Why can't am i getting worse at running
Replies
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well, not sure I am qualified to give advice on this one but I'll throw it out there and you can decide what to do with it
1, Have you considered going back to square one and just starting over with C25k or something?
2. If you cant maintain your pace for the distance you want then you need to slow down
3. If that causes you to get bored then try a different environment, hit the trails they give you more to think about, get some good tunes, or play mind games (someone suggested to count things as you go one time and that can be a good distraction)
4. If you prefer HIIT work then forget distance running and take up crossfit or something, nothing out there says you have to run0 -
just finished running and i went slower and was able to get to 3 miles but it was really boring
If 3 miles were boring I'm wondering why you are running at all. Seriously, if all you want is get in shape there is other ways to do it. Find something you actually like. Working out shouldn't be a burden.0 -
Slow down in order to speed up.... Seriously.
Cut back on the pace and you will be able to run further and faster in the future. Nothing worth having comes for free - you need to put the work in to build a good fitness base and then build on it.
Remember - running NEVER gets any easier you just go further and faster. An ultra-marathoner hurts just like your do now.0 -
He's probably used to running with a team/group of people. My husband ran XC & track for 10 years. In college he was running 80-100 miles a week. However, as soon as he graduated and got into the "real world", running even a few miles alone became "boring", "too much work", "hard", etc. Even if he runs with me, he says it's boring because I only say a few words/hate talking when I run. It's honestly the weirdest thing I've ever witness, he and all his running friends will NOT stop talking the entire run. Normally they say a few words to each other & are very quite people. It's weird to hear the things and how much they talk when they are running.
People who ran XC & track at a young age are hard wired to just be SUPER competitive. They basically feed off other teammates energy at practice. This guy Probably recently turned 18, graduated, no longer runs with his "team" and is therefore in a slump.
I don't doubt that he ran a marathon at all. His inability to complete a 4 mile run stems more from his lack of experience running alone.
Do you have any run clubs in the area? Do you know of any high schools or maybe your old high school looking for any voulenteer coaches? I think you are a perfect example of someone who needs to run with other people. Likely, that is why you are getting "bored".0 -
It sounds like you're an experienced runner who is having issues with endurance when they never existed before. I'd suggest seeing your doctor to make sure this isn't a symptom of something more serious.0
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He's probably used to running with a team/group of people. My husband ran XC & track for 10 years. In college he was running 80-100 miles a week. However, as soon as he graduated and got into the "real world", running even a few miles alone became "boring", "too much work", "hard", etc. Even if he runs with me, he says it's boring because I only say a few words/hate talking when I run. It's honestly the weirdest thing I've ever witness, he and all his running friends will NOT stop talking the entire run. Normally they say a few words to each other & are very quite people. It's weird to hear the things and how much they talk when they are running.
People who ran XC & track at a young age are hard wired to just be SUPER competitive. They basically feed off other teammates energy at practice. This guy Probably recently turned 18, graduated, no longer runs with his "team" and is therefore in a slump.
I don't doubt that he ran a marathon at all. His inability to complete a 4 mile run stems more from his lack of experience running alone.
Do you have any run clubs in the area? Do you know of any high schools or maybe your old high school looking for any voulenteer coaches? I think you are a perfect example of someone who needs to run with other people. Likely, that is why you are getting "bored".
Interesting take that hadn't occurred to me. Well said.0 -
He's probably used to running with a team/group of people. My husband ran XC & track for 10 years. In college he was running 80-100 miles a week. However, as soon as he graduated and got into the "real world", running even a few miles alone became "boring", "too much work", "hard", etc. Even if he runs with me, he says it's boring because I only say a few words/hate talking when I run. It's honestly the weirdest thing I've ever witness, he and all his running friends will NOT stop talking the entire run. Normally they say a few words to each other & are very quite people. It's weird to hear the things and how much they talk when they are running.
