Monday, December 25, 2023

Training log - Week ending 12/24/2023

This week was 61 miles of running, 18 "miles" of pool-running, and 500 yards of swimming -- training log is here.

Last week of this training cycle.  It admittedly didn't go as well as I would have liked.  Tuesday's track workout was in frigid conditions on a slightly slippery track before dawn.  I just could never get warmed up and felt like I was going to pull a muscle if I forced myself to do the track workout, so I bailed and just ran easy.  

The next morning I headed over to the gym to run a workout on the treadmill (my own treadmill is awaiting a replacement part).  I went with tempo intervals as both a bit more relevant to marathon training and a bit safer on the treadmill.  

The workout went well but was tiring.  In retrospect I should have kept the mileage lower on Thursday in the name of recovery, but I didn't.  

Saturday's long run was sluggish and slow - I suspect that this was at least partially due to inadequate recovery.   I also wore a pair of shoes that had lost their bounce and are now retired, and I suspect that played a role too.

I'm now 3 weeks out from Houston, so my focus is on recovering and then sharpening.

Monday:  Upperbody weights/core and 9 "miles" pool-running. Foam rolling in evening.

Tuesday: 10 miles, including a failed track workout (dropped out during first lap); streaming yoga and foam rolling in afternoon.
 
Wednesday: 10 miles on the treadmill, including a workout of 7x5 minutes at tempo effort (8.4 mph) with one minute jog.  Followed with leg strength work.  Foam rolling in evening.

Thursday: 10 miles very easy on trails (10:36) and streaming yoga.  Foam rolling in evening.

Friday: 12.5 miles very easy (9:40) and upper body weights/core Foam rolling in evening.

Saturday: 18 miles progressive, split as the first 5 miles averaging 9:40 pace, next 5 miles averaging 8:32 pace, and next 8 miles averaging 7:50 pace.  Followed with injury prevention work and 500 yards recovery swimming. Foam rolling in evening.

Sunday:  90 minutes pool-running and streaming yoga.  Foam rolling in evening.

Sunday, December 17, 2023

Training log - Week ending 12/17/2023

This week was 65 miles of running, 9 "miles" of pool-running, and ~1000 yards of swimming -- training log is here.

I've now been off of the Lexapro for 3 weeks (which is how long I was on it) and I feel like my old self again, which is a great feeling.  Saturday's long run was a good confidence boost, especially given the fact that I (intentionally) did it on tired legs.

I'm now 4 weeks out from Houston, and so I'm going to start pulling back slightly on the mileage while increasing the intensity over the next few weeks.

Monday:  9 "miles" pool-running and streaming yoga. Foam rolling in evening.

Tuesday:  Upperbody weights/core and 7.5 miles trail running (10:26). Foam rolling in evening.
 
Wednesday: Streaming yoga and 11 miles very easy (9:27) including some grass running, plus strides.  Foam rolling in evening.

Thursday:  10 miles, including 8 Iwo Jima hills (alternating 2:00-2:50 of uphill running with 30-40 second downhill stride).  Followed with leg strengthwork and 500 yards recovery swimming.  Foam rolling in evening.

Friday: 11 miles very easy (9:41) including some grass running, plus drills and strides.  Streaming yoga and foam rolling in the evening.

Saturday: 17.5 miles, with 2x5 miles at marathon effort with 1 mile float in between.  Splits were 37:24 (7:37/7:27/7:30/7:20/7:30 - average pace 7:29) and 37:13 (7:37/7:26/7:29/7:27/7:14 - average pace 7:27) with 1 mile float between the two in 8:32. Followed with injury prevention work and 500 meters recovery swimming.   Foam rolling in afternoon.

Sunday:  8 miles trail running (10:17).  Foam rolling in afternoon.

Monday, December 11, 2023

Training log - Week ending 12/10/2023

This week was 60 miles of running and 1000 yards of swimming -- training log is here.

If you're wondering about Tuesday's workout, our local track is a mess. The infield is being replaced, which means metal fencing in lanes 1 and sometimes 2 and a weird plywood/tarp "road" across the track for the machinery to use to get to the infield.  (Pictures can be seen here). So, on Tuesday we did one lap repeats that started after the plywood track crossing and finished before, with the laps being run in lanes 2, 3, and 4.  I'm not sure what the exact distance was for each repeat, but that's fine - the effort is what matters most in a workout.

On Sunday I ran a 15K as a tune-up race for Houston.  Not the time I wanted, but I was happy with the placing and the effort, so it was overall a good day.  Race report.  I think I'm still bouncing back from the three weeks that I was on Lexapro, so that's another reason not to worry too much about the paces.  I did feel like I could go forever, which is a good feeling before a marathon.

Two more weeks of marathon training, and then I taper.

Monday:  8.5 miles very easy (9:29) and streaming yoga. Foam rolling in evening.

Tuesday: 10 miles, including a track workout of 15x ~400, starting at 1:40 and descending down to 1:36.  Recoveries were 1:40 to 2:00 at first, and shortened to 60-70 seconds by the end.  Followed with leg strengthwork and 500 yards recovery swimming.  Foam rolling in evening.
 
Wednesday: Streaming yoga and 8.5 miles very easy (9:41).  Foam rolling in evening.

Thursday:  Upperbody weights/core and 6 miles trail running (10:24).  Foam rolling in evening.

Friday: 8 miles, including a 1600 in 7:06 and some strides.  Followed with injury prevention work. Foam rolling in evening.

Saturday: 4 miles very easy (9:37) and streaming pilates. Foam rolling in evening.

Sunday:  3 mile warm-up; Jingle All the Way 15K in 1:08:04; 2.5 mile cooldown.

Sunday, December 10, 2023

Race Report: Jingle All the Way 15K, December 10, 2023

I ran the Jingle All the Way 15K this morning, finishing in a time of 1:08:04 - good enough for 6th female overall and top master female.

This race was a tune-up for the Houston Marathon, which is now 5 weeks away.  I personally prefer to use a half-marathon 3 weeks out from the marathon as a tune-up.  However, 3 weeks out from Houston is Christmas weekend, so there aren't many options.  So I went with this race instead.  Just like I did last year before Houston.

When I signed up, I was also hoping I could run significantly faster than last year, since I'm now in a far better place running-wise.  However, two different wrenches fell into that plan.  

The first was that in the past few weeks I've tried and then abandoned a new-to-me medication - Lexapro.  The Lexapro really helped dampen down some hyperactive reflexes (good) but also made me really sluggish, with fast running being particularly challenging (bad).  So I stopped it about 10 days ago (at the neurologist's instruction). I've felt a bit better every day since, but I'm still on the upswing.

The second wrench was the weather.  Last year this race had perfect weather.  This year, it didn't.  The forecast was for a big weather front to roll through during the race.  Heavy rain, wind, etc.  Lovely.  But....also a good chance to test out the shoe I intend to wear for Houston - the Adios Pro 3 - in less-than-ideal conditions.

[side note: yes, I also considered wearing the Adios Pro 3 for Chicago last year, and then decided I hated that shoe.  So why am I giving it another chance?  Because the shoe I wore last year was a women's 7.5 - the smallest size I could get.  I finally managed to get hold of a women's 7 in that shoe, and it fits much better and feels better as a result.]

***

Race morning dawned unseasonably warm and muggy - temperature and dewpoint in the high 50s.  This would be great weather for a summer or early fall race, but not so great after training in the 30s for several weeks.  At least I didn't have to debate tights versus shorts.

The forecast was still for rain, so I wore a hat.  I also tucked a folded plastic poncho in my sportsbra so that I had it for the corral if the rain started pre-race.  And...remembering the advice a friend gave me when I whined about foggy glasses, I wiped my running glasses with an anti-fog wipe. 

Just like last year, I found a great parking spot.  From there, I jogged to the starting area where 17th street was once again closed to traffic (just like last year).  I did my warm-up fartlek there (3:00 at marathon to half-marathon effort, 4x30 seconds at 5K effort, 4x10 seconds at mile effort) and then made my way to the corral, entering with about 10 minutes to spare.  Once in there, I navigated to the correct proportion of supershoes versus hydration packs. 

The first mile of a race is always rough for me in terms of balance and gait - it's just life now.  For a while I was deliberately seeding myself on the far side of the corral in hopes that I could stay out of the way of others once the race started.  However, I've learned that running on the side is actually more chaotic than in the center, since the side is where people who started late or too far back in the corral sprint and swerve to try to get past the masses blocking them.  So now I'm a centrist in my corral placement.

***

The race started.  As I expected, my gait was wonky the first mile, and a downhill plus a stretch of rough pavement didn't help.  But things did feel smoother than last year, so that was a bonus.  After the first mile, my gait did start to level out, and I started to work my way through the runners in front of me.

It was noticeably warm (at least in a relative sense - again, this would have been A+ weather in August), and 7-8 minutes of running was enough to realize that I needed to be conservative here rather than run as if it was a normal winter day.  

That conservatism only lasted a few miles before the wind picked up.  And then we turned at the Kennedy Center, and the wind became a real factor.   But the positive side was that I was no longer worried about overheating, so I picked up the effort.  At this point, I could make a bad pun about "throwing caution to the wind" but the truth is that the headwind actually ripped the caution away. There were a few women ahead of me, and I got to work chasing them down.

The wind was a factor for most the next three miles, as we headed towards the tip of Hains Point.  Luckily, I managed to find a group of three guys to tuck behind (who were running faster than the women I wanted to pass).  Unluckily, one of them was blasting awful pop music from his cell phone.  But luckily (for everyone save said pop-music aficionado) the cell phone eventually froze up and he pulled off to the side to fix it.  I didn't understand his priorities, but I appreciated the reprieve.

***

There are two ways you can circle the bottom tip of Hains Point - either stay on the road or cut through a parking lot.  This course had us cutting through the lot.  However, Hains Point has changed for the worse since last year, including a poorly thought-out attempt to improve pedestrian safety that resulted in flexible posts in awkward places.  The 15K course was not re-measured to account for these, with the result that making the turn into the lot now meant that we had to weave between posts.  Fortunately, I was far enough up in the field that I had plenty of room to maneuver, but I would really hate to try to navigate this part in a crowd.

