Sasha Pachev
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« Reply #1 on: October 03, 2007, 05:49:22 pm » |
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The best way to get help around here is make your training public. Get a blog set up, and start posting your workouts. Some general principles apply to everybody, but there are a lot of individual variations. Once we can see the details of what you are doing, we can give you very specific help.
Some general suggestions:
Train 6 days a week, do not skip for absolutely any reason. Unless there are days you cannot run at all, and have to use some exercise equipment you do not own, gym membership is probably a waste of money. If you want to run well outdoors, you need to train outdoors. Make a resolution to train in any weather and stick to it. Keep your daily mileage and speed sufficiently low that you can do the same the next day comfortably. Do not go more than 3 times your average daily mileage in any run. Be consistent, learn the meaning of NO, eliminate BUT from your spoken language and thought. No skipping means no, no excuses, none. That is when having your training public helps. You will not get away with a lame excuse. Do not get too excited about diets. Just eat healthy. If you think it is bad, do not eat it. Do not worry about fats/carbs/protein. Eat natural foods, stay away from junk. Be patient - avoid get fit quick programs that promise to take a couch potato to running a marathon in a short amount of time. They would be truthful if they replaced "running" with "surviving with a high probability of injury". Take your time to get fit, then race once you are ready. Race a 5 K, go under 30, then race a 10 K, go under 1 hour, then race 1/2 marathon, go under 2 hours, then start planning for your marathon. It is much more pleasant to do it in 4 hours and feel good than survive it in 6.
Good luck in your training. I think you can definitely do it if you prepare thoroughly.
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