Thanks to amkelly and many others that have wished me support.
I am thinking about ditching the marathon and getting ready for Tokyo 2020 for the 1500m freestyle. On Monday as I mentioned in my last post, I got in the pool for the first time this year, and I did 492 yards in 17:22. On Wednesday I did 547 yards in 19:22 and shaved a second off my 100y time! I didn’t get to the pool on Friday like I had planned and ended up going on Saturday, which was supposed to be my rest day. I had planned on not leaving the couch after I got out of bed, but it was not to be. I went down to my local rec. center and did some lower body strength training. I am bagging upper body strength training after I did something to my back on Tuesday. I am going to take a 10 day break from upper body strength training to see how my back reacts. Anyways, I got back in the pool and did 656 yards in 19:27. I took over 30 seconds off my 100y time. At this rate, I should be smoking Mark Spitz by next month, and Michael Phelps some time in early November. I have a sneaking suspicion the improvement may not be sustainable at the current rate.
Sunday I did my long run of 13.1 miles. I continued my walk jog pattern. Higdon meets Galloway. I was supposed to do a half marathon last week on the half marathon plan. I couldn’t find anything for last week or this week. So I upped the long run 1.5 mile last week and 1.2 this week to get to the half distance. I basically just switched the weeks in the plans. I am just trying to finish these long runs. They are supposed to be easy, but I don’t know if that is 1 or 2 minutes slower than marathon pace or something else. After next week or the week after, I am going to try and do some McMillan marathon race pace (30 minutes) in these runs every other week and try to see where I am. My pacing is still very difficult to gauge on what feels right compared to what time I want or think it is.
I had no idea what should be my goal other than finish. I think I pushed too hard in the middle of the week. I wanted to run easy, and I didn’t care if that was close to 12 minute miles or slower for the jog sections. The pattern was walk 0.5 miles jog 2 miles, repeat 4 times, and finish up with a 0.6 mile walk. These were my times with W denoting half mile walk:
W Mile 1-14:00
Mile 2-9:29
W Mile 3-12:46
Mile 4-9:29
Mile 5-9:42
W Mile 6-13:21
Mile 7-10:30
W Mile 8-13:54
Mile 9- 10:53
Mile 10- 10:05
W Mile 11-14:23
Mile 12-10:41
W Mile 13-15:11
Total time 2:36:32
11’56”
Positives: 24 seconds faster per mile than last week over extra 1.2 miles
Negatives: Second half much slower than first half
Miles 1, 11, and 13, I walked with my wife, which may have slowed me down a bit. I was definitely getting slower during the second half. I had no water until the 10th mile and had a small handful of trail mix at mile 7. I typically don’t eat before a run, bike or swim, unless it is more than 2 hours.
When you mentioned the quality of the long run, were you referring to preparation for this race or races going forward? I don’t know what more I can do at this point for this marathon. I am incorporating hills, and more intensity than Higdon dictates as well as more cross training, swimming, and strength training. I have been doing the strength training 3x a weeks and he calls for no more than twice a week. In addition, I am doing more weight every session, doing more miles on my bike at a faster clip, swimming more yards at a faster clip. My running is getting faster as I go longer distance as well. Do you think I should do longer distances for my long runs for this marathon? I have Runcoach for free until my marathon and their recommendations are all over the map. They had my longest run being 13-14 miles and 2-3 miles a 2 other days and 24 miles five weeks before the marathon. I don’t understand their algorithm at all.
This October marathon is a foundational race. I am going to use it as a cornerstone for more training. I think I will focus on shorter races like 5-15ks next spring with a half marathon starting and ending the season. I will work on my speed and, if things work out, have a better base for a marathon next fall.
I am really confused on what time I can strive for in this marathon. I feel like I have a fair amount of gas in the tank whenever I finish my sessions other than this past Thursday when I felt like I had overdone it on the previous 2 days. At this point, my primary goal is to finish injury free and jog the miles I want at the times I want and walk the distances I want that I set out before the race begins. If I do it under 5 hours or not is a secondary goal at this point. I am pretty sure I can do it in under five hours barring injury or illness, but I may be unrealistic.
I have 2 more questions for you or anyone with an opinion. First, food and hydration what works for you before a run and during one? Secondly, do you use ibuprofen or aspirin for nagging injuries or any other reason? I didn’t use anything for my back pain, because I wanted to see how I handled my long run without any medication. Still not sure if I should take anything for it.
Lastly, I have read the first 20 pages of this thread over the past few days. Hope to get caught up to where I started reading recently. Why does it seem so many have such limited flexibility? Is this still an issue with many of you?