Week of June 2 - 8, 2025
This was the sixth week of ~13 weeks of training for a 5k in early August (yes, overkill). This is mostly to keep me running during the summer heat and humidity and I think a focus on speed will be good. In the interest of helping my kneMes, I'm only planning 4 runs/week during this period with the plan of a long hike on the weekend with my husband (instead of a fifth run).
On June 14 - 15, I'm doing the Yeti 24-h Challenge, sort of "with" some Garmin friends. Several of us are doing it on the same weekend. This challenge is to run 5.2 miles every 4 hours for 24 hours (6 times), which adds up to 31.2 mi = 50k. So, yes, I'm essentially running a 50k next weekend. I did this challenge back in February 2021, and I didn't find it to be super difficult, but we'll see how it is now that I'm 4 years older.
Monday
- Before breakfast:
- Workout 2
- 3 x 5 each leg - one-leg squats on bench
- superset
- 3 x 5 each arm - one-arm rows on bench with 33.75 lb
- 3 x 5 - push-ups with 20-lb vest
- 3 x 5 each leg - bench step-up-and-overs with 20-lb vest
- 3 x 5 - parallel-bar dips
- 1 x 5 - supermans with 5-sec hold - see my health section below about my back
- Foam rolling and stretching
- After work: walk on treadmill
- time: 1:27:34
- distance: 4.39 mi
- ave pace: 19:57
- incline: 0%
- comments: see my Health section below about my back
Tuesday
- Before breakfast: foam rolling and stretching
- After work:
- 40 min easy
- T+D 134, 2.5% effect, T 76 F
- time: 40:01
- distance: 3.25 mi
- average pace: 12:18 (GAP ave pace: 12:09)
- splits: 12:22, 12:12, 12:17, 12:33
- ave HR: 136 BPM - within my target range
- elevation gain: 193 ft (corrected)
- route: neighborhood loop 1
- comments: Given my back issues (see Health section), I opted to do an easy run instead of hill repeats.
Wednesday
- Before breakfast:
- Strength endurance workout
- 2 x 15 each leg - reverse lunges
- 2 x 15 each leg - Romanian single-leg deadlifts with kickstand and 10 lb
- 2 x 15 - heels-elevated squats with 10 lb
- 2 x 15 each leg - hip airplanes
- comments: PT for my knees
- comments: I didn't do the hip thrusts because of back issues.
- Foam rolling and stretching
- After work: walk on treadmill
- time: 1:27:35
- distance: 4.64 mi
- ave pace: 18:53
- incline: 0%
Thursday
- Before breakfast:
- Core workout
- 90-sec plank with 20-lb vest
- 20 starfish
- 20 dead bugs
- 20 bird dogs
- 20 each side flutter kicks
- 20 bicycle crunches with hold
- 5 10-sec hollow-body holds
- 2 30-sec side planks
- 20 double leg lift/lowers
- Foam rolling and stretching
- After work:
- Tempo on trail - 15 min easy + 16 min tempo effort + 15 min easy
- T+D 153, 5% effect, T 86 F - hot and humid!
- time: 46:02
- distance: 3.82 mi
- tempo split: 10:34
- elevation gain: 208 ft (corrected)
- route: Valley Trail, Rock Creek National Park
- comments: This was a bit of an adventure because a few minutes into my tempo segment, there were a couple of big trees down across the trail (not there last week), and so I had to do some bushwhacking off trail to where there were just the trunks and not so many branches, and then climb over the trunks and back to the trail to continue. Actually kind of fun! But I was easy prey for all the biting insects.
Friday
- Before breakfast:
- Strength endurance workout
- 2 x 15 each leg - reverse lunges
- 2 x 15 each leg - Romanian single-leg deadlifts with kickstand and 10 lb
- 2 x 15 - heels-elevated squats with 10 lb
- 2 x 15 each leg - one-leg hip thrusts with 10 lb
- 2 x 15 each leg - hip airplanes
- comments: PT for my knees
- Foam rolling and stretching
- After work: walk on treadmill
- time: 1:26:00
- distance: 4.58 mi
- ave pace: 18:47
- incline: 0%
- comments: I was going to do a run, but a big line of thunderstorms was almost on us. And then the storms broke up and we hardly got a drop of rain! Grrr.
Saturday
- Before lunch:
- 60 min easy
- T+D 146, 4% effect, T 76 F - very humid!
