sandam1
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Apr 19, 2016
- Messages
- 1,937
Training Recap - 12/7-12/10 - Dopey Simulation
12/7 - Walk 3 miles
12/8 - Walk 6 miles
12/9 - Walk 13 miles
12/10 - Run/walk 26 miles
I really, really, REALLY just wanted these runs to be DONE. I wasn’t anxious about completing them - I was confident based on my previous simulations that I was ready - but I was a little afraid that something was going to come up to prevent me from doing it. Everything just seemed to be going a little too well.
I know that people have different opinions on doing the full marathon distance in training, but it was 100% the right way to go for me. Every time I upped the mileage on my long runs, the additional miles were genuinely miserable and where I would have the most trouble with my feet. So getting up to the marathon distance gave my body a chance to adjust to it in training rather than on race day. And the confidence to know that I can do it was a huge boost mentally. Plus, to be blunt, my coach wanted me to do it so I did.
The 3 mile walk was super easy. I went to the track at the gym after work and got it done.
On Thursday, I arranged to go into work late so I could get the 6 miles done in the morning. I knew that the 13 and 26 miles were going to be started in the morning so I wanted to get in as much recovery time as possible. This was a little more challenging and I burned through one of my saved podcasts to pass the time. But I felt fine afterward. Two down, two to go!
While I was willing to do the short walks inside, I really didn’t want to do the long distances on the track. Going around and around and around on the track has gotten very old at this point. Thankfully, it looked like the weather was going to cooperate. Both Friday and Saturday looked to be clear, but a little on the cold side in the mid 30’s. I prefer cold weather so I figured that I’d be fine. I dressed appropriately, but what I didn’t anticipate was the very stiff wind (and wind chill). I got about 5 miles done before heading back home to add an additional layer of a wind breaker and sweatpants, which helped out a lot. Lesson learned! Overall, the walk went well and I was a little tired, but felt pretty darn good.
I thought that after three days of walking (particularly the 13 miler) that sleep would come easily to me on Friday night, but that wasn’t how it worked out. I was awake quite a few times and then had trouble falling back asleep each time. I didn’t really get any quality sleep until after 3 a.m. All of this combined to make it hard to get up and get going in the morning. I knew that the distance was going to take a LONG time and there was only so much daylight to be had so I needed to get started early.
I had decided to run near the gym because it a) gave me easy access to a bathroom, water refills, and the indoor track if I needed it and b) there is a large block with nice sidewalks and not a lot of traffic that I could run around repeatedly. It wasn’t very interesting, but I find it a lot easier to not have to decide on a route while I’m running. The weather was similar to the day before so I started out with the extra layer which was needed when I was running into the wind and a little warm otherwise.
My legs were a lot more tired than I expected from the start, particularly considering how good they felt the day before. But I went slow and stuck to my intervals, knowing that the sole focus was on getting the distance done. It was very long and very boring. Thankfully, I had an online runDisney friend who graciously spent over two hours on the phone keeping me company. Around mile 20, things started getting hard. The wind started kicking up again, I hadn’t stayed on top of my fueling, the sun was going down, my feet were getting painful, and all I wanted was to be done. At this point, I called K and she had to listen to me whine for the next couple of miles like only a best friend can.
I also had a problem. After doing the math, I knew that I probably wasn’t going to finish before sunset. The area that I was running in wasn’t well lit and the gym was going to be closed so I could either run around the gym parking lot (which was well lit), head home and finish there, or call it close enough. With precisely a half mile left, I decided to head home and finish it in my neighborhood. I was too stubborn to not finish, but as tired as I was at that point, I couldn’t bear the thought of running around the parking lot. So I drove home, grabbed my dog, and finished. It wasn’t pretty, but I did it.
I felt a lot like this graphic...

My recovery after these runs was rougher than any of my other recent long runs. I was more chilled than I expected and it took me a couple of hours (and after a hot bath) to finally get warm. My feet were extremely painful (like “do I really need to get up and go to the bathroom” painful) and it took a good 36 hours before that subsided. The worst part was the exhaustion. I took a couple of hour long naps throughout the day and even then I felt like I was dragging. This isn’t unusual in the days after my long runs, but it was worse - I think compounded by neglecting my nutrition during the later stages of Saturday’s run.

