Tuesday, January 18, 2011

So, does it work?

That's been the question on my mind since I started this pool running extravaganza, some 10 weeks ago.  My progression has been:

a) 7 weeks of nothing save pool-running and the few other things I could do in the aircast (upper body strength-training, modified pilates, front and reverse planks, and hamstring curls/knee extensions using machines).

b) one week of the above plus the arc-trainer, yoga, and walking.


c) 3 weeks of very carefully reintroducing running and leg strength-training.

So, where do I stand, versus where I came in?  Well, I'm a numbers/stats person - here's the numbers/stats.

Fact 1: my resting heart rate has remained in the low 40s throughout.

Fact 2: When I first started the arc-trainer after 7 weeks of nothing but pool running, I was able in short order to crank out slightly less than two hours at an equivalent resistance and RPMs to what I had done before, with my heart rate only about 5 beats per minute higher on average.

Fact 3: On my very first yoga class back, I was able to make it through the full class, including holding my warrior 3 and half moon poses on the bad leg (I was shocked).  I noted a slight loss of flexibility (especially in hamstrings and hip flexors), but strength and stability were there.

Fact 4: As of 10 weeks out, I am using the single leg press at a higher weight than I did pre-injury (was 130# for the single leg press before; now it's 145#).  I haven't reintroduced barbell squats yet, but that's coming shortly.

Fact 5:  After about 3 weeks of running in short dribbles with frequent walk breaks, I'm able to hold ~7:30 pace for 10 minutes without too much effort.  In fact, that's what I did yesterday morning.  It wasn't intentional -- I was just running by feel and focusing on pushing with my glutes, and was shocked by the pace on my Garmin (which was confirmed by timing a few 400m splits on the track I was running on).

I think I could do a tempo run at about 6:50-7:00 pace right now (no worries, I'm not going to try, just yet), which is not too far off of my pre-injury tempo pace of 6:40.

My fitness feels fine; my main limiter seems to be foot and calf muscular strength.  And I've GAINED strength in my hip flexors, resulting in improved running form.

So, in a nutshell, the majority of my fitness seems to have endured (pun intended).  Oh sure, I've gained a few pounds (less than 5), lost some flexibility, and my feet and calves need a lot of work.  But I am NOT starting at zero, and I don't feel all that far behind.  Even better yet, running feels natural, and not strange (as I feared it would).

Wow.  The pool running worked.  You hope and hope, but you're never quite certain.

7 comments:

  1. Yay!! Yet another confirmation story! Amazing how fast you still are!

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  2. I always wonder if I'm getting any benefit, even though I've been doing it for a long time. I think this is great news for ALL of us. Thanks for sacrificing yourself to this experiment. :) But seriously, congrats and major props to you for being able to withstand this much pool running over the past 10 weeks. Amazing.

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  3. Ditto to what Katie said! You are clearly the poster child for doing pool training hard core and correctly, too. Intervals, tempos, training runs, etc. Well done!

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  4. Agreed! This is awesome. Congrats on the run the other day - your hard work definitely shows!

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  5. Wow! That's major huge great news. Unbelievable how fast you've returned, or rather, thanks to the pool, you barely even left. Congrats!

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  6. Yes, I've determined that it worked for me too. No obvious loss in fitness (although I was also doing spinning, but not a ton). My upper body form is a lot better than it was pre-injury -- I run more upright and swing my arms and relax my hands like I'm s'posed to.

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  7. Very cool! That's great news!! :)

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