't finish the marathon as planned.
The thing that makes me sad is that there are so many surprises and victories as you move through the process of "Starting to run." to "I've been running." to "I'm an (eek) runner." to "I'm a runner and you are too." to "How can I even call myself a runner if I'm not doing 20 miles a week?"
I'd worry that the glory of the first day and the first 5 minutes and the first 10 minutes and the first 5k and the first 10k and the first 7,8,9,10,11 miles are all going to get swallowed up in the "am I progressing enough to do 26.2 in a year?" And that's NOT the mindset that's going to keep you motivated and uninjured through C25k, let alone those lonely long-run miles.
I have had terrible MONTHS. I've had WEEKS of no progress or when I've moved backward. And then the magic day when all of it falls off and I'm better than ever. For a run. And then two runs. And then a week of runs.
What keeps me going is knowing that I don't need to be another runner than the one that I am...and if you asked me whether I was capable of running two years ago, I probably would have started crying because you were making fun of me. I hadn't been able to run for more than 15 seconds in my life, and how would I be able to at my fattest? Contrasting that person with the runner I am today always gives me chills.
There is a contrast between you and the OP. You recognize that there were bad weeks and months ... she isn't even allowing for that possibility. Some people fall in love with running ... some do it when it is far from their favorite activity ... others believe it completely sucks and would rather undergo anesthetic free colonoscopies on a daily basis then run another step in their life. The OP has no clue what part of that spectrum she falls in.0 -
There is a contrast between you and the OP. You recognize that there were bad weeks and months ... she isn't even allowing for that possibility. Some people fall in love with running ... some do it when it is far from their favorite activity ... others believe it completely sucks and would rather undergo anesthetic free colonoscopies on a daily basis then run another step in their life. The OP has no clue what part of that spectrum she falls in.
Correction - I didn't know about them. I FOUND OUT about them :laugh:
I mean, everybody responds to running differently. I know people who never attend races. There are people who won't run unless there is a race involved.
Maybe a BHAG is what the OP needs to get motivated.
But one thing I've found is that running teaches you a whole lot more than how to move over the ground quickly - and you need to be open to those lessons as well. Being focused solely on where you want to be a year from now might make you miss those digressions. And those are exactly the things that make you try a new lacing technique and then a new shoe and then a new surface and then body glide on your feet and then a new strike and then to remove all of your sock liners because your feet feel bloody every time you run. Because you're damn sure not going to quit running.0 -
Have a back up plan. I had friend try to run one and felt fully prepared. On the day of the marathon, she got some major blisters and foot pain about 15 miles into it. Couldn't finish because of the pain. Good thing she had some friends there to drive her back to her own vehicle. Couldn't imagine having to walk back the last 11 miles.
You may or may not finish. If you don't, don't get stuck out there.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
Good tip My fam will be out there and my brother is running it too.
don't have a backup plan...plan to train for a half, then six months out train for the whole...you'll do it. Even if you walk the second half, you can complete your distance! Be confident! Completing is your main goal on the first try. I can't wait to read about your 8th marathon completed in under 4hrs in two years' time! :flowerforyou:
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
Some people you just can't reach.
She can't run 30 seconds now but is somehow convinced that her body will adapt to the point where it can handle 26.2 miles in less than a year ... that she'll enjoy the activity enough to endure the hours of training necessary to reach that goal ... and that she'll have no hiccups in the plan along the way. Her approach is all or nothing. Succeed or fail. That line of thought leaves no room for only making significant progress towards a life goal if something happens and she doesn't finish the marathon as planned.
The thing that makes me sad is that there are so many surprises and victories as you move through the process of "Starting to run." to "I've been running." to "I'm an (eek) runner." to "I'm a runner and you are too." to "How can I even call myself a runner if I'm not doing 20 miles a week?"
I'd worry that the glory of the first day and the first 5 minutes and the first 10 minutes and the first 5k and the first 10k and the first 7,8,9,10,11 miles are all going to get swallowed up in the "am I progressing enough to do 26.2 in a year?" And that's NOT the mindset that's going to keep you motivated and uninjured through C25k, let alone those lonely long-run miles.
I have had terrible MONTHS. I've had WEEKS of no progress or when I've moved backward. And then the magic day when all of it falls off and I'm better than ever. For a run. And then two runs. And then a week of runs.
