Reconstructive foot surgery has given me a much needed break from running for three months, so in between sessions of thesis-writing, paper-grading, and swimming, I had the chance to read Marla Runyan’s book, No Finish Line, My Life as I See it—and to add a plug to the “Gift list for Valentine Runners,” I would highly recommend it. Along with several other life lessons earned from various coaches throughout her career, I think the most valuable one, that has also given me a lesson came from Dick Brown, a first rate coach known for his work training Olympians. He once told Marla that, “training is stress to your body. It’s challenge to your system, but if you rest and recover your body will adapt to the challenges that you give it. You adapt stronger than you were before. It’s a delicate balance of challenge and recovery.”
Every now and then we need a break from running and racing. (Yes this is coming from Morgan who can’t go a day without her two hours of solid foot pounding on pavement, trail, or track). Some of us are blessed with the ability to know when we need a break, and actually schedule a ‘day-off’ each week. Others of us, who are not so lucky, come to this revelation when our body or mind wears down to reveal the threads of overtraining, like stress fractures, slower times, or decreased motivation.
Interning in Washington DC this past summer, I became familiar with the metro system and being the frugal grad student that I am decided to save the bus fare to and from the metro everyday—so I put my god-given legs to use, and ran to and from the metro (a total of 6 miles) for three months. This on top of my daily 12-15 miles logged after work, and then an hour or so of lap swimming, gave me more than 20 miles a day of running and 4+ hrs of exercising, this summer. I worked very hard at my training, but coupled with a hectic long work day and commute, my eating schedules and portions were erratic and lacking. I finished my first 100 miler this summer at the end of May, ran a few races in July, then ran a PR at a 5-mile race in July and didn’t schedule another race until Tussey in October. I planned to train my body to oblivion that summer in preparation for the world-class competition that was expected at the National Championships. Come October, and 25 miles into the race, I felt a painful burning in my left outside leg running from my hip to my knee. I knew immediately that my iliotibial band was inflamed. I tried to walk but couldn’t; I tried to run but couldn’t. Halfway into one of the most important races of my life, holding a strong second place, I dropped out, wishing I had taken just one rest day out of those last 5 months.
This injury made me realize that the body needs time to heal
after you challenge it. I stopped
running for a week, and began using my bike and the pool more as
cross-trainers. November and December
were some of the best months of running for me.
I did a few good long trail runs, but no racing in November. Some strength training sessions allowed me to
build some muscle back after a summer of no weight-bearing activity. An epic race was set for December 11th. This would be the last before my scheduled
foot surgery at the end of December.
Hellgate 100k in
I knew I ran too much this summer—I heard it from people regularly. My favorite training partner, Steve Cohen never failed to tell me that if I stopped racing so much it would do me some good. I knew I didn’t eat well and enough or sleep enough. Weekends were made for long training runs, or traveling to races, not for sleeping in or lounging by the pool!! But all I could think of was if I was taking a day off, there was someone else out there logging miles, and I couldn’t bear that thought. I believed all my hard work would make me faster, and stronger, when all it really did was break me down. So if you’re feeling a little unmotivated, or tired or weak, take a look at last month’s running log. Did you remember to schedule an ‘off-day’? Did you have a few days of non-running, cardiovascular activity be it biking, hiking, swimming, or roller-skating? If January is the month for resolutions, then my vow is to find this delicate balance between challenge and recovery and to teeter there as long as possible.