People who ran XC & track at a young age are hard wired to just be SUPER competitive. They basically feed off other teammates energy at practice. This guy Probably recently turned 18, graduated, no longer runs with his "team" and is therefore in a slump.
I don't doubt that he ran a marathon at all. His inability to complete a 4 mile run stems more from his lack of experience running alone.
Do you have any run clubs in the area? Do you know of any high schools or maybe your old high school looking for any voulenteer coaches? I think you are a perfect example of someone who needs to run with other people. Likely, that is why you are getting "bored".
Interesting take that hadn't occurred to me. Well said.
agreed, we all know running is such a psycological sport, kudos for thinking outside the box!0 -
He's probably used to running with a team/group of people. My husband ran XC & track for 10 years. In college he was running 80-100 miles a week. However, as soon as he graduated and got into the "real world", running even a few miles alone became "boring", "too much work", "hard", etc. Even if he runs with me, he says it's boring because I only say a few words/hate talking when I run. It's honestly the weirdest thing I've ever witness, he and all his running friends will NOT stop talking the entire run. Normally they say a few words to each other & are very quite people. It's weird to hear the things and how much they talk when they are running.
People who ran XC & track at a young age are hard wired to just be SUPER competitive. They basically feed off other teammates energy at practice. This guy Probably recently turned 18, graduated, no longer runs with his "team" and is therefore in a slump.
I don't doubt that he ran a marathon at all. His inability to complete a 4 mile run stems more from his lack of experience running alone.
Do you have any run clubs in the area? Do you know of any high schools or maybe your old high school looking for any voulenteer coaches? I think you are a perfect example of someone who needs to run with other people. Likely, that is why you are getting "bored".
Interesting take that hadn't occurred to me. Well said.
Agreed. Great advice!0 -
He's probably used to running with a team/group of people. My husband ran XC & track for 10 years. In college he was running 80-100 miles a week. However, as soon as he graduated and got into the "real world", running even a few miles alone became "boring", "too much work", "hard", etc. Even if he runs with me, he says it's boring because I only say a few words/hate talking when I run. It's honestly the weirdest thing I've ever witness, he and all his running friends will NOT stop talking the entire run. Normally they say a few words to each other & are very quite people. It's weird to hear the things and how much they talk when they are running.
People who ran XC & track at a young age are hard wired to just be SUPER competitive. They basically feed off other teammates energy at practice. This guy Probably recently turned 18, graduated, no longer runs with his "team" and is therefore in a slump.
I don't doubt that he ran a marathon at all. His inability to complete a 4 mile run stems more from his lack of experience running alone.
Do you have any run clubs in the area? Do you know of any high schools or maybe your old high school looking for any voulenteer coaches? I think you are a perfect example of someone who needs to run with other people. Likely, that is why you are getting "bored".
wish you were the first one to post on this thread0 -
just finished running and i went slower and was able to get to 3 miles but it was really boring
Maybe running isn't for you. Maybe consider geocaching, knitting, or fishing?
wow if you are gonan be like this i don't get why you're even posting still lol u have nothing to do?
I'm just trying to figure out what you want. You've run a marathon and are now complaining of boredom after 3 miles and an inability to bore yourself for longer distances. Try cycling, I dunno. You sound like you have more experience running than I do, and probably most of the people offering you advice, hence why there's a disconnect here (or you're just a troll).
just thought this thread was dead0 -
just finished running and i went slower and was able to get to 3 miles but it was really boring
Maybe running isn't for you. Maybe consider geocaching, knitting, or fishing?
wow if you are gonan be like this i don't get why you're even posting still lol u have nothing to do?
What's your goal? I'm assuming you recently graduated & used to run XC & track?? Do you want to be faster at 800 meter?? 1 mile?? 2 miles? 5k?? Run a fast 1/2 or full?
