|
|
|
Feeling overly tired, sluggish,
or fatigued at the end of a run or walk. | |
|
Certain muscles are experiencing
pain. | |
|
Waking up in the middle of the
night and can't get back to sleep. | |
|
Losing motivation and
excitement for your running or walking | |
| Doing dumb things while
driving. | |
| Suffering an injury |
How
do you modify your plan? By
giving your body more rest. Keep in mind that running or walking
destroys body cells, and it is during rest that your body reacts to that stress and becomes
stronger.
| Reduce your distance. | |
| Reduce your pace. | |
| Following the 10% rule (or less) in increasing
your distance and/or pace. | |
| Alternating heavy and light days. Light days
can be reduced running or no running. Your body needs 48 hours or more
to recover from a heavy run or walk, and following the heavy day with
a light day gives your body that extra time it needs. | |
| Take rest weeks with reduced running. | |
| Go to bed earlier and/or take naps. |
One
day while working in Massachusetts, I came in from a noon-hour run and
the security guard called me over to talk with him. He told me he had
recently started running and felt very tired at the end of his runs.
That tiredness stayed with him throughout the day. I suggested that he
reduce his distance by half and then make small weekly increases of 10%
or less. He told me a week later that he had made those changes and now
felt great during and after his runs.
Where
can you get a dynamic plan? One good source is from a book or web site
that publishes training plans.
Another good source is to create your own plan, following counsel from
other runners, books, and web sites. That is, you get a good static plan that looks like it might work for
you, and then you modify it as you use it. This approach works well as
long as you have the emotional strength to actually modify the plan and
not become a slave to it.
A
third source is from a person whom you admire and trust. This person
could be another runner, a coach, or a professional trainer. Be
aware, however, that unless the person is skillful in working with
runners or walkers, they may give you a plan that would work for
them but not for you. This occurs when that person is unable to
come down to your level of needs. The person may author a plan based on
their needs, and since that person is probably more experienced than
you, they'll give you a plan that requires that you do more than your body
can handle. Coaches especially have this problem, because they have a
fixed competition schedule and don't have time to treat each runner
individually. If you use a plan from another person, be sure that
that person encourages you to modify the plan according to the needs of
your body.
By
listening to your body and using signals from your body as indicators
that your plan needs to be modified a bit, you will have enlisted the
best trainer of all, your body!
Here
is my page on stress that will give you
further suggestions for handling stress.
There
are a lot of training plans given in books, magazines, and web sites. It is
common for new runners (and experienced runners, too) to try to follow those
plans, and often we discover that those plans "aren't for us". Let's look at
this situation.
It takes a lot of faith to follow a plan given by someone we've
never met, someone who doesn't know the current condition of our bodies, someone
who is giving recommendations based on his/her experience with other runners but
not with us. If we try to blindly follow such plans, we're
putting our running career into the hands of a stranger who doesn't know us and
who doesn't know the capabilities of our bodies to handle stress. If we do this,
we'll likely be heading
towards pushing ourselves too much in our training, and that can lead to injury.
Symptoms that we are over training include heavy breathing during and after a
run, cramps or stitches, sore throats, fatigue, excess soreness, feelings that
we should give up running, difficulty sleeping at night, doing dumb things while
driving (sorry, officer, I didn't see that light). Does this mean that we should
ignore plans from the books, magazines, and web sites that we read? No.
It means
that we should operate less on blind faith and more on actual evidence from our
bodies.
There are three principles that are so basic that they should
form the foundation of our training, and everything we do in our training
should be based on these principles.
Principle 3 means we should listen to our bodies and vary our training accordingly. By doing this, we can learn to run without pain and without injury, and our running will be a joyous and positive experience. Principle 3 is also the basis for our having actual evidence for how we train rather than having blind faith in recommendations from strangers who don't know the limits of our bodies.
Some people are adept at listening to their bodies, and these
fortunate folks are capable of establishing their own training plans, or of
modifying plans from others to fit their bodies. Other folks have a hard time
listening to their bodies, often due to strong drives to get fast improvement or
to compete with everyone they encounter. These folks need to be especially
careful in their training since they often "drive blind" in deciding how much to
push themselves in their training. It would be wise for these runners to get
training advice from someone who knows them and knows the capacity of their
bodies to handle stress.
�
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The
information in this site and in my podcasts is for
informational purposes only; it does not constitute medical or physical therapy
advice. For medical advice, consult a physician. For physical therapy advice,
consult a physical therapist.
� Copyright Allen W. Leigh 2003, 2007![]()

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