Bernard Lagat: http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10000872396390444032404578006274010745406
Lauren Fleshman: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qQffeQ5pmbA
Meb Keflezighi: http://www.runnersworld.com/boston-marathon/how-meb-keflezighi-trained-to-win-the-boston-marathon
Greg McMillan: http://www.mcmillanrunning.com/articlePages/article/43
Recovery and Long-term thinking.
I've done it, I've finally convinced myself I need a FULL break.
A year ago I wasn't running because of a stress fracture that popped up out of nowhere. Yet I still found a way to crosstrain like a madwomen - waterjogging and biking like I was training for ironman. Pulling doubles ALMOST every day. Then I returned to running. I came within 40 sec of my half marathon PR off running for only 3 weeks.
Then it hit the fan...all of it, and it hasn't been pretty since: severe fatigue; back spasms; right leg: stress reaction in foot, misalgined hip from walking boot, piriformis syndrome; left leg: strained quad. Don't get me wrong, I had some good runs since last summer, but probably no more than what I can count on my hands.
Enter this blog. The beauty of it is, you can go back and read how you felt, how you REALLY felt, how you were training, what kind of sleep you were getting. I was not the fastest Summer 2012, but I felt the best and I was making the greatest improvements in my running. Why? I was crosstraining a ton more and I had just come off a 2.5 month hiatus from all working out, got really fat, and had a fire in me to take back my fitness.
Don't get me wrong, I have a strong desire to be fit and work hard at it every day. But I finally realized after reading/watching the links above it's been too hard for too long. Case in point, I still have not fully returned to running since my stress fracture A YEAR AGO, I did not feel recovered from workouts (even easy ones), my pace has not been improving as I have seen in the past (partially because everything hurts most of the time), and thanks to technology (Jawbone) I've finally accepted my sleep sucks (I lay in bed for 10 hours and sometimes will get only 7 hours, minimal quality).
Onto my plan: 2 weeks off all workouts. If my sleeping has returned to somewhat normal by the end of the 2 weeks, then hit the weight room to build a solid foundation. Add Flywheel after one week of weights only. If all systems are a go, build back in running per Greg's plan in the link above.
I really wanted to hit some fast 5ks this Summer; there's still time. But for now I will practice patience, and recover, recover, recover. Peace out, Running! I will miss you. You can show me how much you missed me with some PRs this Summer/Fall!
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