What keeps me going is knowing that I don't need to be another runner than the one that I am...and if you asked me whether I was capable of running two years ago, I probably would have started crying because you were making fun of me. I hadn't been able to run for more than 15 seconds in my life, and how would I be able to at my fattest? Contrasting that person with the runner I am today always gives me chills.
There is a contrast between you and the OP. You recognize that there were bad weeks and months ... she isn't even allowing for that possibility. Some people fall in love with running ... some do it when it is far from their favorite activity ... others believe it completely sucks and would rather undergo anesthetic free colonoscopies on a daily basis then run another step in their life. The OP has no clue what part of that spectrum she falls in.
This is awesome, if you let people rant, they will rant. lol. The spectrum I fall in, is Im going to finish this race. Thats it. lol. . Carry on ranting It fuels my fire.0 -
Have a back up plan. I had friend try to run one and felt fully prepared. On the day of the marathon, she got some major blisters and foot pain about 15 miles into it. Couldn't finish because of the pain. Good thing she had some friends there to drive her back to her own vehicle. Couldn't imagine having to walk back the last 11 miles.
You may or may not finish. If you don't, don't get stuck out there.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
Good tip My fam will be out there and my brother is running it too.
don't have a backup plan...plan to train for a half, then six months out train for the whole...you'll do it. Even if you walk the second half, you can complete your distance! Be confident! Completing is your main goal on the first try. I can't wait to read about your 8th marathon completed in under 4hrs in two years' time! :flowerforyou:
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
Some people you just can't reach.
She can't run 30 seconds now but is somehow convinced that her body will adapt to the point where it can handle 26.2 miles in less than a year ... that she'll enjoy the activity enough to endure the hours of training necessary to reach that goal ... and that she'll have no hiccups in the plan along the way. Her approach is all or nothing. Succeed or fail. That line of thought leaves no room for only making significant progress towards a life goal if something happens and she doesn't finish the marathon as planned.
The thing that makes me sad is that there are so many surprises and victories as you move through the process of "Starting to run." to "I've been running." to "I'm an (eek) runner." to "I'm a runner and you are too." to "How can I even call myself a runner if I'm not doing 20 miles a week?"
I'd worry that the glory of the first day and the first 5 minutes and the first 10 minutes and the first 5k and the first 10k and the first 7,8,9,10,11 miles are all going to get swallowed up in the "am I progressing enough to do 26.2 in a year?" And that's NOT the mindset that's going to keep you motivated and uninjured through C25k, let alone those lonely long-run miles.
I have had terrible MONTHS. I've had WEEKS of no progress or when I've moved backward. And then the magic day when all of it falls off and I'm better than ever. For a run. And then two runs. And then a week of runs.
What keeps me going is knowing that I don't need to be another runner than the one that I am...and if you asked me whether I was capable of running two years ago, I probably would have started crying because you were making fun of me. I hadn't been able to run for more than 15 seconds in my life, and how would I be able to at my fattest? Contrasting that person with the runner I am today always gives me chills.
There is a contrast between you and the OP. You recognize that there were bad weeks and months ... she isn't even allowing for that possibility. Some people fall in love with running ... some do it when it is far from their favorite activity ... others believe it completely sucks and would rather undergo anesthetic free colonoscopies on a daily basis then run another step in their life. The OP has no clue what part of that spectrum she falls in.
This is awesome, if you let people rant, they will rant. lol. The spectrum I fall in, is Im going to finish this race. Thats it. lol. . Carry on ranting It fuels my fire.
I hope it gets you through the longer runs.
A tip on C25k: slow down. Your running pace should be very close to your walking pace otherwise you will have a hard time in weeks 3/4 and won't be able to finish week 5.0 -
Have a back up plan. I had friend try to run one and felt fully prepared. On the day of the marathon, she got some major blisters and foot pain about 15 miles into it. Couldn't finish because of the pain. Good thing she had some friends there to drive her back to her own vehicle. Couldn't imagine having to walk back the last 11 miles.
You may or may not finish. If you don't, don't get stuck out there.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
Good tip My fam will be out there and my brother is running it too.
don't have a backup plan...plan to train for a half, then six months out train for the whole...you'll do it. Even if you walk the second half, you can complete your distance! Be confident! Completing is your main goal on the first try. I can't wait to read about your 8th marathon completed in under 4hrs in two years' time! :flowerforyou:
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
Some people you just can't reach.