What is it you want here?
i just want to build my endurance up so i can run longer.. i noticed when i run slow i can keep going and my body won't get tired but my head is always telling me to walk but i know my body can keep going?? lol hard to explain0 -
i just want to build my endurance up so i can run longer.. i noticed when i run slow i can keep going and my body won't get tired but my head is always telling me to walk but i know my body can keep going?? lol hard to explain
I totally get that feeling. It sounds almost like the problem is primarily mental - like, for whatever reason, your heart just isn't into it.
Because for someone pretty fit, running 5k a day, most days, is nowhere near "overtraining".
Might be worth checking in with your doc, too....just in case.0 -
If you ran a marathon last year but are struggling with 3 miles you might consult a doctor, that just doesn't sound normal. It isn't unheard of to struggle a little for a week or so when getting back into it after a long break but that extreme difference is very concerning. (Also do you have enough meat/protein in your diet?)0
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i just want to build my endurance up so i can run longer.. i noticed when i run slow i can keep going and my body won't get tired but my head is always telling me to walk but i know my body can keep going?? lol hard to explain
Why not just use the same plan that got you to a marathon before? It's already worked for you...0 -
I'm going to put aside my initial belief that this couldn't possibly be a real question...
Did you train yourself for the marathon or did you track/xc coach? Or did you just figure you had enough running base from those activities and just decided to run it with no dedicated training?
I'm thinking some posters found it unbelievable because a lot of the people who are responding to you have trained themselves through that distance... perhaps you just don't know how to train yourself after years of coaching?
If that's the case pick a race of some short distance just to set yourself a goal to reach towards--- 8k or 10k, something just beyond your current aim of 4 miles. If you ran a marathon, you know in your head you can run 4 miles... ignore the voice that says you can't. Go google Hal Higdon and look up his 8k or 10k training plans. Pick one that looks good. Follow a program with some structure to it to get you through this slump and back to running. It will help you learn how you should be increasing your miles. It's ok if you go slow, as long as you go.
See how that works for you, if not- like others have mentioned, maybe solo running just isn't for you... find a running club or try something else. Or change up the scenery- if you're on the road, hit some trails.0 -
Kevin
That's not a lot of running so that's not the problem. You've run much better and further before. This does not sound like a training issue to me. It sounds like a medical issue. I never ever see the doctor. Never until one day my running got so bad I couldn't run 1/2 mile and I'm a long time runner who can go the distance. Don't ask on the forums. Go see a doctor.0 -
i just want to build my endurance up so i can run longer.. i noticed when i run slow i can keep going and my body won't get tired but my head is always telling me to walk but i know my body can keep going?? lol hard to explain
Why not just use the same plan that got you to a marathon before? It's already worked for you...
my coach for the marathon was a spanish teacher who can just run long distances.. she just told us to run x miles on this day x miles on that day and i couldn't even run up to 7 miles consistently and we only went up to 16 miles when she said it was 23.. idk the spanish teacher was really clueless and a lot of people made fun of her. i just did this for college0 -
i just want to build my endurance up so i can run longer.. i noticed when i run slow i can keep going and my body won't get tired but my head is always telling me to walk but i know my body can keep going?? lol hard to explain
Why not just use the same plan that got you to a marathon before? It's already worked for you...
my coach for the marathon was a spanish teacher who can just run long distances.. she just told us to run x miles on this day x miles on that day and i couldn't even run up to 7 miles consistently and we only went up to 16 miles when she said it was 23.. idk the spanish teacher was really clueless and a lot of people made fun of her. i just did this for college
So you were told to go run a distance and you did it up to 16 miles ... but now you can't run four miles?
One other question ... when did 23 miles become the standard for a marathon?0 -
i just want to build my endurance up so i can run longer.. i noticed when i run slow i can keep going and my body won't get tired but my head is always telling me to walk but i know my body can keep going?? lol hard to explain
Why not just use the same plan that got you to a marathon before? It's already worked for you...
my coach for the marathon was a spanish teacher who can just run long distances.. she just told us to run x miles on this day x miles on that day and i couldn't even run up to 7 miles consistently and we only went up to 16 miles when she said it was 23.. idk the spanish teacher was really clueless and a lot of people made fun of her. i just did this for college
So you were told to go run a distance and you did it up to 16 miles ... but now you can't run four miles?
