Why can't I run??
Replies
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Hi everyone.
First off a big thank you to everyones advice.
I took two main things on board today. I reduced my pace and REALLY focused on taking deep long breaths for the whole run.
I am pleased to say it worked beautifully and I blitzed week 4 of C25K.
Week 4 is 2X3min and 2X5min runs.
Well of course today the program shut down on me halfway through so I lost a bit of focus.
I didn't give up though.
I managed to do 1X3min, 2X5min and 1X7min runs!!! I couldn't believe it!
This is after not being able to get past 4 mins and even then I was gasping for breath and flopping about all over the place
Thanks again everyone, you are awesome
Bec0 -
Getting a hear rate monitor really helped me to run. I found that it really helped me to slow down and learn to pace. I was going way too fast. The pace I could actually sustain for more than a minute barely felt like running at first, it was so slow. I can run pretty fast now, and the HRM still keeps me at a good pace!0
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Make sure your pace is the slowest you can tolerate. If you are walking at say 3.5 miles per hour then to start set the treadmill to 4.0 and just trot along. Once that gets comfortable you can build up!!
Edit- whoops saw your recent reply. Sounds like you nailed it! Congrats!0 -
try slowing down and focus on deep breaths0
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I find the biggest issue with increasing endurance is breath management. Most people are upper chest breathers and this causes fatigue. Then this spirals into your breaths becoming increasingly more shallow and inefficient and you tire that much faster
You need to learn to pull your breath from your diaphragm and into your belly. It seems unnatural at first, but it helps immensely. Yoga is a huge help in learning how to breathe properly.
Eventually, you'll get better and you'll be able to go faster and your heart will be that much more efficient in moving the necessary oxygen around your body.0 -
I'd also say get outside to run, you would be amazed at the difference it makes to how hard it feels. When you are outside you have so much more to look at and it distracts you from an internal consciousness where all you can feel is the discomfort . Add some great views, or a natural scenery and pow! - a super stressbusting enjoyable experience where time flies and you don't want to turn round to head home!
I wasn't a natural runner either to start with, it was hard but thats cause i ran at one pace which was too fast. I now love it and hate missing a run even in minus degrees! Stick with it, the more you do it the better it gets
Agreed 100%! I started the C25k program at the beginning of the year and an epic two week monsoon drove me indoors for a few runs and I ended up with two swollen and painful knees from running on the treadmill. I also noticed that my calves and the other muscles in my legs were screaming when I'd run on the treadmill, but not while outside.
I did also start off running too fast as well. It is perfectly ok to do what I call the jog-walk-bounce-hybrid. I'm on week 5 and my jog is SOOOOOO slow, but I just ran 8 minutes today. Sometimes I really have to focus on my breathing because I'll start to get out of breath, that's when you should slow down and really focus on "In and out, in and out, in and out"0 -
Hi everyone.
First off a big thank you to everyones advice.
I took two main things on board today. I reduced my pace and REALLY focused on taking deep long breaths for the whole run.
I am pleased to say it worked beautifully and I blitzed week 4 of C25K.
Week 4 is 2X3min and 2X5min runs.
Well of course today the program shut down on me halfway through so I lost a bit of focus.
I didn't give up though.
I managed to do 1X3min, 2X5min and 1X7min runs!!! I couldn't believe it!
This is after not being able to get past 4 mins and even then I was gasping for breath and flopping about all over the place
Thanks again everyone, you are awesome
Bec
Congrats!!! Week 4 was probably my favorite so far.0 -
Hi everyone.
First off a big thank you to everyones advice.
I took two main things on board today. I reduced my pace and REALLY focused on taking deep long breaths for the whole run.
I am pleased to say it worked beautifully and I blitzed week 4 of C25K.
Week 4 is 2X3min and 2X5min runs.
Well of course today the program shut down on me halfway through so I lost a bit of focus.
I didn't give up though.
I managed to do 1X3min, 2X5min and 1X7min runs!!! I couldn't believe it!