- time: 1:00:01
- distance: 5.01 mi
- average pace: 11:58 (GAP ave pace: 11:57)
- splits: 12:07, 12:22, 11:48, 11:46, 11:49
- ave HR: 139 BPM - within my target range
- elevation gain: 179 ft (corrected)
- route: Sligo Creek Trail
- comments: This route is paved, so it's not a trail run.
- comments: I started the run soon after a rain shower stopped, but then it rained again for about 15 min in the middle of the run.
- Before dinner: 2-hr tennis doubles match - my partner and I lost 6-3, 7-5.
Sunday before dinner:
- 80 min LR on trail
- T+D 139, 3% effect, T 71 F - light rain most of the time with a heavier showers
- time: 1:20:00
- distance: 5.68 mi
- average pace: 14:05 (GAP ave pace: 13:15)
- splits: 13:58, 14:37, 14:06, 13:49, 14:28, 13:17
- ave HR: 135 BPM - within my target range
- elevation gain: 745 ft (corrected)
- route: Western Ridge Trail, Rock Creek National Park
- comments: The trail was very muddy and slow with the rain.
Health
This has been a very eventful week for me in terms of "health" stuff.
When I woke up on
Monday, my lower back was really sore, especially on the right side. My lower back is often sore when I wake up, so I didn't really appreciate that this was a lot worse than usual until I started on my strength workout and ended up really aggravating it. It was...unpleasant until about Thursday. I was feeling fine when I went to bed Sunday night, so I have no idea what happened.
I had a physical therapy appointment on
Tuesday. My back wasn't quite so bad by then, but it obviously didn't make sense to aggravate it with a lot of strength work, so the PT did a lot of manual work on my hamstrings (hoping that would help the back too), and I did some lighter exercises and stretching.
Wednesday was a big day for health stuff! First, I had x-rays of both knees. (I had never had x-rays on my knees before.) The orthopedist said the diagnosis was straightforward: I have osteoarthritis in both knees on the lateral side of the trochlear groove. I found an example x-ray online (this is NOT my x-ray - it is from Complete Orthopedics) as an example:

This is for the left knee. The joint space between the patella at the "lateral facet" of the femur has basically no cartilage left. It's the same for both knees.
There are good things about this diagnosis: this is not a weight-bearing part of the joint, so it shouldn't necessarily get worse rapidly, and the orthopedist doesn't think I'll need knee replacements for something like 20 years.
The bad things about this diagnosis: there's really nothing to do to "cure" it. The orthopedist suggested absolutely no squatting, lunging, and to minimize running on anything other than flat surfaces. Yeah, right.
But really, it's up to me, because if I do those things, then the pain is going to be worse, so it's a question of what I want to deal with and how I can manage the pain. In this week as I write this, I have very little knee pain, even on stairs or running. It does get worse when I am more active, and presumably the more active I am, the worse it could get. Currently, I'm not taking any pain meds. Potentially I could use more NSAIDs and potentially get cortisone shots.
So, I'm going to be working with my physical therapist to make sure any muscle imbalances are worked out (to keep the patella tracking as correctly as possible) and then discuss what's possible in PT terms for pain management. I can modify some things I do, especially for strength training, but I have absolutely no plans to stop trail running or running in general - I will just think a bit about moderation.
Also on
Wednesday, after the x-rays, I had dry needling done on my left hamstring and glute. I had strained my left glute in June 2024 (!!!) and it has still been bothering me. My physical therapist (with some manual work on it) thought that the strain itself was probably basically healed, but that there were a bunch of trigger points with it that were making it continue to feel bad. So, the dry needling.
I have not had dry needling done before. I did not watch. If I watch needles being inserted, I can get faint. Some types of pain make me get faint, so that was a possible issue, too. The therapist did three separate needle insertions. It wasn't pleasant, but it wasn't the worst therapy I've ever had, either (remember way back with my headache that wouldn't go away and the two-dozen Botox injections on my face and neck - that was WAY worse). The next day, the areas of insertion were mildly worse, but not bad, and that has improved. The trigger-point area in my glute is much better! Very big improvement in that, so it seems like it worked. I'm not sure how long it will last, so we'll see.
Well, that might be it for my "health news". But important stuff this week! I have two physical therapy appointments this coming up week, so we'll see how that goes and what she wants to change now that we have a diagnosis.