Once through the lot, I now had the wind at my back - smooth sailing, right?  That didn't last too long, as what was a drizzle shifted into a comical downpour.  It was ridiculous.  But... a) if I slowed I was just going to be out here longer, and b) this weather happens in goal races too, so I needed to take advantage of this opportunity to practice racing in heavy rain.

The last few miles were a slog, both figuratively and literally.  The water was ponding and my shoes were starting to feel sloshy.  Mile 8 of this race overlaps with Mile 1, which mean I had to run over my favorite stretch of rough pavement a second time - this time obscured by large puddles. I've been doing some trail running each week to get more comfortable with uneven footing, and I told myself that it was time to put that work to good use and pushed onwards.

The end of this race is a slight uphill and then a gentle downhill.  I passed a guy on the uphill and he said "nice job."  Then we hit the downhill and he flew past me in that way that I used to love when I did it to others and now hate when it's done to me.  I did not say "nice job" back - but that was honestly just because I was focusing on running the downhill decently well.  (I did find him after and fist-bump him for a good race).

I finished the race and stopped my watch, noting 1:08 for my time.  So significantly slower than last year.  But despite that, I was satisfied.  I had put in a good hard effort and my gait felt solid for much of this race.  Plus, I was pretty sure I had finished fairly high up in both the overall women's results and in the masters field, based on what I had seen of the field ahead of me at turn-around points.

Splits were:

Mile 1: 7:43
Mile 2: 7:10
Mile 3: 7:21
Mile 4-5: 15:45 (long)
Mile 6-7: 13:24 (short)
Mile 8: 7:16
Mile 9: 7:08
last .31: 2:17

So...as I expected, slower than last year.  But despite that, I actually think this was a much better performance.  My gait felt much better and more stable than it did last year, and I felt much more comfortable and confident in my balance when dealing with stuff like chaotic crowds, rough pavement, and wind/rain.  This was a good confidence boost going into Houston.

I did note that I didn't really have any higher gears for this race - there were points where aerobically I could have run harder, but I just didn't have the gear in my legs.  I'm not worried about this for two reasons:
a) I'm still working out of the sluggishness of the Lexapro, and all of my training paces were dramatically slowed while I was on the Lexapro.  I didn't have that gear in part because I was out of practice (and possible in part because the last bits of the Lexapro are still wearing off).
b) I feel like the Adios Pro 3 really has a sweet spot pacewise for me, and that sweet spot is marathon pace.  Which is really good, because I have a marathon coming up.  If this race had been a goal race in itself, I think I would have been better off with either the Hoka Rocket X (if there hadn't been rain) or the Asics Metaspeed Edge+ - both of which feel a bit more nimble and quick.

Other notes:

  • Left home at 7:10 for the 8:30 start.  This was enough time that I didn't feel rushed, but I wouldn't have wanted to leave any later.
  • The Adios Pro 3 has decent to decent+ grip on wet pavement. It's certainly much better than any Hoka or Saucony shoe I've ever run in, but not as good as other Adidas shoes.  Not sure why.
  • I hid my plastic rain poncho behind a bench before getting into my corral.  A+ decision - it was great to be able to retrieve that and wear it for my cooldown jog back to my car.
  • Wiping my running glasses with that anti-fog stuff was another A+ decision.  Foggy glasses were not an issue at all for this race.
  • About 3 weeks ago I ran the Rothman 8K at 7:18 pace.  Today I ran this 15K at 7:19 pace.  I certainly would not object to running the Houston Marathon at 7:18-19 pace if this trend continues.


Wednesday, December 6, 2023

Training log - Week ending 12/3/2023

This week was 64 miles of running, 9 "miles" of pool-running, and 500 yards of swimming -- training log is here.

I made it 3 weeks on the Lexapro, and then we (my doctor and I) decided to pull the plug. The fatigue, drowsiness, and weakness I noted on it just weren't improving enough. Training-wise, easy runs were OK, but trying to run faster was getting harder and harder - my heart rate just wouldn't rise, meaning that I was going anaerobic at paces that should have been not-that-hard.  

Tuesday's workout was particularly rough - a 1600 in 7:32 (so roughly my marathon pace right now) felt like an all out effort with each 100m longer than the previous.  It felt bad enough that I canned the workout, did a few 200s (which also felt awful) and went home.

I took my last dose on Thursday night. As of the weekend I was starting to feel better (certainly not as drowsy).  Saturday's workout, though not great, was better than I expected, and I've felt a bit better each day since.  

I hope I'll improve enough over the next week to be able to race a 15K decently on Sunday.

Monday:  Upperbody weights/core and 8 miles very easy (9:32). Foam rolling in evening.

Tuesday: 7 miles, including a failed track workout of 1600 in 7:32 and then 4x200 in 53, 52, 53, 55.  Followed with leg strengthwork.  Sports massage at night.
 
Wednesday: Streaming yoga and 10.5 miles very easy on the treadmill (9:12).  Foam rolling in evening.

Thursday:  10 miles, including a track workout of 3200, 2x1600 in 14:42, 7:18, 7:17 with 5:0x recovery between.  Followed with injury prevention work.  Foam rolling in evening.

Friday: 10 miles very easy on trails (10:30) and streaming yoga. Foam rolling in evening.

Saturday: 18.5 miles, including 5 miles, 2x3 miles at marathon effort (paces of 7:42, 7:39, and 7:47).  Followed with injury prevention work and 500 yards recovery swimming. Foam rolling in evening.

Sunday:  90 minutes pool-running and upperbody weights/core.  Foam rolling in evening.

Sunday, November 26, 2023

Training log - Week ending 11/26/2023

This week was 60 miles of running, 18 "miles" of pool-running, and 1000 yards of swimming -- training log is here.

After two weeks of cheering at marathons, it was nice to have a weekend at home.   I skipped a turkey trot this year both because I had raced on Saturday and because turkey trots tend to start late, meaning that I get to my parents' house later than I would like.  Plus, I had marathon training to do.

Wednesday's workout was pretty slow, but I wasn't surprised as it seems that I'm still getting used to the Lexapro that I started on November 12.  Saturday's long run, though still slower than I would like, felt a bit better, so I think I may be finally adjusting to it.  (My nightly sleep needs are also reverting to normal - hopefully another sign that I am adjusting.)

While I'm waiting for things to settle down, I'm trying to treat this as similar to training in bad weather - I focus on the effort and don't sweat it if the paces are slower than I would like (even though the weather is actually close to ideal).  Hopefully as I adjust my paces will improve back to where they were a few weeks ago. 

Monday:  9 "miles" pool-running and streaming yoga. Foam rolling in evening.

Tuesday: 10 miles very easy (9:27) including some grass running and drills/strides, and upperbody weights/core.  Foam rolling in evening.
 
Wednesday: 12 miles, including a track workout of 3x3200 in 14:17 (7:10/7:07), 14:17 (7:09/7:08) and 14:14 (7:09/7:05); recoveries of 5:00 and 5:13 between the 3200s.  Followed with leg strengthwork and 500 yards recovery swimming.

Thursday:  8 miles trail running (10:04) and streaming pilates.  Foam rolling in evening.

Friday: 10 miles very easy (9:33) to gym, including some grass running, and then upperbody weights/core, followed by 2 miles very easy home (9:30) plus drills/strides.  Foam rolling in evening.
 
Saturday: 18 miles progressive, split as the first 5 miles averaging 9:37, the next 5 miles averaging 8:29, and the next 8 miles averaging 7:42.  Followed with injury prevention work and 500 yards recovery swimming.

Sunday:  9 "miles" pool-running and streaming yoga. Foam rolling in evening..

Thursday, November 23, 2023

Training log - Week ending 11/19/2023

This week was 44 miles of running, 9 "miles" of pool-running, and 500 yards of swimming -- training log is here.

Last Sunday I started a very small dose of Lexapro (5mg - usual dose is 10-20 mg).  Lexapro is generally prescribed for anxiety/depression, but it can also be used off label.  I struggle with an exaggerated startle reflex - meaning that my body jumps any time there is an unexpected noise or something moves unexpectedly near me.  I'm not actually nervous or scared of any of these noises - this is just an annoying thing where my body uses any excuse to act like I've just touched an electric fence. This has made congested track workouts and chaotic race starts or water stations challenging, and so the hope was that a very small dose of Lexapro would reduce that reaction.

The good news is that the Lexapro seems to be working.  The bad news is that even this very small dose came with side effects.  Even 8.5 hours doesn't seem like enough sleep each night, and the workouts and races that I've done on it so far have been sluggish and slow.

From what I can tell, some runners are unaffected by this medication, some are slowed at first and then are back to normal, while others are slowed and remain that way as long as they are on the Lexapro.

Since the Lexapro is already working well for its intended purpose, I'm going to give it a few weeks to see if the side effects (mainly the slowness and sleepiness) ease up.  If they don't improve, then I'll probably go off of it, as I prefer the startle reflex to this sluggish feeling.

In other news, this was a cutback week - I raced the Rothman 8K (poorly) as a rustbuster and then hung out in Philly the rest of the weekend to cheer for friends in the marathon.  Next week will be a return to marathon training.

Monday:  9 "miles" pool-running and streaming yoga. Foam rolling in evening.

Tuesday: 9 miles, including a track workout of 6x800 in 3:25, 3:22, 3:16, 3:16, 3:15, 3:13 (recoveries of 3:00-3:13).  Followed with leg strengthwork and 500 yards recovery swimming.
 
Wednesday: Upperbody weights/core and 8.5 miles very easy (9:27) including some grass running and drills/strides.  Foam rolling in evening.

Thursday:  7 miles trail running (9:50).  Foam rolling in evening.

Friday: 3 miles very easy (9:27).  Foam rolling in evening.

Saturday: 10 miles, including the Rothman 8K in 36:19.