She can't run 30 seconds now but is somehow convinced that her body will adapt to the point where it can handle 26.2 miles in less than a year ... that she'll enjoy the activity enough to endure the hours of training necessary to reach that goal ... and that she'll have no hiccups in the plan along the way. Her approach is all or nothing. Succeed or fail. That line of thought leaves no room for only making significant progress towards a life goal if something happens and she doesn't finish the marathon as planned.
The thing that makes me sad is that there are so many surprises and victories as you move through the process of "Starting to run." to "I've been running." to "I'm an (eek) runner." to "I'm a runner and you are too." to "How can I even call myself a runner if I'm not doing 20 miles a week?"
I'd worry that the glory of the first day and the first 5 minutes and the first 10 minutes and the first 5k and the first 10k and the first 7,8,9,10,11 miles are all going to get swallowed up in the "am I progressing enough to do 26.2 in a year?" And that's NOT the mindset that's going to keep you motivated and uninjured through C25k, let alone those lonely long-run miles.
I have had terrible MONTHS. I've had WEEKS of no progress or when I've moved backward. And then the magic day when all of it falls off and I'm better than ever. For a run. And then two runs. And then a week of runs.
What keeps me going is knowing that I don't need to be another runner than the one that I am...and if you asked me whether I was capable of running two years ago, I probably would have started crying because you were making fun of me. I hadn't been able to run for more than 15 seconds in my life, and how would I be able to at my fattest? Contrasting that person with the runner I am today always gives me chills.
There is a contrast between you and the OP. You recognize that there were bad weeks and months ... she isn't even allowing for that possibility. Some people fall in love with running ... some do it when it is far from their favorite activity ... others believe it completely sucks and would rather undergo anesthetic free colonoscopies on a daily basis then run another step in their life. The OP has no clue what part of that spectrum she falls in.
This is awesome, if you let people rant, they will rant. lol. The spectrum I fall in, is Im going to finish this race. Thats it. lol. . Carry on ranting It fuels my fire.
Nobody is ranting. Those of us with experience running are making informed comments.0 -
While I think Hal Higdon's programs have a lot going for them - I had heard one criticism of them - which I didn't believe - until I had it happen to me. Higdon's training plans take you up TO "the wall" but not THROUGH "the wall" - which killed me about mile 20 and moved my pace from sub-9:00 to 10:15. for the race.
MY ADVICE: Whatever training plan you do - force your body to go 26.2 at least ONCE before the day of the event. You need to know what you're body is going to do at/past Mile 20.0 -
I think you're looking at the big hurdle as being the marathon. That is the WRONG way to look at it. The race is the easy part.
I trained for a half through last winter. Let's just say that training through the winter was brutal. Running long runs with temp highs of -2F. My sweat would freeze to me. It was miserable.
It was lonely. I'd be out there for hours. It hurt. There were days that I just hated it.
Weeks and weeks and weeks of doing this. There was one run that I had fueled incorrectly. I started puking 4 miles from my car. I still had to run back to my car.
There was a run where I sat on the side of the road and bawled my eyes out. My soul felt crushed. I didn't think I could do it anymore.
Periods? I hope you're prepared to run right through them. Just cross your fingers your cramps don't hit on the day you need to go 15 miles.
Was my race worth it? Gosh yes. YES YES YES. In fact I've run several halfs now. But look at the demons I had to fight, and that's not even a full marathon.
I'm just trying to make you see the whole picture. I'd hate to see a budding runner lose their love for it because of a terrible experience.0 -
Here's my tip: switch to a half.
^^ This x 100000! I think it's really important to set realistic and achievable goals, that don't involve you getting injured. A half marathon in 1 year would still be a major accomplishment, and a much more doable one. Just my 2 cents.
PS I am currently training for my 3rd half (have also done a few 5k and 10Ks) and I personally do not feel ready for a full marathon yet.
As another runner with similar experience,, 5 half's so far,, I'm also voting for the half option versus a full maraton. & this only after you've run some 5 & 10K races while improving your conditioning & endurance..0 -
I think you're looking at the big hurdle as being the marathon. That is the WRONG way to look at it. The race is the easy part.
