When I had to pause and admit it was crappy, it finally hit me. For the first time in 20 years of running, I didn’t want to admit it. Running was the worst.
Read MoreWrapping up Thoughts on Healthy Running and Racing Context
Today's post connects back to my previous two entries about the healthy context I believe is necessary for us to feel successful in racing. It is absolutely necessary to follow planned and organized training schedules for runners to reach their goals. If I did not believe that I would not be in this profession and certainly not publishing my thoughts to a web address with "Coach" in the URL.
Yet the need to remain connected to the fundamental reason we chose to engage in running must never be lost. The freedom in movement, the simplicity in task, the escape from our daily grind in an allegorical act of taking control. In pursuit of worthwhile goals and results in sport there is an inescapable demand for monotonous rigor carried out over time to harden the athlete. Hours of batting practice or the golf driving range are, in those aspects, not that different than runs on my favorite four miles and change.
However, there is danger present when the reasons my favorite route is preferred over others becomes the tree lost in the proverbial woods. At that point it is only a matter of time before motivation fails, goals become inconsequential and I might surmise that no training plans will rescue the athlete.
Every run is not fun. Monotony will steal joy. Athletes will have to drag themselves reluctantly toward the next workout. Coaches will need creativity and confidence to inspire athletes on the days dulled by the "trial of miles". But over the last few months I have become more convinced than ever that sometimes we must leave room for the freedom of simplicity in our training.
The great part about my favorite route is that it became so over time spent running there over almost two decades. I know the distances by heart within less than a tenth of a mile. I know the hills and flats and holes in the pavement. Because of the past work relationship I have with my beloved "Hennepin Loop" there is trust that I just need to cover the route in one of its various iterations. The other variables are not always required reading every time out on the path.
As a coach taking the watch off for an RPE based workout is great for athletes training for cross country where times are often irrelevant to team scores. But sometimes it also opens the window for us to look back and remember why we chose to run in the first place. Every time my fitness has been good enough to achieve fast times at my ability level there have been complicated, well planned, physically and mentally taxing workouts on the schedule. But there were also days where I could trust my natural self-selected recovery or easy pace over a route that was close enough to the distance I needed to cover.
In those days I can tell if the training is too much. In those days I can see the forest tree by tree. Enough of those days allow me to pin on a bib number with enough mental, physical and emotional energy available to confidently unleash my best effort and embrace the spirit of competition that drew me to running in the first place.
Healthy Running and Racing Context, Part 2
All regular runners, competitive, recreational or fitness, have a go to running route. The four miles and change that compose my favorite circuit were actually the key ingredient in the training that produced the fastest times of my competitive college running career.
I could and have run this loop along the Mississippi River in downtown Minneapolis in the dark of morning or night. I've run the lollipop style route both forward and backward. I've run it as a segment of a longer run all the way up to 12 miles. It's flat stretches, bridges, light polls and hill segments have served for hours of repeats hitting every imaginable goal for physiological stress and adaptation possible.
You'll find it known simply as the Hennepin Loop in my logs and journals and by the dozens of athletes that I coach who also attend the same university I did as a college athlete. Hennepin Loop + Nic Island means 5.2 miles. Hennepin Loop + Boom equals 6.5 miles. Hennepin/Stone Arch Fartlek means an RPE based fartlek run measured by light poles on two long bridges over Old Man River.
It seems to me many of us have these home turf areas that are the foundation to our successful running endeavors. But how does this tie into my previous post about creating a healthy context for serious athlete training and connect back to my perceived success at a local 10-mile racing event?
Back in February in the midst of an intense period of sleep depravity, work pressure and general winter doldrums common in Minnesota I needed to get out for a run. It also needed to be as seamless as possible. Shorts. Shirt. Socks. Shoes. Run.
Simple. No watch or GPS. No phone or fitness apps. No uploads, downloads, instagrams or tweets (Of course I'm ruining it by blogging about it now). Just a familiar, favorite route where the mind turns off, the CNS takes over and some unknown time later you are back home again.
I will never know exactly which physiological systems were taxed or the extent to which they were pushed. The minutes per mile down to hundredths of a mile will remain an unknown in my log. Yet the time spent on my feet that day were just as much a training day as any prescribed workout with umpteen variables dialed in and programed into my Garmin 220.
There is more to say on this but I'm going to keep this post short and extend my thoughts on to another entry later this week. Thanks for staying with me on this topic and I hope to have you back when I wrap up things up next time.