Sunday:  6.5 miles (9:32) running around cheering at Philadelphia Marathon.  Foam rolling in evening.

Race Report: Rothman 8K, November 18, 2023

I ran the Rothman 8K on Saturday (part of the Philadelphia Marathon weekend), finishing in a time of 36:19.

I did this race for a few reasons: I've always wanted to do it; I needed a rustbuster and preferred doing it in a large race; and it gave me an excuse to go up to Philadelphia and cheer for friends over the weekend.   

The weekend started off nicely when I got to Union Station early on Friday for my 3:30 pm train to Philly.  On a whim, I swiped my train ticket through one of the kiosks to see if there were any earlier trains, and....the 2:55 pm Acela (bullet train) was open and was $50 cheaper than my normal regional train (I suspect that they discount the tickets 30 minutes before the train leaves).  So...I got to Philly substantially earlier than planned, and for $50 less.

After checking into my hotel, I headed over to the expo, where I grabbed 8K bibs for myself and a teammate.  Unfortunately, they were out of safety pins, but like any good goth/punk I have safety pins everywhere on my backpack, so that was an easy problem to fix.  Then back to the hotel to do some reading and sleep.

***

The Rothman 8K didn't start until 11 am, which made for an awkward day.  Eating-wise, I ended up handling breakfast the same way I did when I ran the Boston Marathon - 1/2 in the morning when I woke up, and the second half about 2 hours before race time.  Then I left my hotel around 9:30 to jog to the start.

I noted as I jogged over that it was chillier than I expected, and the wind had picked up substantially.  I was only wearing a thin throwaway shirt over my singlet and shorts.  Fortunately I had both a credit card and a CVS in sight.  I ducked into the store and headed directly for the holiday section, where I found exactly what I was looking for - a pile of $8 holiday themed blankets.  I grabbed one, swiped my card, and then jogged on towards the start, blanket tucked under my arm like a precious football.

All of the Philadelphia events have security checkpoints for the start/finish area.  I wasn't sure how much room there would be to warm-up once inside the secured area, so I tucked my blanket under a tree and ran my warm-up as back-and-forth 150m laps (so I could keep an eye on the blanket).  Once those were done, I grabbed the blanket and proceeded through security (meaning I now had a security blanket).

***

The good news was that there was room inside the secured area to warm-up, so I was able to keep jogging.  The bad news was that the race wanted people in the corral 15 minutes before the race start, which would be long enough for my legs to lock up nicely.  But I knew this was the deal when I headed up to Philly.  Since many big races make one enter the corral at least 10 minutes before the race starts, it wasn't the worst thing in the world to have to practice this during my rustbuster. Plus, I had my security blanket.

The other bad news was that there were no signs indicating how to seed oneself in the corral.  For a fairly large 8K, I thought this was ridiculous.  My teammate Matt seeded himself by walking up until he saw Vaporflies.  For my part, I looked at faces, trying to parse between serious and having fun, and seeding myself between the two.  Since there was a high correlation between Vaporflies and serious faces, Matt and I ended up lined up next to each other.  I kept my security blanket wrapped around me until we were two minutes from the start, and then I tossed it and exposed myself to the elements.

***

The race started, and I was pleasantly surprised to discover that I had much less difficulty with the early race churn/chaos than my recent norm.  

Surprised may be too strong a word - my problems with early race chaos seem to be mostly due to an "exaggerated startle reflex" which means that when something happens near me that I don't expect, my body overreacts.  So, this week I started a new medication in hopes that it would muffle that startle reflex, and sure enough, it seems to be working already.  Excellent.

So that was good news.  The less good news was that my legs were pretty stiff from standing in the corral, and it was hard to get things moving.  But again, remembering how to manage stuff like this is why I don't like to take too long between races, so I got to work.

The course was pretty simple - run slightly downhill to the southeast, then around a circle and to the northwest, with a slight uphill.  A bit after mile 3, we'd turn around and head southeast again, to the finish.  There was a very strong wind from the NW that amplified the effect of the uphill and downhill. 

The headwind/slight uphill combo made for a miserable two miles.  There's not much I can say about those two miles other than that I was extremely happy to see the turnaround.

The next two miles were a very fast gentle downhill with a tailwind, but I was unable to benefit as much from this as I would have liked.  The will was there, but the legs weren't turning over, so I was stuck at my current pace.  The good news (in a sense) was that I was mentally at that point where I was sorely tempted to jog or even walk, so at least I got a chance to practice managing race suck.

I crossed the line and checked my watch: 36:20. This was surprisingly slow - I had recently tempoed 4 miles at about 7 minute pace, so I had expected to be under 35 minutes for this race at a minimum, even with a lot of wind.  But it was what it was.

Splits were:

Miles 1-2: 15:00
Mile 3: 7:12
Mile 4: 7:13
Last .97 - 6:56.

So, very evenly paced, and it certainly hurt.  But slower than expected.

It wasn't until I got back to my hotel that I remembered that I had started the new medication 6 days ago, and that my Tuesday workout had felt surprisingly hard for the paces.  The new medication is a very small dose of Lexapro, and I've read other reports online of people feeling like it slowed them substantially for a few weeks when they started it (note: in the timespan between this race and the completion of the race report, I did another track workout, and was also substantially slower for a given effort - so something's up).  So I think I'm going to write this race off as due to that.

Overall, I was still happy I did this race.  I got my rustbuster out of the way and got to practice dealing with both large chaotic starts and race suck in the process.  And I had a good excuse to go to Philly, meet up with others from the Running Ahead forums (both of whom PR'd the marathon), eat some good meals with cool people, do some shopping, and cheer for friends at the marathon on Sunday.  So overall a net positive weekend.

Other notes:

  • The weather was pretty good for the race, other than the wind - temp 49 and dewpoint 38, with overcast skies.  But the wind (25 miles per hour from the northwest) made it feel much colder.  I wore a tanktop, shorts, and arm-warmers, and I wish I had worn thin tights instead.
  • Managed to get an age group award anyways (4th) which was a pleasant surprise.  
  • I am decidedly not a fan of races that start at 11 am.
  • I can recommend the following restaurants in Philly: El Rey and Restaurant Aleksandar (both in Rittenhouse Square).
  • I can recommend the following stores for shopping in Philly: TheDreamEerie and Digital Underground/Isotank (both in the South Street area).  And also CVS for all of your pre-race Christmas security blanket needs.
  • Wore my Puma Deviate Nitro Elite 1's for this race - I really like this shoe for shorter races, as it's lower stack and agile.  I don't think my slow race was the shoe's fault.




Sunday, November 12, 2023

Training log - Week ending 11/12/2023

This week was 63 miles of running, 9 "miles" of pool-running, and 500 yards of swimming -- training log is here.

Just two workouts this week - both of which went well.  I was pretty happy with the 800s on Tuesday as I felt a little hint of my old legspeed.  I was less happy with the 200s, but I stood around for a few minutes before doing those, so...

Friday's marathon effort workout felt pretty good.  I hit a steady rhythm and the miles passed quickly and smoothly - I didn't feel tired until I stopped running.  17 miles also didn't feel very challenging from a distance perspective either.  I'd pretty much decided not to do any 20+ mile long runs during this short Houston cycle, under the theory that I didn't need them (a big rule of marathon training - don't work any harder than you need to).  Having the 17 flow that easily certainly reinforced that decision.  I'll do two runs of 18 miles where a 20+ miler would have been and call it good.

Next week I'm racing an 8K in Philadelphia as a post-Chicago rustbuster, so that will be a cutback week.

Monday:  9 "miles" pool-running. Foam rolling in evening.

Tuesday:  11 miles, including a track workout of 6x800, 2x200 in 3:22, 3:19, 3:15, 3:15, 3:15, 3:13, 48, and 48 (recoveries of 3:0x after most 800s; one recovery of 2:32 where I swapped groups.  Full recovery for the 200s).  Followed with leg strengthwork.
 
Wednesday: 11 miles very easy (9:22) including some grass running.  Yoga and foam rolling in evening.

Thursday:  Upper body weights/core and 8 miles trail running (10:52).  Foam rolling in evening.

Friday: 17 miles, with 2x5 miles at marathon effort with 1 mile float in between.  Splits were 37:18 (7:21/7:29/7:33/7:30/7:25 - average pace 7:28) and 37:12 (7:29/7:26/7:31/7:32/7:14 - 7:26 pace) with 1 mile float in 8:30. Followed with injury prevention work and 500 yards recovery swimming.   Foam rolling at night.

Saturday: Spent the morning cheering at the Richmond 8K/Half-Marathon/Marathon.  4 miles very easy midday (9:30) and streaming yoga. Foam rolling in evening.

Sunday:  12 miles easy (8:59) followed by drills and strides, and then upper body weights/core.  FOam rolling in evening.

Sunday, November 5, 2023

Training log - Week ending 11/5/2023

This week was 66 miles of running, 9 "miles" of pool-running, and 1500 yards of swimming -- training log is here.

Nothing exciting, just a continued return to normal training with two track workouts and a progressive long run.  My paces are not far from where they were at the end of my Chicago training cycle (of course, the weather is cooler now, so not an apples to apples comparison), and I feel like I'm in good shape.  In particular, Sunday's long run was not a jog, but it wasn't a huge reach either- 16 miles felt totally doable, and 6 miles at marathon effort was more mentally hard then physically hard.  

9 weeks until Houston.

Dailies:

Monday:  9 "miles" pool-running. Foam rolling in evening.

Tuesday:  10 miles, including a track workout of 4x1200, 400 in 5:22, 5:15 5:06, 5:01,1:34 (recoveries of 3:08-3:32 after the 1200s).  Followed with leg strengthwork and 500 yards of recovery swimming.
 
Wednesday: Upper body weights/core and 11 miles very easy (9:22) including some grass running and drills.  Foam rolling in evening.

Thursday:  7 miles trail running (10:32).  Streaming pilates and foam rolling in evening.

