creativeamanda
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jan 21, 2008
- Messages
- 9,530
Joining in--I registered fro the marathon about a month ago and added Race retreat today. So excited, but a little intimidated at the same time.
Joining in--I registered fro the marathon about a month ago and added Race retreat today. So excited, but a little intimidated at the same time.
I recall my first. I was so excited and like many scared to death.
I recommend spending the next 2 weeks in a maintenance run set up, running 2-3 x a week during the week and one longish run of 3-5 miles on the weekend. (or something within your current raining levels). Read through several training plans if you have not selected one. Your goal is to look at your lifes schedule and overlay the running commitment. Decide on a plan. Frankly, any written plan aimed at first timers will get you to the race. Finally during this couple of weeks, plug the schedule into your calendar as a series of meetings/appointments. You want your phone or computer to push you out the door. At first you will readily head out the door, but there will be a stretch or two where you must be reminded and pulled out.
During your training and after long runs hit about 90 minutes, you will want to learn about hydration and fueling on the run. These are the two critical variables that will help you make the distance. There are guidelines on when, where and how much to drink and eat, but these are so personal that you will need to tweak to fit your needs.
Keep a log of your runs. Specifically this is to track shoe miles but I find it a good way to recall any specific issue that may have occurred. Note things like weather, feelings, etc. It will help you understand the little mental tracks you used to get through a tough run.
Finally, as you pass through the Holidays, you will begin to understand how far you have come. You will begin to enjoy your short 10 mile run. You will start to realize that you only need to add a few short miles and you will be running 26 miles. Its kind of a mind blowing thing when this occurs. Then on race day, all the anxiety you are feeling today will pop back up. Think back on your training. You will draw some comfort from knowing that you are prepared. But also know that even the most experienced runner out there is also feeling some of the same feelings. We all are a little anxious just before heading out on course.
Have fun out there
I recall my first. I was so excited and like many scared to death.
I recommend spending the next 2 weeks in a maintenance run set up, running 2-3 x a week during the week and one longish run of 3-5 miles on the weekend. (or something within your current raining levels). Read through several training plans if you have not selected one. Your goal is to look at your lifes schedule and overlay the running commitment. Decide on a plan. Frankly, any written plan aimed at first timers will get you to the race. Finally during this couple of weeks, plug the schedule into your calendar as a series of meetings/appointments. You want your phone or computer to push you out the door. At first you will readily head out the door, but there will be a stretch or two where you must be reminded and pulled out.
During your training and after long runs hit about 90 minutes, you will want to learn about hydration and fueling on the run. These are the two critical variables that will help you make the distance. There are guidelines on when, where and how much to drink and eat, but these are so personal that you will need to tweak to fit your needs.
Keep a log of your runs. Specifically this is to track shoe miles but I find it a good way to recall any specific issue that may have occurred. Note things like weather, feelings, etc. It will help you understand the little mental tracks you used to get through a tough run.
Finally, as you pass through the Holidays, you will begin to understand how far you have come. You will begin to enjoy your short 10 mile run. You will start to realize that you only need to add a few short miles and you will be running 26 miles. Its kind of a mind blowing thing when this occurs. Then on race day, all the anxiety you are feeling today will pop back up. Think back on your training. You will draw some comfort from knowing that you are prepared. But also know that even the most experienced runner out there is also feeling some of the same feelings. We all are a little anxious just before heading out on course.
Have fun out there
I recall my first. I was so excited and like many scared to death.
I recommend spending the next 2 weeks in a maintenance run set up, running 2-3 x a week during the week and one longish run of 3-5 miles on the weekend. (or something within your current raining levels). Read through several training plans if you have not selected one. Your goal is to look at your life’s schedule and overlay the running commitment. Decide on a plan. Frankly, any written plan aimed at first timers will get you to the race. Finally during this couple of weeks, plug the schedule into your calendar as a series of meetings/appointments. You want your phone or computer to push you out the door. At first you will readily head out the door, but there will be a stretch or two where you must be reminded and pulled out.
During your training and after long runs hit about 90 minutes, you will want to learn about hydration and fueling on the run. These are the two critical variables that will help you make the distance. There are guidelines on when, where and how much to drink and eat, but these are so personal that you will need to tweak to fit your needs.
Keep a log of your runs. Specifically this is to track shoe miles but I find it a good way to recall any specific issue that may have occurred. Note things like weather, feelings, etc. It will help you understand the little mental tracks you used to get through a tough run.
Finally, as you pass through the Holidays, you will begin to understand how far you have come. You will begin to enjoy your short 10 mile run. You will start to realize that you only need to add a few short miles and you will be running 26 miles. It’s kind of a mind blowing thing when this occurs. Then on race day, all the anxiety you are feeling today will pop back up. Think back on your training. You will draw some comfort from knowing that you are prepared. But also know that even the most experienced runner out there is also feeling some of the same feelings. We all are a little anxious just before heading out on course.