One other question ... when did 23 miles become the standard for a marathon?
Obviously has never coached high school XC. No offence, but they are completely clueless. I've helped coach a girl who ran a 5:15 mile as a sophomore in high school. She could only run 15-20 miles a week max.. Out of season she refused to run at all. She hated running. She said it was boring.
However, she really wanted to go to state. So she did what she was told.
He Probably really wanted to run the marathon, so he did what he was told.
His problem is motivation.
By him saying a marathon was 23 miles, also not surprised.
Same said athlete was getting ready for her third 4k race in cross country the following fall. Before the race she actually said, "how far is a 4k anyways? Like 2 miles?" She had no idea. It was insane to me that she didn't know. BUT what you have to remember is they taught to compete against the OTHER athletes, the OTHER teams, the OTHER schools. Most of the kids don't wear a stop watch to race. The only "watch" they have is a stop watch. Most of them don't know any different.
So instead of being rude to the OP with comments such as "since when is a marathon 23 miles" maybe just don't say anything because you clearly don't understand the problem at hand.
OP- like I said before, find a running partner, find a run club, sign up for a road race. You are the type the enjoy the running community & team aspect of running. I don't doubt that you could go run 8 miles right now.0 -
i just want to build my endurance up so i can run longer.. i noticed when i run slow i can keep going and my body won't get tired but my head is always telling me to walk but i know my body can keep going?? lol hard to explain
Why not just use the same plan that got you to a marathon before? It's already worked for you...
my coach for the marathon was a spanish teacher who can just run long distances.. she just told us to run x miles on this day x miles on that day and i couldn't even run up to 7 miles consistently and we only went up to 16 miles when she said it was 23.. idk the spanish teacher was really clueless and a lot of people made fun of her. i just did this for college
So you were told to go run a distance and you did it up to 16 miles ... but now you can't run four miles?
One other question ... when did 23 miles become the standard for a marathon?
Obviously has never coached high school XC. No offence, but they are completely clueless. I've helped coach a girl who ran a 5:15 mile as a sophomore in high school. She could only run 15-20 miles a week max.. Out of season she refused to run at all. She hated running. She said it was boring.
However, she really wanted to go to state. So she did what she was told.
He Probably really wanted to run the marathon, so he did what he was told.
His problem is motivation.
By him saying a marathon was 23 miles, also not surprised.
Same said athlete was getting ready for her third 4k race in cross country the following fall. Before the race she actually said, "how far is a 4k anyways? Like 2 miles?" She had no idea. It was insane to me that she didn't know. BUT what you have to remember is they taught to compete against the OTHER athletes, the OTHER teams, the OTHER schools. Most of the kids don't wear a stop watch to race. The only "watch" they have is a stop watch. Most of them don't know any different.
So instead of being rude to the OP with comments such as "since when is a marathon 23 miles" maybe just don't say anything because you clearly don't understand the problem at hand.
OP- like I said before, find a running partner, find a run club, sign up for a road race. You are the type the enjoy the running community & team aspect of running. I don't doubt that you could go run 8 miles right now.
thank you for understanding my situation.. I'm going to try looking for clubs once college starts and to be honest i only did the marathon because i didn't think it would be hard and i wanted to get the jacket they give out to students hehe and also i got a week of non- uniform if i completed it0 -
You could be anemic also. A simple blood test from a finger prick can test it. They do it before you give blood, so that could be an easy way to check. If you are you would need to increase Iron intake from food. If really low, or doesn't improve with diet consult your doctor about an iron supplement.0
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i just want to build my endurance up so i can run longer.. i noticed when i run slow i can keep going and my body won't get tired but my head is always telling me to walk but i know my body can keep going?? lol hard to explain
Why not just use the same plan that got you to a marathon before? It's already worked for you...
my coach for the marathon was a spanish teacher who can just run long distances.. she just told us to run x miles on this day x miles on that day and i couldn't even run up to 7 miles consistently and we only went up to 16 miles when she said it was 23.. idk the spanish teacher was really clueless and a lot of people made fun of her. i just did this for college
So you were told to go run a distance and you did it up to 16 miles ... but now you can't run four miles?