Friday: 10 miles, including a 6400m tempo on the track in 28:05 (7:08/7:05/6:59/6:53) plus 2x200m in 48 seconds each (full recovery).  Followed with leg strengthwork and 500 yards recovery swimming.   Foam rolling at night.

Saturday: 11 miles very easy (9:32) and streaming pilates. Foam rolling in evening.

Sunday:  16 miles progressive, split as the first 5 miles averaging 9:30, the next 5 miles averaging 8:03, and then the next 6 miles averaging 7:30 pace.  Followed with injury prevention work and 500 yards recovery swimming.

Monday, October 30, 2023

Training log - Week ending 10/29/2023

This week was 63 miles of running, 9 "miles" of pool-running, and 1500 yards of swimming -- training log is here.

This was return to action week.  I did my last hill workout of a very short hill phase (just two workouts) and then eased into more focused training with a tempo workout on Friday and a progressive long run on Sunday.  

I'm pretty happy with where I am right now - I'm not awfully out of shape, but I'm not fit either.  That's a good place to be about 10 weeks from a marathon.  I just need to take care not to get too aggressive with my training, so that I peak at the right time and not before.

Dailies:

Monday:  9 "miles" pool-running and streaming yoga. Foam rolling in evening.

Tuesday:  10 miles, including 8 Iwo Jima hills.  Followed with leg strengthwork and 500 yards of recovery swimming.
 
Wednesday: Streaming yoga and 10 miles very easy (9:31) including some grass running and drills.  Foam rolling in evening.

Thursday: Upper body weights/core and 8.5 miles trail running (10:14).  Foam rolling in evening.

Friday: 10 miles, including tempo workout on the track of 2x3200+2x400 - splits were 14:22 (7:16/7:06), 14:03 (7:07/6:56), 1:37, 1:38 (recoveries of 5:04 and 5:13 after the 3200s and 2:32 between the 400s.  Followed with leg strengthwork and 500 yards recovery swimming.   Foam rolling at night.

Saturday: 10 miles very easy (9:44) and streaming yoga. Foam rolling in evening.

Sunday:  14 miles progressive, split as the first 6 miles averaging 9:13, the next 4 miles averaging 8:23, and then the next 4 miles averaging 7:40 pace, plus a half-mile jog.  Followed with injury prevention work and 500 yards recovery swimming.

Sunday, October 22, 2023

Training log - Week ending 10/22/2023

This week was 44 miles of running, 9 "miles" of pool-running, and 500 yards of swimming. -- training log is here.

The first part of this week was disrupted (in a planned way) by a colonoscopy.  I ran on Monday, but took the day of the colonoscopy completely off and stayed in the pool the next day to be gentle on my body.

I'm sadly an old hand at colonoscopies now (I'm on the every two years plan) and thus I have the prep part nailed down.  For the benefit of others, I'll set it forth here:

  • (I use Suprep for the prep; if you use something else, the below may not apply)
  • Clif brand margarita shot bloks are your best friend the day before - I went through two full sleeves of them.  They are chewy (and so more satisfying than broth or jello), have electrolytes, and taste good.  
  • When you drink the Suprep, mix it with very cold water, use a straw and pinch your nose shut. Take ten big slurps quickly, then take a 30-60 second break to walk around and let the nausea settle. Then repeat twice more, and you're done with the hardest part of that round. 
  • Drink warm water for the chaser after - this will keep you from getting too chilled.
  • Have some reading material near the toilet.
Also of note is that I did this colonoscopy without sedation (yes, that is an option, but you need to ask for it).  I did this because the medication I am on for my dystonia stuff doesn't play well with anesthesia/sedation.  Given a choice between going off the medication for two weeks or doing the colonoscopy while awake, I chose the latter.  

Based on my experience this week, I'm never doing a colonoscopy WITH sedation ever again.  The procedure was not terribly painful - it was uncomfortable, but deep tissue massage hurts much more.  And when they were done, I was free to get dressed and leave.  No waking up, no need for an escort home.

The best part was just how good I felt in the days after the procedure.  After my last few colonoscopies, I've felt dull for a week or two after.  I thought it was the strain of the procedure, but now I think it was a lingering effect from the sedation.

Other than that, the only other thing is that my old training buddy Dan Vogel showed up for the Sunday run.  It was great to run with him again.  Almost as interesting as the colonoscopy, and certainly more fun than the prep was.

Dailies:

Monday:  6 miles very easy (9:22).  Foam rolling at night.  

Tuesday: Off (colonoscopy)
 
Wednesday: 9 "miles" pool-running followed by upper body weights/core work.  Foam rolling in evening.

Thursday: Streaming yoga and 9 miles (9:19) plus two strides.  Foam rolling in evening.

Friday: 9 miles, including 6 Iwo Jima hills, followed by leg strengthwork and 500 yards recovery swimming.  Foam rolling at night

Saturday: 8 miles very easy (9:46), followed by streaming pilates.  Foam rolling at night.

Sunday:  12 miles very easy (9:23).  Weights and core later.  Foam rolling at night.

Tuesday, October 17, 2023

Training log - Week ending 10/15/2023

 This week was 16 miles of running and 36 "miles" of pool-running -- training log is here.

Not too much of interest; just a post-marathon recovery week.  

The first 5 days were mostly pool-running (the exception being one day where I left the house at 5:45 am to try to get to work early, only to fail and spend 90 minutes in a round trip commute - the exact same amount of time I would have spent pool-running before telecommuting from home).

Due to a colonoscopy scheduled on Tuesday of the upcoming week, I decided to start running again a few days early, so that I wouldn't have 10 straight days of non-running.  With the neuro issues, a week is the longest I dare take between runs.

Everything felt good when I ran, so that was good. 

I have decided that for the upcoming cycle, starting now, I am going to be re-emphasizing leg strength training.  I've improved my gait a lot with hard work, now it's time to maintain that while increasing my stride length by restoring some of the leg strength and power that I seem to have lost.  So...a lot more heavy squatting, lunging, etc in the next few weeks.

Dailies:

Monday:  9 "miles" pool-running.  Foam rolling at night.  

Tuesday: Streaming yoga.  Deep tissue massage in evening.
 
Wednesday: 9 "miles" pool-running followed by some core work.  Foam rolling in evening.

Thursday: 9 "miles" pool-running.  Foam rolling in evening.

Friday: 9 "miles" pool-running, followed by weights/core.  Foam rolling at night

Saturday: 7 miles easy (9:39), followed with drills and streaming pilates.  Foam rolling at night.

Sunday: 9 miles very easy (9:52) followed by leg strengthwork.  Foam rolling at night

Thursday, October 12, 2023

Training log - Week ending 10/8/2023

This week was 54 miles of running, 7 "miles" of pool-running, and 1500 yards of swimming -- training log is here.

Once again, a belated placeholder for race week.

Dailies:

Monday:  1 hour pool-running and streaming yoga. Foam rolling in evening.

Tuesday:  7 miles, including a track workout of 5x800 in 3:28, 3:23, 3:17, 3:12, 3:11.  Recoveries of 3:0x after the 800s (except for one extended recovery in 3:23 due to track traffic).  Followed with leg strengthwork and 500 yards of recovery swimming.
 
Wednesday: 8 miles very easy (9:16) including some grass running, followed with light upper body weights/core.  Foam rolling in evening.

Thursday: 7 miles, including 2x1 mile at early marathon effort (7:40 and 7:33); streaming pilates in evening.  Foam rolling in evening.

Friday: Off.  Just travel to Chicago.

Saturday: 4 miles very easy (9:15).

Sunday:  half mile jog and Chicago Marathon in 3:20:29.

Monday, October 9, 2023

Race Report: Chicago Marathon, October 8, 2023

I ran the Chicago Marathon yesterday, finishing in 3:20:29.

I ran Chicago last year also, finishing in what was then a new lifetime personal worst.  Of course, I was honestly just happy to actually make it through a training cycle and a marathon then, but I instantly wanted a do over.  So I registered for the next Chicago marathon as soon as it opened, with the understanding that it was very unlikely that 2023 would be gifted with the spectacular weather that 2022 received.

Like last year, I flew out to Chicago on Friday morning, which gave me plenty of time to do stuff, and also fudge time in case I had travel difficulties.  While I've historically been a Southwest Airlines fan, I've shifted allegiances in the past year.  Now I try whenever possible to book an airline that has hubs in both Baltimore/DC and my destination - the idea is that if there are cancellations/delays, there will be plenty of other options to get me to my destination without having to swap airlines.

So I flew American Airlines for the first time in possibly 15-20 years. The only thing of note about my flight was that there was a chunk missing from one of the wings.


I noticed this before we departed and pointed it out to a flight attendant (in case the pilot had somehow missed it on the walkaround).  We took off anyway with no delay, so clearly it wasn't an issue.  In retrospect this wasn't surprising because (based on my very limited aviation knowledge) a chunk missing from one of the flaps doesn't affect the overall airworthiness of the aircraft.  

I Googled later and learned that this is a standard repair when there is a crack in the flap.  So file that under "today I learned (not to bug the flight attendant with silly stuff)."

Once I landed, I did my standard routine - pick up the box I'd shipped myself and then grab Chipotle.  The marathon expo was also on the Friday checklist, but first I had a pilgrimage to complete.

*** 

The Museum of Post Punk and Industrial Music was founded in 2021 by Martin Atkins, who is pretty much the Kevin Bacon of the Wax Trax era of music.  Both Brian and I are "founders" which means that we contributed some money and were granted lifetime access to the Museum (by appointment - we can't just randomly show up).  

Since I was in Chicago for the marathon, I scheduled a visit for early Friday afternoon, thinking that I'd first visit the Museum and then take a cab to the expo.  This also gave me a chance to personally courier my contribution to the Museum - one of two chunks of wood I owned from a stage that a lot of industrial/post punk/goth bands played on 20 years ago. 


