cmurph and Sagarin,
I 100% agree... 11PM - 5AM is not enough sleep for 100 mile weeks, let alone 150 mile weeks. I could not do that. No way.
I have a gym at work and live in the suburbs. So the way I did it was wake up at 5:30 and get the 5:42 train. I can run to the train station in 3-4 minutes, and would have my clothes ready to go. Didn't brush my teeth or anything. Hopped out of bed, thew on my clothes and left.
The train would get to 125th street at 6:07. If I stayed on the train, it would arrive at Grand Central at 6:17 and then its a 10 minute walk to my office. That's 20 minutes of commuting I just cut out and instead, made it 20 minutes of running time. Anyway, off the train at 6:07 and run to 7:15. End up at the office where I kept work clothes. Shower, shave, brush teeth and at my desk by 7:30-7:35.
I work all day, take train home, put kids to bed, run 35 minutes, shower, and be done for the night. Sometimes my morning and evening routine would flip flop if I was working late and wasn't going to see the kids anyway (i.e. if I had to work until 7:00, the kids will be in bed before I get home, so might as well run longer at night and sleep in and run shorter in the morning). Anyway, in bed by 10:00... though admitedly, in the hardest part of training when I was also doing workouts, I was feeling pretty groggy by 9:00 (though would 9 out of 10 times stay up to 10 so I could hang out with my wife). 7.5 hours of sleep was enough for me at that level.
This was running 100 mpw... so I dind't run doubles on Saturday and not every day.
blort,
It was worth it to me for a very short period of time so I could get that sub 2:40. You're right... I have a saint of a wife who would usually read while the kids napped and I ran. I think she liked the quiet time, honestly. I didn't run that kind of mileage for very long (a few months) as it took me 2 years to build up to it after a 2.5 year layoff of no running. It was worth it to get my sub 2:40, however, is not worth it any longer (and why I've run 10 times since Chicago). In my warped world, whether I run 2:39:58 or 2:30:01, it doesn't matter. The next barrier is the 2:30 barrier, and I will never be within 5:00 of that no matter how much I train. Yes, some time was taken away from my wife (not my kids), but how is that different then her going to Yoga on Saturdays, or out with friends on a Thursday night? I did none of that. Running, work, and being a dad/husband was my life. So, to answer your question... yes, it was worth it to get to 2:40, its not worth it to continue to do it to get to a possible 2:35.
To some of the others who like to make personal attacks on me:
My point is not to say I am great and someone else is not. I am not great. I was a decent, by runner's standards, runner. I realize that. My point is if I can do it, others can as well. I don't view the fact that I ran 100 mile weeks special. That's the point. And nor should you. In a way, I'm encouraging anyone who doesn't think they can to say, "yes you can!". If a schlepp like me can do it, so can you. The people who are "mad" at me are insecure and need to attack. I'm actually complimenting you. I'm saying, "dude, you're better then me and I can do it so you can do it". Again, not sure how that is bad. Maybe I have a strange way of encouraging people. For that I apologize. Add it to my flaws.