This is after not being able to get past 4 mins and even then I was gasping for breath and flopping about all over the place
Thanks again everyone, you are awesome
Bec
Congrats! Always a great feeling to get past those hurdles that plague us!0 -
Not sure if any of you are having the same problem I used to have. But all through high school I could walk seemingly forever, however when it came to running I could barely go a block before I was winded and had sharp pains towards the bottom of my ribcage. It wasn't until after high school and a lot of determination of wanting to run more that I started doing my research. The pain hurt so bad at times I started assuming that maybe it was a hernia or something, however it was never always on the same side. I had tried to "run through the pain" one night only to end up laying on the side of the road curled up in the fetal position near passing out. Mind you I don't think i was out of shape or anything, I was 6' 1" 160lbs, a person that looked prime for running really. So anyways doing some research I came across the term "Runners Stitch". After reading into this it seamed to describe exactly what I was experiencing.
What I discovered was this. Before I never paid much attention to my breathing and often the faster I tried running the faster and shorter my breaths became trying to "keep up". As it turns out this bad breathing leads to straining the lung diaphragm located at the bottom of your lungs.
With this new knowledge I started experimenting with my breathing after just a few weeks I was actually able to run until my legs felt like rubber! Talk about one very happy nite, I could barely stand but was grinning from ear to ear.
My tips would include the following. Take quality breaths, not necessarily a lot of breaths. Instead of breathing faster, focus on breathing deeper. And probably the most important, be sure to COMPLETELY EXHALE every breath. Start with a super slow jog to practice your breathing and slowly work up your jogging speed day by day or week by week. Everyone progresses differently, no need to rush it. Hopefully this will help someone out there. I remember how frustrated I was when I'd be winded or "in lung pain" long before ever feeling a burn in my legs.
Thanks for this advice, I would have that same problem in MS & HS, I could do the sprint running but not the long distance. Of course it did not help that I use to smoke and as result I now have athletic asthma and chronic bronchitis.... I have been off of asthma meds since I was 17 and have not had any problems, I can do brisk walks (more like speed walking) w/out a problem... however the last two years I have gotten out of shape again and so I am back to square one... I love to bike ride but last summer could not go far before I had to stop and felt like I had been jogging back in MS/HS... I do not jog for other reasons as I have had two dislocated knees and have had to go into physical therapy once in my late teens and then again in my early twenties. They adviced me to stick to low impact excercise for my knees... no jogging, not even sprint running. So I hike and walk, and ride bike... now I just have to retrain myself to breath correctly why I am bike riding. Those side pains are the worst, sometimes it felt like I had a broken/cracked rib... which unfortanely have had before, ouch!
Good to hear someone got some helpful advice from it! As someone else mentioned as well, if you get the sharp pains then putting pressure on it with a few of your fingers can help reduce it some, but in my experience it was never a cure. More of a band-aid to help you out while you get your breathing back in check. Also as other have mentioned in through the nose and out through the mouth, I relate it to pretty much exactly like blowing up a balloon. You're basically blowing through your lips as though your blowing up an imaginary balloon. Biggest thing by far is making sure you COMPLETELY exhale before taking in another breath because its not until the very end of the exhale that your lung diaphragm is actually at rest. So if you fail to get all that air out then your not letting that diaphragm get any sort of rest and are just straining it causing it to give you those sharp pains. Anyways good luck! Keep us updated!0 -
Hi everyone.
First off a big thank you to everyones advice.
I took two main things on board today. I reduced my pace and REALLY focused on taking deep long breaths for the whole run.
I am pleased to say it worked beautifully and I blitzed week 4 of C25K.
Week 4 is 2X3min and 2X5min runs.
Well of course today the program shut down on me halfway through so I lost a bit of focus.
I didn't give up though.
I managed to do 1X3min, 2X5min and 1X7min runs!!! I couldn't believe it!
This is after not being able to get past 4 mins and even then I was gasping for breath and flopping about all over the place
Thanks again everyone, you are awesome
Bec
Awesome-- I'm glad to hear it.0 -
I managed to do 1X3min, 2X5min and 1X7min runs!!! I couldn't believe it!
This is after not being able to get past 4 mins and even then I was gasping for breath and flopping about all over the place0 -
Try singing while you run so you learn how to control your breathing. Maybe cover up the machine so you don't see the time and just fight through the pain, I have learned a lot of it is mental. I personnally have a hard time running on the treadmill but can much further withouth stopping when I run outside. Good luck0
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asthma?
trying to run too fast?
ETA: Oops, I see you already adjusted your pace. Cool! Keep it up!0
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