Leave the time behind
I have battled the folks at Garmin for five years now. Longstory short, I picked one of their first GPS running
watches up back in 2006, five years later I am now in need of my fifth
replacement. I get a year at most out
of these puppies. Shows you what four hundo gets you these days. I’m
onto the forerunner 610 now, the latest and greatest, we will see what that
gets me. I vowed never to patronize this
company again, but there just isn’t
anything on the market that does what this watch does (trust me I have spent
way too much time on it). I won’t bore
you with the details, the point of the
matter is that I would now have to suffer an entire week of training without a
watch while waiting the transition for a new one. I lost sleep with this on my mind. I must be able to see my pace, my heart rate,
and mileage on my left wrist. I mean, what would become of me? The longrun is already a sufferfest, what if I run too fast, and burn out to
quick, there goes the whole session. If
you are thinking I have a problem, possible running addiction, well for sure I do. I guess there are worse problems to have. Well I got through the week, I’m here,
life didn’t in fact end, and I’m still hungry as ever. Actually, I
thoroughly enjoyed the Sunday longrun watchless sufferfest . In fact, I learned a timeless lesson (Ron McLean pun
intended).
Listen to your body. It tells you everything you need to know. I got back into the practice of zoning in and
out of my runs, relying on my gut feeling of how hard I was working vs breathing and speed. Sunday, the longrun, was extra special. I just ran.
Met some people along the way, engaged in some banter. I’m pretty early in the training program so
the run only called for 90 minutes. Its all about time on my feet right now, not
speed. So rock the bare wrist
people, leave the watch at home once in
a while and just go for it.
The Program Update
Two solid weeks in the books, with 8 days of running, some
core and cross train (cycle) workouts. Looks like I have shed 3 lbs, weighing back
in at 175. I need to get inside 160 to
have any shot at a Boston Q of 3:20. No
rush, lots of time. The key really is staying focused and healthy. I ran a scheduled Tempo Run tonight, coach called for 5 miles at approx 7:10/mile,
couldn’t get to that pace in the wind, so laid back and averaged 7:40’s.
I cut it short at 4, just felt like I was working way too hard for that pace.
Infirmary Report
Some interesting left knee pain, its not my patellar (an old scary injury that
took me out of a marathon program a few
years ago. In fact I was worried that I would never run again it hurt so bad)
. I’m not concerned, I think I over stretched it by accidently
sitting awkwardly bathing the kid after a run….. (It’s the boy’s fault again!).
Just need to keep it lose with some mild
massage.
The weeks ahead
I will be hitting 33 and 36 miles per week. With an 105 minute LR this Sunday then a cutback
the following week. Focus will be pounding the hill repeats, need to build some power and kill some
weight. I’m really enjoying the added
weighttraining and cycle routines that coach has me on.
We are really going to go after my endurance this session, only achievable
by developing a better frame. One month
until the first half marathon and 7 weeks until that nasty 30K.
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