The Museum was amazing.  It's a place to display cool stuff, but unlike most museums, visitors are allowed to touch stuff, examine it, even play it (in the case of a drum kit that apparently survived multiple tours).  I suspect this is because a) the entire ethos of industrial music is experimenting and playing around with stuff and b) the Museum has complete control of who can attend.  

The staff on hand were all as enthusiastic about this stuff as the guests (just me and a really nice guy henceforth known as Norwegian death metal guy, plus his elderly relatives) and so the whole visit felt like hanging out with a bunch of cool people and chatting about the latest iteration of Coldwaves, flipping through old tour passes, and listening to unreleased demos.  

I could go on and on, but instead I'll let NPR describe the Museum.

***

My visit to the Museum was slightly marred when I couldn't get a cab to pick me up afterwards. The first service I called informed me that they didn't serve that part of Chicago; the next told me that they would, but it'd be an hour+ wait.   Fortunately, I was able to bum a ride off of Norwegian death metal guy and his grandmother to the expo.  

[No, I don't normally bum rides from strangers in a strange city.  But given the fact that a) he had his grandmother with him and b) my other options were either walking two+ miles by myself through an arguably sketchy area of Chicago or sitting outside in a light rain for an hour+ as the sun set in hopes a cab might arrive, I took my chances.]

Transitioning from the profanity-strewn intimacy of the Museum to the mass neuroticism of bib pickup for a World Major marathon was a bit jarring, but fortunately the Chicago Marathon expo offered me plenty of walking and escalator time to adjust.

***

Saturday was pretty boring.  I jogged four miles at an effort that seemed very slow and a pace that seemed shockingly fast for the effort and concluded that I had nailed the taper.  I celebrated with a few bowls of Chipotle and some stretching, and then confirmed that the Sunday forecast was still for perfect weather before going to bed early.

Race morning was an early wake-up - a bit before 4 am.  I wanted plenty of time to eat, digest, and stretch before leaving my hotel room about 5:15 am to head over to the start.   This should have been perfect timing for a relaxed pre-race experience (ironic foreshadowing).

I was staying in the Magnificent Mile area of Chicago (I don't make up the names here) and so I had a short ride on the red line subway down to the race start.  I was entered in the "World Age Group Marathon Championships" which meant that I and the other entrants had our own gate through security to the starting area, a warm tent to sit in before heading to the corrals, private bag check, and designated corrals.   

This all sounded great in theory.  However, it took 25+ minutes to get through the security at our designated gate, which was the only gate we were allowed to use.  [I've run Chicago twice before - once with a normal bib and once in the ADP corral - in both cases it took 10 minutes or less to get through security].  That, plus a few minutes delay on my inbound subway, meant that all of my pre-race fudge time had been eaten, digested, and pooped.  

***

When I finally got through security I hustled to the tent so I could jam my feet into my racing shoes (I had decided to go with the Hoka Rocket X2), rummage through my bag to make sure I had everything I needed and nothing I didn't, and then check my bag before heading out for a warm-up jog/bathroom search.  

The gossip in the tent had been that the lines for our "reserved" portajohns were impossibly long, and a visual inspection confirmed this.  Many people were using bushes, but as I jogged I noted another set of pristine portajohns, with a very bored race official standing out front.  These portajohns were intended for volunteers, but the portajohn guard generously allowed me and a few other desperate-looking older runners to use them.  It was blue plastic aloe-scented bliss.

After taking care of the necessary, I squeezed in roughly a 1/2 mile of mostly jogging, and then it was time to head to the start.  I entered my corral at 7:10 (mindful of the fact that at exactly 7:20 the corral would close) and waited.

***

I had been assigned to corral B, which was for 3:10 marathoners and faster.  I knew I belonged in corral C (for 3:20 and faster), so when the race started, I stood aside as the waves walked forward, watching for the 3:20 pacer.  When I saw that sign go by, I paused a few moments and then slipped into the corral and walked to the timing mats to start.

The first two miles of the race were unsurprisingly rocky for me.  Running in crowds, especially tightly packed ones, is an issue for me, as is standing around for some time before running.  But I knew this and planned for it.  A forced slow start is not a bad thing in a marathon, as long as you don't let it stress you out.  So I just mentally chilled out and let my body calibrate itself to running, and then I started to open my stride up.

Chicago is a boring marathon, and I mean that in a good way.  There's no hills or otherwise challenging terrain to worry about.  Just flat, mostly smooth pavement.  Even after a few miles had passed, I was working fairly hard to mentally manage my dystonia stuff - the course was pretty crowded, and friendly spectators throwing confetti or waving signs in my face didn't help.  But I knew this what I had signed up for, so I dealt with it.

***

One problem that did show up pretty early was my right adductor/groin.  I had tweaked it slightly while stretching about 5 days ago.  It didn't bother me at all when running, so I decided not to worry about it other than being very protective of it in the final days of taper.  But now, only about 3 miles into the race, it was hurting.  It hurt enough that I would have been really concerned except for one thing: the same thing had happened early on when I ran my marathon PR at CIM.  

With that knowledge, and the fact that I could drop out of Chicago at any time without being stranded, I decided to ignore it and keep going.  If it hurt enough that I had to stop, I would, but I wasn't going to give it any mental energy until then.

[I'll jump out of sequence so I can fast forward to the following: the pain was completely gone and forgotten by 10 miles, and a day later it doesn't hurt at all there.  So we'll cross that one off as early race tension manifesting as a tight muscle.]

***

The other issue that I faced was the water stops.  I was wearing the Hoka Rocket X2, which is a great shoe with horrible traction on wet pavement.  I had decided to wear the Rockets since rain was nowhere in the forecast for race day.  However, I forgot how wet the pavement gets at water stops.  Especially when you're running at roughly 7:30 pace in a big marathon, which means that plenty of runners ahead of you have already splashed the ground.

I was carrying a handheld water bottle, which enabled me to skip the first few water stations.  But even then, the entire road was wet and strewn with paper cups.  Between the slipperiness of the Rockets and my own personal balance issues, it was problematic.  I had to treat each water station as though it was a patch of black ice and adjust accordingly, slowing to navigate the water station and then picking up the pace after.  Lesson learned for next time - save the Hokas for smaller races where you can avoid the water stop madness.

***

Other than those things, there wasn't much of note.  I had expected to feel really good on race day, but I didn't - just kinda average.  But...you can only work with what you have.  So I focused on holding the correct effort instead of panicking and trying to force something.  And tried to keep my zen as I continued to navigate a crowded field long after I expected it to clear.

Given where I was, I was shocked when the 3:20 pace flag came into view in the distance, around mile 18.  I had thought they were far ahead of me, but nope, I was reeling them in.  Excellent.  

I continued to slowly but methodically gain on them.  Unfortunately, a mile or so later, my hamstrings started to cramp.  Not horribly, but enough that it altered my gait some.  The last few miles of the race were among the tougher of any marathon I've done, as the 3:20 group gently pulled away.  

When getting into cramping/other gait issues late in a marathon, I've always it helpful to think about "relaxing and flowing forward" rather than "fighting" and so I relaxed and flowed forward as "hard" as I could, while also trying to find people who were in more trouble than I was to chase down.  Fortunately, at this stage in a large marathon there were plenty of pawns for that purpose, and that's how I got myself to the finish without falling apart completely.

I crossed the finish, stopped my watch, and checked it. 3:20:33.  So a little more than a second per mile off of the time I had hoped to run.  There was a twinge of disappointment, but mostly satisfaction.  I had fought a pretty good fight, especially the last few miles, and had improved significantly from last year, which was my biggest goal.

Manual splits (I missed quite a few mile markers):

Miles 1-2: 16:55 (8:23 pace)
Miles 3-4: 15:21 (7:41 pace)
Miles 5-6: 15:19 (7:40 pace)
Mile 7: 7:22 
Mile 8: 7:31 
Mile 9: 7:22
Mile 10: 7:21
Mile 11: 7:32
Mile 12: 7:43
Mile 13: 7:22
Mile 14: 7:34
Mile 15: 7:19
Mile 16: 7:33
Mile 17: 7:32
Mile 18: 7:30
Mile 19: 7:02 (short)
Mile 20: 8:13 (long)
Mile 21: 7:47
Mile 22: 7:32
Mile 23: 7:49
Mile 24: 7:47
Mile 25: 7:39
Mile 26: 7:42
last .21 - 1:43 (8:10 pace)

***

I wish the race story ended there, but there's more.  I gingerly made my way over to the Age Group Championships tent to pick up my bag and was presented with a line much longer than what I had faced when going though security a few hours prior.  It was incredibly frustrating.  

Quite a few people abandoned their bags either temporarily or permanently, but I didn't have that option.  I had a cell phone, a jacket, shoes, and a set of headphones in my bag, and I also had deadlines for checking out of my hotel and meeting friends for lunch.  So I waited, and waited, and waited.  In what felt much more like an airline terminal during a computer meltdown than a post race celebration.

Having given up on being able to match bag to runner, the few valiant volunteers (who are blameless here - they just showed up to do their job when not enough other people did) dumped our bags out onto the lawn, leaving the runners to sort through them.  Fortunately, a volunteer helped me find mine, and so I was able to quickly (or as quickly as I could) put on my jacket and relocate my feet from one pair of a shoes to another, before hustle-hobbling out of the finish area towards shower, checkout, friends, and food.