I trained for a half through last winter. Let's just say that training through the winter was brutal. Running long runs with temp highs of -2F. My sweat would freeze to me. It was miserable.
It was lonely. I'd be out there for hours. It hurt. There were days that I just hated it.
Weeks and weeks and weeks of doing this. There was one run that I had fueled incorrectly. I started puking 4 miles from my car. I still had to run back to my car.
There was a run where I sat on the side of the road and bawled my eyes out. My soul felt crushed. I didn't think I could do it anymore.
Periods? I hope you're prepared to run right through them. Just cross your fingers your cramps don't hit on the day you need to go 15 miles.
Was my race worth it? Gosh yes. YES YES YES. In fact I've run several halfs now. But look at the demons I had to fight, and that's not even a full marathon.
I'm just trying to make you see the whole picture. I'd hate to see a budding runner lose their love for it because of a terrible experience.
God. This. I had a little pity party for myself 2.5 miles into a 10k trail run last weekend.
The race is a culmination of all of the miles and hours of training. It's like the commencement ceremony in college.0 -
OP ... almost 2% of your available training time elapsed since starting this thread. What have you done?0
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OP ... almost 2% of your available training time elapsed since starting this thread. What have you done?
I started to c25k program, am on week 2. Averaging 4.25 miles 4x a week.0 -
I think you're looking at the big hurdle as being the marathon. That is the WRONG way to look at it. The race is the easy part.
I trained for a half through last winter. Let's just say that training through the winter was brutal. Running long runs with temp highs of -2F. My sweat would freeze to me. It was miserable.
It was lonely. I'd be out there for hours. It hurt. There were days that I just hated it.
Weeks and weeks and weeks of doing this. There was one run that I had fueled incorrectly. I started puking 4 miles from my car. I still had to run back to my car.
There was a run where I sat on the side of the road and bawled my eyes out. My soul felt crushed. I didn't think I could do it anymore.
Periods? I hope you're prepared to run right through them. Just cross your fingers your cramps don't hit on the day you need to go 15 miles.
Was my race worth it? Gosh yes. YES YES YES. In fact I've run several halfs now. But look at the demons I had to fight, and that's not even a full marathon.
I'm just trying to make you see the whole picture. I'd hate to see a budding runner lose their love for it because of a terrible experience.
Thank you. I understand what you are saying. I know its going to be a long year for me, and ALOT of challenges especially being a rookie. I know I will hurt, I will (hopefully ) not got injured too bad, and fight those demons. This is just a challenge to myself. I am doing it for health, for knowledge, to push my body to do something a year ago I thought Id never be capable of. Im not going for the fastest time. My goal is to finish.
Thanks again for being honest, I can appreciate that.0 -
While I think Hal Higdon's programs have a lot going for them - I had heard one criticism of them - which I didn't believe - until I had it happen to me. Higdon's training plans take you up TO "the wall" but not THROUGH "the wall" - which killed me about mile 20 and moved my pace from sub-9:00 to 10:15. for the race.
MY ADVICE: Whatever training plan you do - force your body to go 26.2 at least ONCE before the day of the event. You need to know what you're body is going to do at/past Mile 20.
I was curious about this, thanks for the tip0 -
Have a back up plan. I had friend try to run one and felt fully prepared. On the day of the marathon, she got some major blisters and foot pain about 15 miles into it. Couldn't finish because of the pain. Good thing she had some friends there to drive her back to her own vehicle. Couldn't imagine having to walk back the last 11 miles.
You may or may not finish. If you don't, don't get stuck out there.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
Good tip My fam will be out there and my brother is running it too.
don't have a backup plan...plan to train for a half, then six months out train for the whole...you'll do it. Even if you walk the second half, you can complete your distance! Be confident! Completing is your main goal on the first try. I can't wait to read about your 8th marathon completed in under 4hrs in two years' time! :flowerforyou:
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
Some people you just can't reach.
She can't run 30 seconds now but is somehow convinced that her body will adapt to the point where it can handle 26.2 miles in less than a year ... that she'll enjoy the activity enough to endure the hours of training necessary to reach that goal ... and that she'll have no hiccups in the plan along the way. Her approach is all or nothing. Succeed or fail. That line of thought leaves no room for only making significant progress towards a life goal if something happens and she doesn't finish the marathon as planned.