One other question ... when did 23 miles become the standard for a marathon?
Obviously has never coached high school XC. No offence, but they are completely clueless. I've helped coach a girl who ran a 5:15 mile as a sophomore in high school. She could only run 15-20 miles a week max.. Out of season she refused to run at all. She hated running. She said it was boring.
However, she really wanted to go to state. So she did what she was told.
He Probably really wanted to run the marathon, so he did what he was told.
His problem is motivation.
By him saying a marathon was 23 miles, also not surprised.
Same said athlete was getting ready for her third 4k race in cross country the following fall. Before the race she actually said, "how far is a 4k anyways? Like 2 miles?" She had no idea. It was insane to me that she didn't know. BUT what you have to remember is they taught to compete against the OTHER athletes, the OTHER teams, the OTHER schools. Most of the kids don't wear a stop watch to race. The only "watch" they have is a stop watch. Most of them don't know any different.
So instead of being rude to the OP with comments such as "since when is a marathon 23 miles" maybe just don't say anything because you clearly don't understand the problem at hand.
OP- like I said before, find a running partner, find a run club, sign up for a road race. You are the type the enjoy the running community & team aspect of running. I don't doubt that you could go run 8 miles right now.
Words have meanings ... a marathon is not 23 miles, hasn't been since Pheidippides made the run around 490 BC. For the OP to redefine a term with over two millennia of history is telling. Your rush to defend him in a rambling, non-sequential diatribe is as well. Neither is telling in a good way.0 -
i just want to build my endurance up so i can run longer.. i noticed when i run slow i can keep going and my body won't get tired but my head is always telling me to walk but i know my body can keep going?? lol hard to explain
Why not just use the same plan that got you to a marathon before? It's already worked for you...
my coach for the marathon was a spanish teacher who can just run long distances.. she just told us to run x miles on this day x miles on that day and i couldn't even run up to 7 miles consistently and we only went up to 16 miles when she said it was 23.. idk the spanish teacher was really clueless and a lot of people made fun of her. i just did this for college
So you were told to go run a distance and you did it up to 16 miles ... but now you can't run four miles?
One other question ... when did 23 miles become the standard for a marathon?
Obviously has never coached high school XC. No offence, but they are completely clueless. I've helped coach a girl who ran a 5:15 mile as a sophomore in high school. She could only run 15-20 miles a week max.. Out of season she refused to run at all. She hated running. She said it was boring.
However, she really wanted to go to state. So she did what she was told.
He Probably really wanted to run the marathon, so he did what he was told.
His problem is motivation.
By him saying a marathon was 23 miles, also not surprised.
Same said athlete was getting ready for her third 4k race in cross country the following fall. Before the race she actually said, "how far is a 4k anyways? Like 2 miles?" She had no idea. It was insane to me that she didn't know. BUT what you have to remember is they taught to compete against the OTHER athletes, the OTHER teams, the OTHER schools. Most of the kids don't wear a stop watch to race. The only "watch" they have is a stop watch. Most of them don't know any different.
So instead of being rude to the OP with comments such as "since when is a marathon 23 miles" maybe just don't say anything because you clearly don't understand the problem at hand.
OP- like I said before, find a running partner, find a run club, sign up for a road race. You are the type the enjoy the running community & team aspect of running. I don't doubt that you could go run 8 miles right now.