Have fun out there
Thanks - did you just go over there after the race or could you buy during the expo. Any idea how much they were discounted?
I would love to meet some of the people who post on this forum. I want to put a face to a name...and yeah thank them for helping us prep and answering our questions...
There's always several meet ups during marathon weekend. You'll have multiples chances to see lots of us.
Awesome! I'll book as soon as I can, when the cheapest airlines for me start offering those dates. I'm coming from the Philadelphia area. I like AirTran or SouthWest. Also looking at Frontier out of Trenton this year. It will be my first Marathon too
Joining in--I registered fro the marathon about a month ago and added Race retreat today. So excited, but a little intimidated at the same time.
Welcome!!! This will be my first marathon too, and I'm scared to death, already!![]()
I recall my first. I was so excited and like many scared to death.
I recommend spending the next 2 weeks in a maintenance run set up, running 2-3 x a week during the week and one longish run of 3-5 miles on the weekend. (or something within your current raining levels). Read through several training plans if you have not selected one. Your goal is to look at your lifes schedule and overlay the running commitment. Decide on a plan. Frankly, any written plan aimed at first timers will get you to the race. Finally during this couple of weeks, plug the schedule into your calendar as a series of meetings/appointments. You want your phone or computer to push you out the door. At first you will readily head out the door, but there will be a stretch or two where you must be reminded and pulled out.
During your training and after long runs hit about 90 minutes, you will want to learn about hydration and fueling on the run. These are the two critical variables that will help you make the distance. There are guidelines on when, where and how much to drink and eat, but these are so personal that you will need to tweak to fit your needs.
Keep a log of your runs. Specifically this is to track shoe miles but I find it a good way to recall any specific issue that may have occurred. Note things like weather, feelings, etc. It will help you understand the little mental tracks you used to get through a tough run.
Finally, as you pass through the Holidays, you will begin to understand how far you have come. You will begin to enjoy your short 10 mile run. You will start to realize that you only need to add a few short miles and you will be running 26 miles. Its kind of a mind blowing thing when this occurs. Then on race day, all the anxiety you are feeling today will pop back up. Think back on your training. You will draw some comfort from knowing that you are prepared. But also know that even the most experienced runner out there is also feeling some of the same feelings. We all are a little anxious just before heading out on course.
Have fun out there
I would love to meet some of the people who post on this forum. I want to put a face to a name...and yeah thank them for helping us prep and answering our questions...
Does this mean you changed your mind and are running now?
a few weeks ago I started having pain on the outside of my right knee...I think maybe it's my IT band acting uptaking it easier this week and comtemplating getting into a Dr and therapy to work it out. Anyone else deal with IT band issues??
Have I ever.My ITBS was so bad by the TOT last year, I couldn't run more than a mile without excruciating pain. My advice? 1. Start looking for the root cause; no point in fixing the issue until you've ID'd and fixed the cause. For me, it was always running the same side of our very steeply canted roads coupled with stability shoes. But there are many, many things that can bring on ITBS; Google and experiment. 2. Get yourself a foam roller and look up foam rolling techniques for ITBS. 3. Find a PT or chiropractor that does targeted massage, Active Release Therapy and electrical stimulation. My chiro is an absolute miracle worker; I'm running now because of her! 4. No running until the pain is gone. The knee pain stems from the tightened ITB rubbing against the knee joint, causing inflammation. You must wait until that inflammation is gone. When you do start running, keep it short and very slowly start rebuilding mileage. Stop immediately any time you start feeling the tell-tale ITB pain.
I didn't do any of that until I was in really bad shape... don't be me.![]()
Thanks for all the info! I did notice it after I had been running across a hill in my route where my right leg was always on the downhill so I changed my route to avoid that for now.
Also, I do wear stability shoes (asics 2170)...always have but now you have me wondering? I have been fitted a few different times at Marathon Sports and that's what they recommend for me. My legs are super tight so I really need to focus on stretching better. And foam rolling!
PrincessV said:I'm not a shoe expert, but I think if you've been in stability shoes happily and the ITBS thing has just come up, it's probably not your shoes. I have complicated feet - highly flexible arches that can appear flat if I'm just standing, a fore-to-midfoot strike and a tendency to pronate while walking but suppinate while running.I'm a shoe-fitter's worst nightmare, lol!
I'm not a shoe expert, but I think if you've been in stability shoes happily and the ITBS thing has just come up, it's probably not your shoes. I have complicated feet - highly flexible arches that can appear flat if I'm just standing, a fore-to-midfoot strike and a tendency to pronate while walking but suppinate while running.I'm a shoe-fitter's worst nightmare, lol!