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Location:

San Antonio,TX,

Member Since:

Dec 13, 2009

Gender:

Male

Goal Type:

Other

Running Accomplishments:

5K PR - 18:01 - Nov '14

10K PR - 38:37 (workout) - Oct '14

Half-marathon - 1:22:43 - Jan '14

Marathon - 2:58:43 in Boston! - Apr '13

50 mile - 7:49:30 (2nd) - Nov '15

Short-Term Running Goals:

- Balance

- Run more trails, volunteer, more social running, run with a team

- Race a lot more.  learn.

Race results / possible schedule:

Apr 2 - Hells Hills 25k trail - 4th

Apr 9 - Toughest 'n Texas 20-mile Trail - 2nd

May 7 - Paleface - Trail Marathon - 3rd

May 29 - American Hero road 25k - 2nd

Jun 25 - Pedernales Falls 30k nighttime Trail - 5th (sick)

Jul 16 - Muleshoe Bend 30k nighttime Trail - 3rd

Jul 23-24 - Fossil Valley 9-hour nighttime Trail - 2nd

Aug 6 - Colorado Bend 30k nighttime Trail - 4th

Aug 27 - Reveille Peak 30k nighttime Trail (entered)

Sep 10 - Franklin Mountains 50k (entered - not all-out effort...I hope)

Sep 17 - Lighthouse Hill 20-mile trail (entered)

Sep 24 - J&J 50 mile trail

Long-Term Running Goals:

Compete in a few more ultras without going off course (again)

Sub-18 in a 5k

One.  Good.  Marathon.

Personal:

I started running at age 30, in late 2009.  I have 2 daughters (10 and 8 yrs old).

  

 

Favorite Blogs:

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Miles:This week: 0.00 Month: 0.00 Year: 0.00
Saucony A5 Lifetime Miles: 1054.70
Kinvara 2 - Gray/red Lifetime Miles: 1551.08
Kinvara 3 - Gray/red Lifetime Miles: 1244.23
1160s Lifetime Miles: 888.70
Saucony A5 Red Lifetime Miles: 565.10
Saucony A6 - Yellow Lifetime Miles: 214.00
Saucony A6 - Red/blue Lifetime Miles: 61.50
NB MT101 Trail Lifetime Miles: 302.00
Fastwitch 6 Red #1 Lifetime Miles: 286.50
Fastwitch 6 Red #2 Lifetime Miles: 267.00
Slow milesFast milesTotal Distance
0.000.000.00

Tried to do an easy run in the morning and couldn't - too much of a hobble and pain from my right foot.  Knowing it gets worse as the run goes on, I called it off.  I don't think it's a stress fracture since the impact on the ground doesn't hurt; it's right before I push off, when the angle from foot to shin is sharpest.  More research led me toward tendonitis - posterior tibial tendonitis or anterior, depending on which random website I go by.  Either way I'm supposed to rest it to fix it.  Having said that, there is a 10k on Friday that I'd like to try so I might rest until then, warmup a few miles without NSAIDs to test it, them maybe run it.  Sound dumb enough?

Weight: 0.00
Comments
From Mike on Wed, Sep 15, 2010 at 06:34:13 from 155.85.58.253

Sounds asinine. Go to the doc, dip@#$%!

From flatlander on Wed, Sep 15, 2010 at 12:44:32 from 198.207.244.102

Don't know if you have the same thing I did, but it hurt at exactly the same pushing off point, anything else was fine. Honestly, as long as I could run a little bit it seemed OK to run, then try a little bit more the next day, but I am no doctor. You might miss the 10K, though. Take care.

From seeaprilrun on Wed, Sep 15, 2010 at 15:15:46 from 68.103.248.145

Ouch. I had peroneal tendonitis(the tendon behind the outer ankle bone) in both of my ankles. First I got it in one ankle, couldn't run for almost a month, got over it, ran for a month, and then blew the other ankle shortly thereafter. It hurt on push-off, a debilitating pain, I couldn't even walk without a severe limp. The crazy part was there was no swelling or tender point to push on or anything. Anyways, I had to cross train. As badly as it sucked, I was able to recover and set a lot of PR's. Sorry--long story--the point is, tendons are slow healers. It sounds like the pain has stepped up its game with you and is really starting to hurt and make you hobble. With Houston the ultimate goal on January 30th, I think the best time to cross-train and get the thing completely healed is now--this leaves you plenty of time to recover and train for Houston if you cross-train to maintain aerobic fitness. I came off the elliptical without having lost too much aerobically at all. I would also do ankle strengthening exercises. I found ice to be worthless for an ankle injury(or PF for that matter) but what helped was a week of scheduled ibuprofen(every 6 hours) and then exercises like writing the alphabet with my toe once the pain began to diminish. If you get it taken care of now, then you won't have to struggle through months of training-while-injured for Houston.

From Tracy on Wed, Sep 15, 2010 at 15:18:45 from 209.175.177.37

I second Mike.

From SlowJoe on Wed, Sep 15, 2010 at 20:22:58 from 214.13.130.104

I definitely want to get rid of it fully before I start running again; just like to hope it will be sooner rather than later. If it looks like it'll be more than a few more days, I'll be hitting the gym and figuring out where the doctor is - although I can guess what he/she will say. Thanks all.

From CookieLegs on Thu, Sep 16, 2010 at 13:08:57 from 155.101.152.105

I agree with everyone above, especially with April's alphabet writing therapy, etc. You are in great condition now, so if Houston is the ultimate goal for you, ease off your running (ie, no 10K)until you can figure out what this pain is all about. Also, you've increased your daily and weekly mileage a lot in the last month, which might have been the trigger. April wrote somewhere that she has to increase her mileage slowly or else risk getting injured. She suggested adding a mile to your run every other day for one week, then the next week add a mile to the runs you didn't increase the week before, etc. Something to keep in mind when you start ramping up mileage again. (It also might help to gradually shift between TM running and outside running, because of the different type of mechanics they employ.) Good luck; I'm pretty sure you will have a super fast recovery and be back in full training mode soon!

From SlowJoe on Thu, Sep 16, 2010 at 14:54:12 from 214.13.130.104

Thanks Adele, hopefully it's short-lived. I already felt like I could've run this morning (thurs) but want to make sure I can't feel it at all, which is not yet the case.

I do always build mileage very slowly, except for that last week, which probably brought out the tendonitis a bit stronger. I got runner's knee when I got into the 30s, a hip flexor strain when I hit the 40s and now this for my first venture into the 50s. I read what I thought was a very conservative piece of advice somewhere not to increase more than 10 miles a year but it doesn't seem totally silly anymore.

From seeaprilrun on Thu, Sep 16, 2010 at 16:07:14 from 68.103.248.145

Glad it is feeling better Joe! I hope it clears up and does not make a return.

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