Words have meanings ... a marathon is not 23 miles, hasn't been since Pheidippides made the run around 490 BC. For the OP to redefine a term with over two millennia of history is telling. Your rush to defend him in a rambling, non-sequential diatribe is as well. Neither is telling in a good way.
sorry i meant that my coach would over exaggerate how many miles we would be doing for practice and an example is one time she said we were running 23 miles but on the nike app it was only 16 miles she also said 18 miles but we really ran 12 miles
so wat is "the simpsons marathon" to u if a marathon is only 26 miles in ur vocab0 -
Is ultimate Frisbee still THE college club sport? If it's not, now I feel old even just having to ask that. If it is, try it... it's WAY more fun than just plain running, and I enjoy running by myself.0
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i just want to build my endurance up so i can run longer.. i noticed when i run slow i can keep going and my body won't get tired but my head is always telling me to walk but i know my body can keep going?? lol hard to explain
Why not just use the same plan that got you to a marathon before? It's already worked for you...
my coach for the marathon was a spanish teacher who can just run long distances.. she just told us to run x miles on this day x miles on that day and i couldn't even run up to 7 miles consistently and we only went up to 16 miles when she said it was 23.. idk the spanish teacher was really clueless and a lot of people made fun of her. i just did this for college
So you were told to go run a distance and you did it up to 16 miles ... but now you can't run four miles?
One other question ... when did 23 miles become the standard for a marathon?
Obviously has never coached high school XC. No offence, but they are completely clueless. I've helped coach a girl who ran a 5:15 mile as a sophomore in high school. She could only run 15-20 miles a week max.. Out of season she refused to run at all. She hated running. She said it was boring.
However, she really wanted to go to state. So she did what she was told.
He Probably really wanted to run the marathon, so he did what he was told.
His problem is motivation.
By him saying a marathon was 23 miles, also not surprised.
Same said athlete was getting ready for her third 4k race in cross country the following fall. Before the race she actually said, "how far is a 4k anyways? Like 2 miles?" She had no idea. It was insane to me that she didn't know. BUT what you have to remember is they taught to compete against the OTHER athletes, the OTHER teams, the OTHER schools. Most of the kids don't wear a stop watch to race. The only "watch" they have is a stop watch. Most of them don't know any different.
So instead of being rude to the OP with comments such as "since when is a marathon 23 miles" maybe just don't say anything because you clearly don't understand the problem at hand.
OP- like I said before, find a running partner, find a run club, sign up for a road race. You are the type the enjoy the running community & team aspect of running. I don't doubt that you could go run 8 miles right now.
Words have meanings ... a marathon is not 23 miles, hasn't been since Pheidippides made the run around 490 BC. For the OP to redefine a term with over two millennia of history is telling. Your rush to defend him in a rambling, non-sequential diatribe is as well. Neither is telling in a good way.
I have to disagree. She's really been the only one to understand what the OP was going thru. The OP isn't doing himself any favors with the way he's dribbling out information but she's getting thru to him anyway. And as much enjoyment as I have had poking fun at this thread it's really about helping the OP get his run game back, not how many miles a marathon is.0 -
i just want to build my endurance up so i can run longer.. i noticed when i run slow i can keep going and my body won't get tired but my head is always telling me to walk but i know my body can keep going?? lol hard to explain
Why not just use the same plan that got you to a marathon before? It's already worked for you...
my coach for the marathon was a spanish teacher who can just run long distances.. she just told us to run x miles on this day x miles on that day and i couldn't even run up to 7 miles consistently and we only went up to 16 miles when she said it was 23.. idk the spanish teacher was really clueless and a lot of people made fun of her. i just did this for college
So you were told to go run a distance and you did it up to 16 miles ... but now you can't run four miles?
One other question ... when did 23 miles become the standard for a marathon?
Obviously has never coached high school XC. No offence, but they are completely clueless. I've helped coach a girl who ran a 5:15 mile as a sophomore in high school. She could only run 15-20 miles a week max.. Out of season she refused to run at all. She hated running. She said it was boring.
However, she really wanted to go to state. So she did what she was told.
He Probably really wanted to run the marathon, so he did what he was told.
