Feeling restless... I got up this morning and wrote a poem. It's dreadful, so don't even ask me to share it. But I will give you the nutshell version: I didn't run today. I wish very much that I was back up to my usual miles. I am at the beginning of a new training period with all this possibility laying before me. Now is the time to make good choices.
The best thing to do at a time like this is immerse oneself in one's training books, planner in hand. I may be having some coaching with Sean after all (haven't heard from him), in which case things will be somewhat simpler. But for now I'm reviewing principles and picking workouts. When I got to my Daniels Formula book, I realized I had not yet plugged my new 5K PR (2 weeks ago) into his tables. O-ho! A new VDOT number! 39. That's up from 37! But then I went to the pace table and the paces for VDOT 39 seem way high. I guess that's just sticker shock; Mr. Daniels knows quite a lot more about these things than I. (E = 10:23, M = 8:57, T = 8:22, I = 1:54 for 400m, R = :53 for 200m) But perhaps those are targets rather than current training paces. I'll have to reread...
And as long as we are talking about Stuff Sno Doesn't Understand... I would love someone to explain Peaking. (Have I whined about this before?) I've read all about it and I know what is meant by the term, but I cannot wrap my brain around it in a practical sense. Let's say I lose all my senses and take a job as a refuse collection person (don't know the current PC term). At first, my muscles will be very sore lifting the garbage cans into the truck. After a while they will get stronger. Eventually, it will be no problem, lift, lift, lift. There is no "peak," after which I will be come a less able lifter. Why should running muscles behave any differently? Maybe someone can straighten me out. Enough rambling... tomorrow I run!
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