Other notes:

  • The weather was as good as it could be for a marathon.  High 40s and low 50s, with not much wind (maybe a bit of a headwind in the final 2 miles) and mostly overcast skies.
  • I took 6 Maurten gels this race.  Despite pre-tearing them before, I still had a bit of trouble with getting some of them open and had to toss one away for that reason.  Fine motor skills have never been my strength.
  • Starting around mile 17 or so, the third and fourth toes on my right foot really started hurting.  Like the shoe was too small for my foot, though that didn't make sense.  I didn't have any choice but to ignore and finish the race, but it was pretty damn painful by the time I was done.  When I changed my shoes after, I realized that I had placed an extra pair of toe spacers in my right shoe, in case I somehow lost the ones I was wearing.  In my pre-race hustle, I had jammed the shoe on without checking, and....Ooops.  I don't think it cost me any time, though, and amazingly those toenails are NOT black as of the writing of this blog post.
  • I carried a water bottle which tided me through much of the race, refilling it once around mile 16 or so.  My mouth was really dry and I was thirsty when I finished, which tells me I should have taken more water during the race.  I'm normally good about that, but my challenges with water stops made me hesitant.  I suspect this was at least partially the source of the cramping in the late miles.
  • I think my dystonia and balance issues might have also been an indirect cause of my late struggles.  Essentially, it's best to run a marathon as relaxed and smoothly as possible - no sudden changes in pace, direction, etc, and thus no wasted effort.  However, I wasn't running that way.  Instead, I repeatedly encountered scenarios where I had to work to stay on my feet.  Slick pavement, people cutting me off, dark underpasses where my gait would get really screwy.  I suspect all of that extra effort came at a cost, and so the pacing by feel that would have normally put me in a good place in the final miles instead left me in a hole.  
  • Overall, I was still really happy with this race - not just from a time standpoint, but from the fact that so many things are better.  I didn't struggle with timing mats the way I did last time.  The very modest downhills after overpasses were no issue this year.  And I handled the crowding better than last year.  Progress is a great feeling.
  • It took a full HOUR for me to get my bag from the time I first lined up to grab it.  I run Chicago because it's a very well run marathon, and I did the Age Group Championships thing because I thought it would be even better.  Instead, I feel like an idiot who signed up for the mature marathoner's version of the Fyre Festival.  (To their credit, the Chicago Marathon did email all of the participants an apology that evening)
  • I discovered that Chicago public transit lets one use their credit card as a fare card just like New York.  So convenient for visitors.  Every city should do this.

Wednesday, October 4, 2023

Training log - Week ending 10/1/2023

This week was 54 miles of running, 7 "miles" of pool-running, and 1500 yards of swimming -- training log is here.

I had a bad workout on Tuesday - I felt fine, but I simply couldn't see for much of the workout (before sunrise on an unlit track, with light drizzle fogging up my glasses). That's how one ends up running 800s at slower than tempo pace. 

 Friday's tempo went a lot better. Since it was so short, I made a point of pretty much hitting pace right away instead of easing into it. Which reminded me of how much I hate doing that - it essentially results in an anaerobic first mile, since my heart rate is fairly slow to adjust to effort. But it was a slight shock to the system, which is what I felt like I needed in order to start peaking. 

I'm still debating which shoes to wear for the marathon, which I know is ridiculous. I've worn the Asics Metaspeed Edge+ for my last two marathons, and liked it, but I would like to try another shoe that lets me roll through my foot a bit more. I was thinking the Adios Pro 3, but I lost a bit of confidence in them after the half. 

 Early in the cycle I did a marathon pace workout in the Hoka Rocket X2 and really liked it - the only issue is that the Rocket X2 has awful traction on wet pavement. But....since Chicago looks like it will be dry, the Rocket X2 may be the best choice. 

 Another option is the Puma Deviate Nitro Elite 2 - which I was leaning towards until I wore it on Sunday's not-so-long run and my feet started hurting. I suspect that this was because I had the laces cranked too tight, but still...it wasn't reassuring. 

 I'll make a decision when I pack my backpack on Thursday for the Friday morning flight.

Dailies:

Monday:  6 miles (9:12), followed by upper body weights/core. Foam rolling in evening.

Tuesday:  11.5 miles, including a track workout of 2x800, 2x1600, 2x800, 4x200 in 3:37, 3:33, 7:00, 6:50, 3:19, 3:20, 47, 47, 47, and 47.  Recoveries of 2:2x-2:4x after the 800s and 5:4x after the 1600s.  Full recovery for the 200s.  Followed with leg strengthwork and 500 yards of recovery swimming.
 
Wednesday: Streaming yoga and 8 miles very easy (9:30) including some grass running and drills+strides.  Foam rolling in evening.

Thursday: 7 "miles" of pool-running and upper body weights/core.  Foam rolling in evening.

Friday: 8.5 miles, including a 5K tempo on the track in 21:43 (7:00/6:58/6:55/0:50).  Followed with leg strengthwork and 500 yards recovery swimming.   Foam rolling at night.

Saturday: 8 miles trail running (10:07), followed by upper body weights/core. Foam rolling in evening.

Sunday:  12 miles progressive/aerobic, split as the first 3 miles averaging 9:36, the next 5.5 miles averaging 8:03, and then the next 3.5 averaging 7:43 pace.  Followed with 500 yards recovery swimming.

Wednesday, September 27, 2023

Training log: week ending 9/24/2023

This week was 54 miles of running and 15 "miles" of pool-running -- training log is here.

(and yet another late update, because life got away from me)

The first part of the week was half-marathon recovery (that's actually continuing, since it will take about 10 days to totally freshen up) and then I returned to hard running with a hill workout to re-emphasize good running form.  

My first real workout back was a weekend long run.  However, a tropical storm was supposed to hit us all day Saturday as well as Sunday morning, so I did my long run on the treadmill on Saturday rather than risk being caught in the middle of a storm several miles from my car.  As it turned out, the storm wasn't that impressive and I could have run outside without much issue other than getting a bit wet.  Oh well.

I'm now two weeks from Chicago, and I'm feeling hopeful, though a lot also hinges on the weather.  Another concern has been the looming government shutdown, since I am a federal employee.  If I was deemed "essential" I would be required to work and my scheduled vacation (including the day I'm scheduled to fly to Chicago) would be cancelled.  However, I've confirmed that I am not essential for purposes of shutdown, so it seems that won't be an issue.

(*essential for this purpose just means that your work is necessary to immediately preserve life or property - things like police, medical personnel, cybersecurity.)


Dailies:

Monday:  9 "miles" of pool-running and streaming yoga.  Foam rolling in evening.

Tuesday:  7 miles trail running (10:31), followed by upper body weights/core.  Sports massage in evening.
 
Wednesday: 10 miles very easy (9:28) including some grass running and drills+strides. Streaming yoga in afternoon.  Foam rolling in evening.

Thursday: 10 miles, including 6 Iwo Jima hills (alternated between route a: ~2:10 up, 90 second jog, 40 second downhill stride, and 60 second jog and route b: ~2:40 up, 70 second jog, 30 second flat/slightly downhill strides, and 60 second jog).  Followed with leg strengthwork.  Foam rolling in evening.

Friday: 10.5 miles very easy (9:16) including some grass running and drills+strides.  Followed with upper body weights/core.  Foam rolling at night.

Saturday: 16 miles progressive on treadmill, split as the first 5 miles averaging 9:26 pace, the next 5 miles averaging 8:24 pace, and the next 6 miles averaging 7:27 pace, plus a half-mile cooldown jog.  Followed with leg strengthwork.  Foam rolling at night.

Sunday:  6 "miles" pool-running and streaming yoga.  Foam rolling at night.

Wednesday, September 20, 2023

Training log - Week ending 9/17/2023

This week was 53 miles of running, 1000 yards of swimming, and 7 "miles" of pool-running -- training log is here.

Tapered for and raced a half-marathon.  I was pretty happy with my execution, but not so much the time.  But I got some helpful prep information from the half, so as a dress rehearsal for the marathon, it was good.

One thing I did observe (but did not note in my race report) - I continue to experiment with how much running to do in the last few days before a race.    Based on how my legs felt early on Sunday morning, I think I should have done a bit more running the day before.

Dailies:

Monday:  7 "miles" of pool-running and streaming yoga.  Foam rolling in evening.

Tuesday:  8 miles very easy (9:39) including some grass running and four strides, followed by upper body weights/core.  Foam rolling in evening.
 
Wednesday: 9 miles on the track, including 12x400m with 100m ~float (first 400s in 1:46 and 1:47, then the rest in 1:42-1:43; floats in 33-34 seconds).  Followed with injury prevention work and 500 yards recovery swimming.  Foam rolling in evening.

Thursday: 7 miles trail running (10:17) and streaming yoga.  Foam rolling in evening.

Friday: 7 miles very easy (9:37) including some grass running, two hill sprints, and six strides.  Followed with upper body weights/core.  Foam rolling at night.

Saturday: 3 miles very easy (9:29).  Foam rolling at night.

Sunday:  3 mile warm-up, Half-Marathon in 1:34:and 500 yards recovery swimming.  Foam rolling at night.

Sunday, September 17, 2023

Race Report: DC Half, September 17, 2023

 I ran the DC Half today, finishing in a time of 1:34:45.

This race was my tune-up for the Chicago Marathon in 3 weeks, and when I first checked out the forecast a week in advance, I was excited.  It looked like a big cooldown was coming and I was feeling good about my fitness.  Between those two things, I was hoping for a solid performance on Sunday.

Unfortunately, the forecast shifted slightly, with the best of the cool weather sifting away on Saturday night.  When I woke Sunday morning, it was warmer and stickier - in the 60s.  Nothing like the worst that summer can offer, but not what I had been hoping for.  Ah well.

***

I ate a quick breakfast and did my pre-run mobility routine, and then headed down to Georgetown to park on Water Street - about 2 miles from the start/finish.  Once there, I did my standard warm-up fartlek (3:00 at marathon down to half-marathon effort, 4x30 seconds at 5K, and then 4x10 seconds strides).   Then I snuck into the corral and cracked open a Maurten gel as last minute fueling.

I like to start my half-marathons at near marathon pace before easing into tempo effort.  So I seeded myself behind the 1:40 pace group.  There were a few announcements - mostly trying to get us all to cheer - and then we were off.  

The 1:40 pace group was massive, which was fine for the first mile or so, but created some difficulty when I wanted to pick up the pace.  Fortunately, I was running on the right side of the road, and that section had intermittent sections where the asphalt would widen to accommodate parking spaces.  So I used those parking areas as opportunities to move up in the group - I'd accelerate each time the road widened, and then merge back into the group when the road narrowed.  This worked well, and after 2-3 parking lots I was free of the 1:40 group.