All of that being said, I’m still very, very glad that I did a simulation with the full mileage. I made a few mistakes and learned a few more things that I might not have otherwise. What surprised me the most was that I wasn’t super excited to be done. Maybe it was because I was just too darn tired. Maybe it doesn’t feel real. I don’t know. But I do know that it’s taper time - and probably not a moment too soon.
12/7 - Walk 3 miles
12/8 - Walk 6 miles
12/9 - Walk 13 miles
12/10 - Run/walk 26 miles
I really, really, REALLY just wanted these runs to be DONE. I wasn’t anxious about completing them - I was confident based on my previous simulations that I was ready - but I was a little afraid that something was going to come up to prevent me from doing it. Everything just seemed to be going a little too well.
I know that people have different opinions on doing the full marathon distance in training, but it was 100% the right way to go for me. Every time I upped the mileage on my long runs, the additional miles were genuinely miserable and where I would have the most trouble with my feet. So getting up to the marathon distance gave my body a chance to adjust to it in training rather than on race day. And the confidence to know that I can do it was a huge boost mentally. Plus, to be blunt, my coach wanted me to do it so I did.
The 3 mile walk was super easy. I went to the track at the gym after work and got it done.
On Thursday, I arranged to go into work late so I could get the 6 miles done in the morning. I knew that the 13 and 26 miles were going to be started in the morning so I wanted to get in as much recovery time as possible. This was a little more challenging and I burned through one of my saved podcasts to pass the time. But I felt fine afterward. Two down, two to go!
While I was willing to do the short walks inside, I really didn’t want to do the long distances on the track. Going around and around and around on the track has gotten very old at this point. Thankfully, it looked like the weather was going to cooperate. Both Friday and Saturday looked to be clear, but a little on the cold side in the mid 30’s. I prefer cold weather so I figured that I’d be fine. I dressed appropriately, but what I didn’t anticipate was the very stiff wind (and wind chill). I got about 5 miles done before heading back home to add an additional layer of a wind breaker and sweatpants, which helped out a lot. Lesson learned! Overall, the walk went well and I was a little tired, but felt pretty darn good.
I thought that after three days of walking (particularly the 13 miler) that sleep would come easily to me on Friday night, but that wasn’t how it worked out. I was awake quite a few times and then had trouble falling back asleep each time. I didn’t really get any quality sleep until after 3 a.m. All of this combined to make it hard to get up and get going in the morning. I knew that the distance was going to take a LONG time and there was only so much daylight to be had so I needed to get started early.
I had decided to run near the gym because it a) gave me easy access to a bathroom, water refills, and the indoor track if I needed it and b) there is a large block with nice sidewalks and not a lot of traffic that I could run around repeatedly. It wasn’t very interesting, but I find it a lot easier to not have to decide on a route while I’m running. The weather was similar to the day before so I started out with the extra layer which was needed when I was running into the wind and a little warm otherwise.
My legs were a lot more tired than I expected from the start, particularly considering how good they felt the day before. But I went slow and stuck to my intervals, knowing that the sole focus was on getting the distance done. It was very long and very boring. Thankfully, I had an online runDisney friend who graciously spent over two hours on the phone keeping me company. Around mile 20, things started getting hard. The wind started kicking up again, I hadn’t stayed on top of my fueling, the sun was going down, my feet were getting painful, and all I wanted was to be done. At this point, I called K and she had to listen to me whine for the next couple of miles like only a best friend can.
I also had a problem. After doing the math, I knew that I probably wasn’t going to finish before sunset. The area that I was running in wasn’t well lit and the gym was going to be closed so I could either run around the gym parking lot (which was well lit), head home and finish there, or call it close enough. With precisely a half mile left, I decided to head home and finish it in my neighborhood. I was too stubborn to not finish, but as tired as I was at that point, I couldn’t bear the thought of running around the parking lot. So I drove home, grabbed my dog, and finished. It wasn’t pretty, but I did it.
I felt a lot like this graphic...

My recovery after these runs was rougher than any of my other recent long runs. I was more chilled than I expected and it took me a couple of hours (and after a hot bath) to finally get warm. My feet were extremely painful (like “do I really need to get up and go to the bathroom” painful) and it took a good 36 hours before that subsided. The worst part was the exhaustion. I took a couple of hour long naps throughout the day and even then I felt like I was dragging. This isn’t unusual in the days after my long runs, but it was worse - I think compounded by neglecting my nutrition during the later stages of Saturday’s run.

All of that being said, I’m still very, very glad that I did a simulation with the full mileage. I made a few mistakes and learned a few more things that I might not have otherwise. What surprised me the most was that I wasn’t super excited to be done. Maybe it was because I was just too darn tired. Maybe it doesn’t feel real. I don’t know. But I do know that it’s taper time - and probably not a moment too soon.