The thing that makes me sad is that there are so many surprises and victories as you move through the process of "Starting to run." to "I've been running." to "I'm an (eek) runner." to "I'm a runner and you are too." to "How can I even call myself a runner if I'm not doing 20 miles a week?"
I'd worry that the glory of the first day and the first 5 minutes and the first 10 minutes and the first 5k and the first 10k and the first 7,8,9,10,11 miles are all going to get swallowed up in the "am I progressing enough to do 26.2 in a year?" And that's NOT the mindset that's going to keep you motivated and uninjured through C25k, let alone those lonely long-run miles.
I have had terrible MONTHS. I've had WEEKS of no progress or when I've moved backward. And then the magic day when all of it falls off and I'm better than ever. For a run. And then two runs. And then a week of runs.
What keeps me going is knowing that I don't need to be another runner than the one that I am...and if you asked me whether I was capable of running two years ago, I probably would have started crying because you were making fun of me. I hadn't been able to run for more than 15 seconds in my life, and how would I be able to at my fattest? Contrasting that person with the runner I am today always gives me chills.
There is a contrast between you and the OP. You recognize that there were bad weeks and months ... she isn't even allowing for that possibility. Some people fall in love with running ... some do it when it is far from their favorite activity ... others believe it completely sucks and would rather undergo anesthetic free colonoscopies on a daily basis then run another step in their life. The OP has no clue what part of that spectrum she falls in.
This is awesome, if you let people rant, they will rant. lol. The spectrum I fall in, is Im going to finish this race. Thats it. lol. . Carry on ranting It fuels my fire.
I hope it gets you through the longer runs.
A tip on C25k: slow down. Your running pace should be very close to your walking pace otherwise you will have a hard time in weeks 3/4 and won't be able to finish week 5.
I will def do that.0 -
OP ... almost 2% of your available training time elapsed since starting this thread. What have you done?
I started to c25k program, am on week 2. Averaging 4.25 miles 4x a week.
Make sure you take a rest day between every run. Remember that you build fitness during recovery, not during the workout.
(That being said, I ran when I could so sometimes I'd do it back-to-back, but never more than twice in a row and never ran more than three days one week and four days the next).
ETA: if you haven't joined already, I would strongly recommend this group -
http://www.myfitnesspal.com/groups/home/30-couch-to-5k-running-program-c25k0 -
While I think Hal Higdon's programs have a lot going for them - I had heard one criticism of them - which I didn't believe - until I had it happen to me. Higdon's training plans take you up TO "the wall" but not THROUGH "the wall" - which killed me about mile 20 and moved my pace from sub-9:00 to 10:15. for the race.
MY ADVICE: Whatever training plan you do - force your body to go 26.2 at least ONCE before the day of the event. You need to know what you're body is going to do at/past Mile 20.
The vast majority of runners would disagree with running the whole 26.2 before the race, especially for a first time runner. The amount of recovery required and the toll it takes makes it simply not worth it.
I would strongly advise against doing the full distance in training.
How are you doing 4.25 miles on week 2?0 -
Bump to read later. I'm doing a marathon October 19th and would love to read through all this0
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OP ... almost 2% of your available training time elapsed since starting this thread. What have you done?
I started to c25k program, am on week 2. Averaging 4.25 miles 4x a week.
Your c25k program must be *very* different than the one I did last year. I don't think I *ever* exceeded 4 miles at any time during the entire program...and certainly not in week 2.0 -
OP ... almost 2% of your available training time elapsed since starting this thread. What have you done?
I started to c25k program, am on week 2. Averaging 4.25 miles 4x a week.
Make sure you take a rest day between every run. Remember that you build fitness during recovery, not during the workout.
(That being said, I ran when I could so sometimes I'd do it back-to-back, but never more than twice in a row and never ran more than three days one week and four days the next).
ETA: if you haven't joined already, I would strongly recommend this group -
http://www.myfitnesspal.com/groups/home/30-couch-to-5k-running-program-c25k
Yes thank you. Ive failed to mention that. I run one day, the next day is my "break" day in which I do some biking, or walking or some strength training (core work).0 -
OP ... almost 2% of your available training time elapsed since starting this thread. What have you done?
I started to c25k program, am on week 2. Averaging 4.25 miles 4x a week.