***

I was running by feel and ignoring my watch as usual, so my pacing plan was effort based.  I had planned to be in hard tempo rhythm by mile 3 - I'd hold that rhythm until mile 11 and then hammer the last two miles.  However, when I got to mile 3, I was already feeling warm and uncomfortable, so I held off, keeping the pace slightly restrained and my effort controlled.  

I re-evaluated at mile 5 and I didn't feel any better, so I decided to stay where I was, running carefully hard, until mile 9 or 10, when I'd start pushing.  When it's warm and humid, I like to pace my races this way - run the first 2/3 to 3/4 conservatively so that I don't overheat, and then hammer the remaining miles as best I can.  

The race course took us into Rock Creek park and back.  The Rock Creek Parkway is a winding road, and I found myself lulled into following the course of the road instead of running the tangents.  Eventually I woke up and focused on running the tangents, but I likely lost a few seconds there.

The Rock Creek Parkway is also significantly cambered in some places, and I found myself intentionally running wide in a few sections just to get flatter asphalt.  I don't think I lost time there, though, because any time lost from running long was balanced by the time I gained and the energy I conserved from being more comfortable.

***

Mile 9 took forever to show up, but also came up very quickly (racing is like that, sometimes), and it was time to start hammering (I refuse to say "Hammer Time" in this blog).  So I mentally turned the careful switch off and opened up my stride.  From there, it was just a matter of keeping my mind focused solely on a longer, relaxed stride and the people ahead of me that were coming back to me, and not on how increasingly uncomfortable I was.  

I really started to hurt in the last mile, but (as always) I had mapped out the course and figured out landmarks for the last mile.  The Jefferson Memorial was about 1200m from the finish line, and the little humpback bridge was a bit less than 800m from the finish.  I used each of those as cues to open my stride a bit more, and then I started dumping out whatever I had left when I saw the 13 mile marker approaching.  

Finally I was over the mat and I was done.  And I was relieved, because I felt like total crap.

As I closed, I noted the 1:35 pacer near me, so I was fairly sure I had not run the time I wanted.  A glance at my watch confirmed it - 1:34:45.  Oh well.

***

Several of the mile markers were off (one very short followed by two long) and I also missed a split, so I'll post the Strava splits instead.  Those were:

Mile 1: 7:39
Mile 2: 7:19
Mile 3: 7:16
Mile 4: 7:14
Mile 5: 7:16
Mile 6: 7:14
Mile 7: 7:17
Mile 8: 7:20
Mile 9: 7:10
Mile 10: 6:59
Mile 11: 6:57
Mile 12: 6:52
Mile 13: 6:51
last .22 - 6:34 pace

(no, the course wasn't a tenth of a mile long - that's just Garmin error).

I'm not thrilled with this race from a time perspective, but as a tune-up for Chicago, I got what I needed.  And I feel pretty good about how I executed the race.  So we'll file this one away and move on.

Other notes:

  • The weather at the start was 64 degrees with a dew point of 56; when I finished it was 69 degrees with a dew point of 59.  (The humidity felt higher to me, but that's what was reported.)  So not awful, but not ideal.  The sun was out for the first few miles and then thankfully some clouds rolled in. 
  • I wore my arm-coolers/sunsleeves and as always they seemed to help.  I'm well aware that I look bizarre wearing what looks like arm-warmers in hot races, but they really do seem to help me and this sport is not judged by appearance.
  • I parked in Georgetown at about 6:05 for a race with a 7 am start.  This was slightly tight in time - next time it would be ideal to park about 10 minutes earlier.
  • I wore the Adidas Adios Pro 3 for this race because I'm considering (and almost certainly) wearing it for Chicago.  I've noted in training that it seems much more comfortable at marathon effort than half-marathon effort, and I felt that today as well.  Which of course doesn't disqualify it as my marathon shoe choice.  I did play around with an alternate lacing for the shoe, and it felt too loose on my feet today.  I nearly rolled my ankle twice during the race and also have a blister on the inside of my right foot, and I suspect both are because the shoe was a bit loose.  So I'm returning to the previous lacing job, which felt not perfect but a bit more secure on my foot.
  • I took a Maurten gel right before the race and another one during, at mile 6.  I had some difficulty taking the gel, so this is a reminder to myself to pre-tear my gels before races.  For water, I carried a water bottle from start to finish. 
  • I ended up 4th master female, and 4th in the 40-49 age group.  When you are 49, 5 year age groups seem fairer than 10 year age groups.
  • My mold/ragweed allergies have been hitting me really hard the past few days and that may (or may not) have affected my race.  This pretty much happens every September - my monthly Xolair shot mostly controls those allergies, but of course I'm due for my next shot.  This is why I don't like to spend a lot of money to travel for a September race - unless it rains, ragweed and mold are issues for any September race.  If I'm going to have a meh race, I'd prefer not to have paid for a hotel.

Tuesday, September 12, 2023

Training log - Week ending September 10, 2023

This week was 69 miles of running, 1000 yards of swimming, and 9 "miles" of pool-running -- training log is here.

Last week of training.  The biggest thing of note is that I started iron supplements after noting late last week that my iron was low.  

[for those of you who geek out about this stuff - my ferritin was actually normal/high at 125.  But because I have ulcerative colitis, ferritin can often be artificially inflated, and isn't reliable.  Instead the number I look at is the transferrin saturation.  Mine was 17% which is significantly low.]

The iron supplements are clearly working because I perked up within a few days (the same thing happened last time I was low) and had a pretty good workout on Tuesday (as well as Friday and Sunday).

I intentionally shortened my Sunday long run from 20 miles to 18 - this was primarily because it was hot and I really didn't need another 20+.  I've run great marathons off of just one 20+ mile long run.  Essentially once I get my endurance set, I get a lot more from work at marathon pace or a bit faster than I do from simple time and miles on my feet.  And (especially given the iron issues) it seemed like I gained more than I lost from cutting 2-3 easy miles off of the beginning of the run.

Dailies:

Monday:  9 "miles" of pool-running and streaming yoga.  Foam rolling in evening.

Tuesday:  10 miles, including a track workout of 5x1000, 400, 2x200 in 4:23, 4:15, 4:08, 4:07, 4:07, 95, 46, and 46.  Recoveries of 2:4x-3:0x after the 1000s, 90 seconds recovery between the 400 and 200s.   Followed with leg strengthwork.  Foam rolling in evening.
 
Wednesday: 11 miles very easy (9:28) with some grass running and uphill/downhill strides, followed by streaming yoga.  Foam rolling in evening.

Thursday: 7 miles trail running (10:19) and upper body weights/core.  Foam rolling in evening.

Friday: 10 miles, including a 6400m track tempo in 28:02 (7:14/6:58/6:56/6:54).  Followed with leg strengthwork and 500 yards recovery swimming.  Foam rolling at night.

Saturday: 12.5 miles very easy (9:10) plus drills and uphill/downhill strides, followed by streaming pilates.  Foam rolling at night.

Sunday: 18 miles progressive, split as the first 6 miles averaging 9:48 pace, then next 5 miles averaging 8:23 pace, and the next 7 miles averaging 7:39 pace, plus a half-mile cooldown jog. Followed with injury prevention work and 500 yards recovery swimming.  Foam rolling at night.

Monday, September 4, 2023

Training log - Week ending 9/3/2023

This week was 63 miles of running, 1000 yards of swimming, and 12 "miles" of pool-running -- training log is here.

Once again I moved my marathon pace workout up to Friday from the weekend.  We had great weather on Friday morning, and it was nice to get the workout done and then be able to chill out the entire weekend.  I was decently happy with Friday - I would have liked to have run it faster, but instead my legs just locked into 7:30-7:35 pace and stayed there, with a rock bottom HR.  7:35 pace gets me a 3:18 marathon, which I'd be pretty happy with at this point, so I'm not complaining.

I'm continuing to work on my neuro issues, including a fair amount of trail and grass running.  I can tell the trail running is really helping my stability and making running everywhere else a lot easier.  At the same time, because I go so slowly, I don't get my heart rate up very high at all, and my stride stays very short and confined.  

So I've decided to revise my "default" training schedule (for lack of a better term) going forward to swap one of my pool-running days for a trail run.   Previously I've been subbing in a trail run for an easy run on asphalt.

This still gives me two days of very low level aerobic work, with low (trail) or no (pool) impact.  But it means that I still keep a decent volume of running with a normal length stride each week, rather than losing some of that to trail running.

I'm also focusing more on vestibular rehab work, since that still seems to be related to some of my troubles.  I continue to be subtly uncertain of where my body is in space relative to the ground, which forces me to be more tentative when I push off each stride, which in turn slows me down.   This issue is of course much worse when I try to run faster (because everything happens more quickly) or when my visibility is restricted (since I rely on my vision to keep myself oriented in space).

One exercise I added in this week was simply standing, two feet together, on a balance pad with my eyes closed for two minutes.  (Try it - it's harder than you think).  One thing I've noted is that I seem to run much better after doing this - it's like I get a bit of confidence in my own balance.  So I've added that to my long list of pre-run exercises.

Dailies:

Monday:  6 miles very easy on trails (11:04) and streaming yoga.  Foam rolling in evening.

Tuesday:  10 miles, including a track workout of 2x(1600, 800) + 2x400 in 7:07, 3:25, 6:53, 3:21, 1:39, and 1:38; recoveries of 5:43 and 6:01 after the 1600s, 3:0x after the 800s, and 74 seconds between the 400s.   Followed with leg strengthwork and 500 yards recovery swimming.  Foam rolling in evening.
 
Wednesday: 10 miles very easy (9:25) with some grass running and drills/strides, followed by upper body weights/core.  Foam rolling in evening.

Thursday: 12 "miles" pool-running and streaming yoga.  Foam rolling in evening.

Friday: 17 miles with 2x5 miles at marathon effort in 37:47 (7:43/7:29/7:35/7:32/7:30) and 37:44 (7:34/7:28/7:33/7:39/7:30) with one mile float in 8:27 between the two.  Followed with injury prevention work and 500 yards recovery swimming.  Foam rolling at night.