His problem is motivation.
By him saying a marathon was 23 miles, also not surprised.
Same said athlete was getting ready for her third 4k race in cross country the following fall. Before the race she actually said, "how far is a 4k anyways? Like 2 miles?" She had no idea. It was insane to me that she didn't know. BUT what you have to remember is they taught to compete against the OTHER athletes, the OTHER teams, the OTHER schools. Most of the kids don't wear a stop watch to race. The only "watch" they have is a stop watch. Most of them don't know any different.
So instead of being rude to the OP with comments such as "since when is a marathon 23 miles" maybe just don't say anything because you clearly don't understand the problem at hand.
OP- like I said before, find a running partner, find a run club, sign up for a road race. You are the type the enjoy the running community & team aspect of running. I don't doubt that you could go run 8 miles right now.
Words have meanings ... a marathon is not 23 miles, hasn't been since Pheidippides made the run around 490 BC. For the OP to redefine a term with over two millennia of history is telling. Your rush to defend him in a rambling, non-sequential diatribe is as well. Neither is telling in a good way.
I have to disagree. She's really been the only one to understand what the OP was going thru. The OP isn't doing himself any favors with the way he's dribbling out information but she's getting thru to him anyway. And as much enjoyment as I have had poking fun at this thread it's really about helping the OP get his run game back, not how many miles a marathon is.
Incoherent responses by one to incoherent posts by the other ... it is a rather synergistic relationship they are developing here.0 -
i just want to build my endurance up so i can run longer.. i noticed when i run slow i can keep going and my body won't get tired but my head is always telling me to walk but i know my body can keep going?? lol hard to explain
Why not just use the same plan that got you to a marathon before? It's already worked for you...
my coach for the marathon was a spanish teacher who can just run long distances.. she just told us to run x miles on this day x miles on that day and i couldn't even run up to 7 miles consistently and we only went up to 16 miles when she said it was 23.. idk the spanish teacher was really clueless and a lot of people made fun of her. i just did this for college
So you were told to go run a distance and you did it up to 16 miles ... but now you can't run four miles?
One other question ... when did 23 miles become the standard for a marathon?
Obviously has never coached high school XC. No offence, but they are completely clueless. I've helped coach a girl who ran a 5:15 mile as a sophomore in high school. She could only run 15-20 miles a week max.. Out of season she refused to run at all. She hated running. She said it was boring.
However, she really wanted to go to state. So she did what she was told.
He Probably really wanted to run the marathon, so he did what he was told.
His problem is motivation.
By him saying a marathon was 23 miles, also not surprised.
Same said athlete was getting ready for her third 4k race in cross country the following fall. Before the race she actually said, "how far is a 4k anyways? Like 2 miles?" She had no idea. It was insane to me that she didn't know. BUT what you have to remember is they taught to compete against the OTHER athletes, the OTHER teams, the OTHER schools. Most of the kids don't wear a stop watch to race. The only "watch" they have is a stop watch. Most of them don't know any different.
So instead of being rude to the OP with comments such as "since when is a marathon 23 miles" maybe just don't say anything because you clearly don't understand the problem at hand.
OP- like I said before, find a running partner, find a run club, sign up for a road race. You are the type the enjoy the running community & team aspect of running. I don't doubt that you could go run 8 miles right now.
Words have meanings ... a marathon is not 23 miles, hasn't been since Pheidippides made the run around 490 BC. For the OP to redefine a term with over two millennia of history is telling. Your rush to defend him in a rambling, non-sequential diatribe is as well. Neither is telling in a good way.
sorry i meant that my coach would over exaggerate how many miles we would be doing for practice and an example is one time she said we were running 23 miles but on the nike app it was only 16 miles she also said 18 miles but we really ran 12 miles
so wat is "the simpsons marathon" to u if a marathon is only 26 miles in ur vocab
If that were in an actual language it might become decipherable.0 -
i just want to build my endurance up so i can run longer.. i noticed when i run slow i can keep going and my body won't get tired but my head is always telling me to walk but i know my body can keep going?? lol hard to explain
Why not just use the same plan that got you to a marathon before? It's already worked for you...
my coach for the marathon was a spanish teacher who can just run long distances.. she just told us to run x miles on this day x miles on that day and i couldn't even run up to 7 miles consistently and we only went up to 16 miles when she said it was 23.. idk the spanish teacher was really clueless and a lot of people made fun of her. i just did this for college
So you were told to go run a distance and you did it up to 16 miles ... but now you can't run four miles?