Your c25k program must be *very* different than the one I did last year. I don't think I *ever* exceeded 4 miles at any time during the entire program...and certainly not in week 2.
Well Im following the program it tells me when to stop running and when to start walking. I assume everyone runs differently according to speed? Thus far I have done week 1 indoors (gym) and will move to outside here shortly. Its over 107 degrees some days so i dont get up early enough (4 am) to beat the heat.0 -
While I think Hal Higdon's programs have a lot going for them - I had heard one criticism of them - which I didn't believe - until I had it happen to me. Higdon's training plans take you up TO "the wall" but not THROUGH "the wall" - which killed me about mile 20 and moved my pace from sub-9:00 to 10:15. for the race.
MY ADVICE: Whatever training plan you do - force your body to go 26.2 at least ONCE before the day of the event. You need to know what you're body is going to do at/past Mile 20.
The vast majority of runners would disagree with running the whole 26.2 before the race, especially for a first time runner. The amount of recovery required and the toll it takes makes it simply not worth it.
I would strongly advise against doing the full distance in training.
How are you doing 4.25 miles on week 2?
Not understanding your question?
I have a while to build up to that point, so Im taking in all the info given to me in regards to the marathon. I have been working closely with someone who has ran many and is giving me all the info from the mistakes he did on his first time run.
I hope to bring an update a year from now on this forum!:)0 -
While I think Hal Higdon's programs have a lot going for them - I had heard one criticism of them - which I didn't believe - until I had it happen to me. Higdon's training plans take you up TO "the wall" but not THROUGH "the wall" - which killed me about mile 20 and moved my pace from sub-9:00 to 10:15. for the race.
MY ADVICE: Whatever training plan you do - force your body to go 26.2 at least ONCE before the day of the event. You need to know what you're body is going to do at/past Mile 20.
NO NO NO! The amount of time you will need to recover from a 26.2 miles ''long run'' is not worth it.
You shouldn't even run for longer than 3 hours in training, even if that means only running 16 miles for you depending of your speed. After 3 hours on your feet, the amount of muscle and tendon damage and the time needed to recover from it is not worth the extra mileage. If you need to actually run 26 miles to ''feel ready' for the big day, you are NOT ****ing ready to run a marathon. If you are ready to do it in training, you are ready to do it in a race setting. End of story.0 -
OP ... almost 2% of your available training time elapsed since starting this thread. What have you done?
I started to c25k program, am on week 2. Averaging 4.25 miles 4x a week.
Your c25k program must be *very* different than the one I did last year. I don't think I *ever* exceeded 4 miles at any time during the entire program...and certainly not in week 2.
Well Im following the program it tells me when to stop running and when to start walking. I assume everyone runs differently according to speed? Thus far I have done week 1 indoors (gym) and will move to outside here shortly. Its over 107 degrees some days so i dont get up early enough (4 am) to beat the heat.
Of course everyone runs at a different speed. I'm just saying that as a 8:00-10:00/mile (in training) pace guy, I don't think I ever exceeded 4 miles during the entire c25k program. I mean, the entire purpose of that program is to prepare you to be able to run 3.1 miles...so it makes no sense to me that it would have you running 33% farther than that in the second week of the 10-12(?) week program.
TL;DR - Congratulations on completing the c25k program...in your second week.0 -
OP ... almost 2% of your available training time elapsed since starting this thread. What have you done?
I started to c25k program, am on week 2. Averaging 4.25 miles 4x a week.
Your c25k program must be *very* different than the one I did last year. I don't think I *ever* exceeded 4 miles at any time during the entire program...and certainly not in week 2.
Well Im following the program it tells me when to stop running and when to start walking. I assume everyone runs differently according to speed? Thus far I have done week 1 indoors (gym) and will move to outside here shortly. Its over 107 degrees some days so i dont get up early enough (4 am) to beat the heat.
Of course everyone runs at a different speed. I'm just saying that as a 8:00-10:00/mile (in training) pace guy, I don't think I ever exceeded 4 miles during the entire c25k program. I mean, the entire purpose of that program is to prepare you to be able to run 3.1 miles...so it makes no sense to me that it would have you running 33% farther than that in the second week of the 10-12(?) week program.
TL;DR - Congratulations on completing the c25k program...in your second week.
lmao! I was wondering the same thing... She doesn't waste time, apparently!0
This discussion has been closed.
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