Saturday: 8 miles very easy on trails (10:27) and streaming pilates.  Foam rolling at night.

Sunday:  12 miles mostly easy (average 8:58, with a slight progression down to about 7:50 pace at the end), followed by upper body weights/core. Foam rolling at night.

Sunday, August 27, 2023

Training log - Week ending 8/27/2023

This week was 54 miles of running, 1000 yards of swimming, and 24 "miles" of pool-running -- training log is here.

Though it looks low in mileage, this was actually a heavy week - I averaged 13.5 miles on each day I did run, with some high volume quality in there (8x800 and then the 8K tempo followed by the long run the next morning).  

This was intentional, as this was my final week of strength building.  At this point, I think I have all the strength I need for the marathon and then some - my legs feel heavy but also like they could go forever (I did have to cut Saturday's long run a mile short, but that was because I started the run too late and it got too hot, not because the distance was an issue).  For me personally, once I get to this point I can keep that strength for a really long time.  Thus, there's no real reason to do more work on endurance.  

So even though I'm still about 7 weeks out from Chicago I'm going to pull back on the mileage a bit to get my legs a bit fresher for some faster running.  I know I can cover 26 miles without issue; it's just a question of how fast I can do it.

Dailies:

Monday:  9 "miles" pool-running and streaming yoga.  Foam rolling in evening.

Tuesday:  12 miles, including a track workout of 8x800 in 3:35, 3:30, 3:31, 3:29, 3:26, 3:25, 3:26, 3:26 with 3 minute recovery after each.  Followed with leg strengthwork. Foam rolling in evening.
 
Wednesday: 8 miles very easy (9:54) with some grass running and drills/strides, followed by upper body weights/core.  Then jogged 3 miles home (9:42).  Foam rolling in evening.

Thursday: 9 "miles" pool-running and streaming yoga.  Foam rolling in evening.

Friday: 12 miles, including an 8K tempo in 36:35 (7:18/7:19/7:18/7:23/7:17) followed with 500 yards recovery swimming.  Foam rolling at night.

Saturday: 19 miles, mostly easy but with a fartlek of 10x2 minutes on/5 minutes jog in the second hour.  Followed with 500 yards recovery swimming. Foam rolling at night.

Sunday:  1 hour pool-running and injury prevention work.  Foam rolling at night.

Monday, August 21, 2023

Training log - Week ending 8/20/2023

This week was 65 miles of running, 500 yards of swimming, and 18 "miles" of pool-running -- training log is here.

Just two workouts this week: Wednesday and Saturday.  Wednesday's workout looks a bit underwhelming, but that's because I was experimenting with a lower dose of the meds I take for the dystonia stuff, and I got it wrong, resulting in legs that were clumsy and heavy.  

I decided that it was worth doing the workout anyway at the proper effort level, so that's what I did.  And made some notes for next time.

Saturday's workout went much better.  I was able to find that sweet spot of marathon effort and lock into it, which was a big confidence boost.

I am still deciding between the Hoka Rocket X2 and the Puma Deviate Nitro Elite 2 for my fall marathon shoe.  I've run a marathon pace workout in each, and I go back and forth between the two.  I think that right now I'm leaning towards the Pumas, both because they have much better grip on wet pavement and because they seem more forgiving when my legs get a bit tired.  But I've got a few more weeks to decide.

Dailies:

Monday:  9 "miles" pool-running and streaming yoga.  Foam rolling in evening.

Tuesday:  9 miles easy (9:50), upper body weights/core, and then 2 miles very easy (9:44) plus strides  Foam rolling in evening.
 
Wednesday: 14 miles, including a track tempo workout of 4800, 3200, 1600 in 21:29 (7:15/7:09/7:05), 14:14 (7:10/7:04) and 7:05 (recoveries of 5:32 and 5:19 between).  Followed with injury prevention work.   Sports massage in evening.

Thursday: 9 "miles" pool-running and streaming yoga.  Foam rolling in evening.

Friday: 11.5 miles very easy (9:36) including some grass running, and then upperbody weights/core.  Foam rolling at night.

Saturday: 17.5 miles, including 2x5 miles at marathon effort in 37:25 (7:40/7:27/7:28/7:25/7:25) and 37:21 (7:33/7:28/7:34/7:27/7:18) with 1 mile in 8:40 between.  Followed with injury prevention work and 500 yards recovery swimming.  Foam rolling at night.

Sunday:  11 miles very easy on trails (11:20) plus hill sprints.  Foam rolling at night.

Sunday, August 13, 2023

Training log - Week ending 8/13/2023

This week was 65 miles of running, 1000 yards of swimming, and 18 "miles" of pool-running -- training log is here.

A pretty boring week.   We had some nice cool weather in the middle of the week before it heated up for the weekend.  I wish my paces were faster, but gotta train where one is.  At least I'm getting better at grass running and trail running.  

I am playing around a bit more with the medication I take for the dystonia in my lower legs.  It seems that I'm on slightly too high a dose, which is why I'm having a bit of trouble rolling through my feet and pushing off.  Of course, too low a dose has its own issues too, and since I'm a fairly small person, we have to be pretty precise with the dose to get it right.  So we're still fine-tuning things.

And yes, I am very familiar with Botox being used for dystonia.  However, it's not a good choice for me because a) the problem is not with one specific muscle, but with several; and b) selectively weakening lower leg muscles makes sense for people who just want to walk normally or to run a few miles a couple times a week.  But I want to continue to train seriously, and so weakening my lower leg muscles creates an unacceptable risk of compensation injury.

Dailies:

Monday:  9 "miles" pool-running and streaming yoga.  Foam rolling in evening.

Tuesday:  11 miles, with a track workout of 1600, 2x1200, 2x800, 2x400 in 7:04, 5:09, 5:03, 319, 3:17, 96, 97.  4 minutes recovery after the 1600, 3 minutes recovery after the 1200s, and equal time recovery after the 800s and 400s.  Followed with leg strengthwork.  Foam rolling in evening.
 
Wednesday: 9.5 miles very easy (9:32), including some grass-running and drills/downhill strides; then upper body weights/core, followed by 2.5 miles very easy (9:28).   Sports massage in evening.

Thursday: 9 "miles" pool-running and streaming yoga.  Foam rolling in evening.

Friday: 10 miles, including a 6400m track tempo in 28:02 (7:08/7:01/6:55/6:58), plus 2x200m in 49 seconds each.  Followed with leg strengthwork and 500 yards recovery swimming.  Foam rolling at night.

Saturday: 11 miles very easy trail running (10:51) plus drills/strides and then upper body weights/core.  Foam rolling at night.

Sunday: 20.5 miles progressive, split with the first 10 miles averaging 9:30 pace, the next 6.5 miles averaging 8:46 pace, and the next 4 miles averaging 8:13 pace. Followed with injury prevention work and 500 yards recovery swimming.  Foam rolling at night.

Sunday, August 6, 2023

Training log - Week ending 8/6/2023

This week was 61 miles of running, 1500 yards of swimming, and 21"miles" of pool-running -- training log is here.

The week started off poorly, with a frustrating track workout where I was essentially stuck at my tempo pace for intervals.  In retrospect, it was simply because the track workout was too close to Sunday's 16 miler, which was followed by some heavy squatting.  So I'll file that workout under "it's the effort that counts."

I moved my marathon effort workout up to Friday to take advantage of better weather, and ended up being very happy with the results.  I had planned on doing the 4-3-2-1 workout (4, 3, 2, and 1 miles at marathon effort with 1 mile between), but I hit a good rhythm during the first 4, and decided on the fly to swap to 2x5 miles at marathon effort.  The marathon effort miles all felt good and controlled and like I could have continued on (which is the ideal when doing a marathon effort workout, IMHO) so I felt pretty good about it.

Since I did my long run on Sunday and my next hard workout isn't until Tuesday morning, I used Sunday morning to run a whole bunch of 100s, 200s, and even a few 400s, wearing different shoes and playing with different mental cues.  The winners ended up being the Takumi Sen 8 (other choices were the Adios 7, the Adidas Adizero Pro, and the New Balance RC Elite 1).  

As for mental cues - the best cues for me in running fast and smoothly seem to be engaging my transverse abdominus (deep abdominals) while allowing my stride to extend behind me (not in front of me) with some torso rotation.  And keeping my feet relaxed.  It also helps to visualize a harness tied around my hips pulling me forward - when I try to push forward I try too hard with my legs and get stiff and slow down.

Not sure if those mental cues will help anyone else, but they were working for me.  At least for today.

Dailies:

Monday:  9 "miles" pool-running and streaming yoga.  Foam rolling in evening.

Tuesday:  10 miles, with a track workout of 2x800, 1600, 2x800, 2x400 in 3:30, 3:29, 7:00, 3:21, 3:21, 1:37, and 1:38; 2:4x-2:5x recovery after the 800s, 6:01 recovery after the 1600 and 88 seconds between the 400s.  Followed with leg strengthwork and 500 yards recovery swimming.  Foam rolling in evening.
 
Wednesday: 11 miles very easy (9:38), including some grass-running and drills/downhill strides; upper body weights/core later.   Foam rolling in evening.

Thursday: 9 "miles" pool-running and streaming yoga.  Foam rolling in evening.

Friday: 17 miles, including 2x5 miles at marathon effort with 1 mile easy/float (9:00 pace) between. Splits were 37:47 (7:33 pace) and 37:41 (7:32 pace).  Followed with injury prevention work and 500 yards recovery swimming.  Foam rolling at night.

Saturday: 9 miles very easy trail running (11:12) plus drills/strides and then upper body weights/core plus 3 "miles" pool-running.  Foam rolling at night.

Sunday: 14 miles with a collection of 100s, 200s, and 400s done with full recovery.  Final 200s were the fastest, at 46 seconds. Followed with injury prevention work and 500 yards recovery swimming.  Foam rolling at night.