One other question ... when did 23 miles become the standard for a marathon?
Obviously has never coached high school XC. No offence, but they are completely clueless. I've helped coach a girl who ran a 5:15 mile as a sophomore in high school. She could only run 15-20 miles a week max.. Out of season she refused to run at all. She hated running. She said it was boring.
However, she really wanted to go to state. So she did what she was told.
He Probably really wanted to run the marathon, so he did what he was told.
His problem is motivation.
By him saying a marathon was 23 miles, also not surprised.
Same said athlete was getting ready for her third 4k race in cross country the following fall. Before the race she actually said, "how far is a 4k anyways? Like 2 miles?" She had no idea. It was insane to me that she didn't know. BUT what you have to remember is they taught to compete against the OTHER athletes, the OTHER teams, the OTHER schools. Most of the kids don't wear a stop watch to race. The only "watch" they have is a stop watch. Most of them don't know any different.
So instead of being rude to the OP with comments such as "since when is a marathon 23 miles" maybe just don't say anything because you clearly don't understand the problem at hand.
OP- like I said before, find a running partner, find a run club, sign up for a road race. You are the type the enjoy the running community & team aspect of running. I don't doubt that you could go run 8 miles right now.
Words have meanings ... a marathon is not 23 miles, hasn't been since Pheidippides made the run around 490 BC. For the OP to redefine a term with over two millennia of history is telling. Your rush to defend him in a rambling, non-sequential diatribe is as well. Neither is telling in a good way.
I have to disagree. She's really been the only one to understand what the OP was going thru. The OP isn't doing himself any favors with the way he's dribbling out information but she's getting thru to him anyway. And as much enjoyment as I have had poking fun at this thread it's really about helping the OP get his run game back, not how many miles a marathon is.
Incoherent responses by one to incoherent posts by the other ... it is a rather synergistic relationship they are developing here.
Actually I think it makes quite a lot of sense at this point... much more than it did in the beginning and I think that's because the OP has been offering information in bits and pieces... The gal who understood what he was trying to say "got it" because she coaches high schoolers- so that also makes a lot of sense.
Here's what I'm gathering- OP ran XC through high school coached by someone whose abilities he and his teammates apparently questioned... ie She said go run 18 miles and my watch or my app or whatever said 12... how many did I run? OP decided to run a marathon, why? Not for the challenge of 26.2 miles, but for a cool jacket and a week off of practice... He probably didn't know or care how long the race was, it was a "marathon" and he was just going to run until he saw the finish line and that was that.
Now, he graduated in June (?), and has never had to train himself... he did what the coach told him to do (and it seems he was never really sure what he was doing... the 18 miles or 12 miles thing. Add to it, losing his teammates- no more camaraderie.. it's just him and he doesn't know how to do anything but run... it doesn't really sound like too much fun to make that transition to be honest, and I enjoy running by myself. Maybe he took a month or two off after graduation so his endurance came down some. He tried slowing down like everyone told him... he can finish the miles but he's getting bored and wants to stop. I think the advice to try to find a running club to join or to try another activity if he finds that running isn't really for him (and that's ok) is good advice.
OP-- am I close?0 -
0
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Nice..
I can't help but think the kid has been giving info in bits and pieces at least partly because we all jumped on him and got "salty" when he first posted... it makes sense now and the kid's still getting crapped on.
I guess I forgot what website I was on for a minute...0
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