Another good run

I didn’t run last Wednesday, per my usual schedule, but then it turned cold again and snowed both Thursday and Friday. On Thursday I did walk the 3 miles, wearing a coat, and then we rode our bike trainers for 90 minutes that night. I didn’t do anything all weekend, so I had plenty of rest before starting my run today.

I felt pretty good today. I ran the whole first mile, then walked for about 30 seconds, then ran the next mile and walked for about 2 minutes, then ran the rest of the way home. I knew I had walked more distance today than I did last Monday, but I figured my running, especially the last mile, was probably a little faster. So I figured I would come in around the 35 minute mark. When I got home, let myself inside, and saw the stopwatch at 34:01, I was really happy. That’s a new personal record for this loop.

Eventually I’m going to have to start swimming and biking outside again. Right now we ride our trainers at night sometimes, but biking outside at night won’t work, so I may need to figure out a new schedule for running once it starts to warm up.

Hard run

I only walked once today. I ran the first 2 miles without switching from running to walking. That’s the longest I’ve gone without switching, so I was happy. I kept telling myself that I may run the whole thing without ever switching to walking, but I finally did when I got to the last big hill around the 2 mile marker. I was pretty beat-up by the time I gave up and switched to walking, so when I switched back to running at the top of the hill, it was very slow. In fact, it’s pretty generous to even call it running; it was more shuffling than running. But it wasn’t walking, and that was important.

I finished in 35:56, which is slower than yesterday’s “good” run, but still faster than any other run I’ve done this year. So I’m quite happy with the time.

The thing I’m not as happy about is my legs. When I finished running, they were in pain. They didn’t hurt while I was running, not even the last few steps of the run, but as soon as I stopped running, they hurt. I stretched out a bit and felt a lot better, but I was really hoping they would feel as good as they did yesterday. Oh well. I probably won’t run tomorrow, so they should have a chance to recover.

A good run

I have been using the Daily Plate over at LiveStrong.com to track my eating and exercise habits for the last month or so. It’s really great for tracking food intake, but it’s pretty terrible at tracking exercise. At least it hasn’t been easy for me to track and view reports on the things I do. It’s fine for tracking time spent doing something, but not very good at tracking things like weights, reps, etc. Even tracking distances running or biking isn’t great.

I’m starting to make some progress with my running and I don’t want to forget that I have improved. Two weeks ago I was lucky to finish my 3.1 mile loop under 40 minutes. Last week I finished under 37 minutes twice (36:15 and 36:20).

Today I finished it in 34:54.

That isn’t just my best time for the loop, I also had what I would consider a really good run. I only switched from running to walking 3 times, for a total of about 2 minutes spent walking instead of running. But more importantly, I felt good almost the entire time I was running. My legs never hurt during the run and they don’t feel sore after running. I kept catching myself enjoying the run. It still seems strange, but I’ll take it.

Running?

I have always hated running as exercise.

In high school, our swim team had to run a lot. Some of us figured out how to get out of running the prescribed distance. We would bring a basketball along with us, pretending to bounce the ball as we ran to give us something to do. In reality, we would find a basketball hoop somewhere along the way and play ball instead of run, then hook back up with the group on their way back to the pool. I’m guessing our coach knew what was going on, but we thought we were so clever. Not surprisingly, we were all sprinters. The swimmers that figured out how to run the long distances, also knew how to swim the long distances. I never figured out how to do either one.

I have done several triathlons in recent years. These usually require swimming a decent distance. Having a background in swimming has helped me do well in the swimming portion, even though I still don’t swim distance well. I really enjoy the biking and the distance you ride in a typical Olympic-distance triathlon doesn’t seem all that long. But my “run” portion has always been terrible. In fact, I have been in the bottom-5 for my age group in the run on several occasions. That hasn’t really bothered me. In fact, I have been joking for several years that I’m going to start creating and selling T-shirts that say “Swim – Bike – Walk” on them. I haven’t ever done that, of course, but I still think it’s a fun idea.

My father had a heart attack this year, so I’ve been thinking a lot about taking better care of myself. I know that means I need to walk and probably run on a regular basis, so I started walking around the neighborhood at lunch (I work from home, so it’s easy to schedule). I found I really enjoyed the walking. It really cleared my head and helped me solve problems. It wasn’t long before I was walking 3 miles a day, 3 or 4 times a week. I didn’t have enough time to be gone more than about 45 minutes, so I just kept walking my 3 miles. But then something strange happened. My legs didn’t want to walk, they wanted to run.

I have been mixing walking and running my 3 mile loop for the past two weeks. I’m not in good enough shape to run the whole loop, but I haven’t had too much trouble running big portions of it. It wasn’t fun, but for some reason, my legs still wanted to run it, so I did. The amount of the loop I walk has been getting less and less, while the amount I run has been increasing.

Today something very strange and unexpected happened. I wasn’t planning on running any more than I had earlier this week, but after mixing running and walking the first mile, I started feeling really good. I started really enjoying running. I have never enjoyed running. It was a completely new experience for me. I ran the rest of the loop and really enjoyed it. I didn’t run fast by any means, probably somewhere between 5.5 and 6.0 miles/hr, but it was easy and enjoyable. I don’t think I’ve fully come to terms with what it means, but I’m already looking forward to my next run to see if it happens again.