JCurrey
Earning My Ears
- Joined
- Mar 31, 2014
- Messages
- 59
Yes, it's my first one. My goal is to finish in under 40 minutes, b/c that's my 3 mile time right now. I am not good at pacing myself, and I need to work on that. I usually run a fast first mile (9ish minutes), and then slow down b/c I can't maintain that yet.
In reality, I don't care what my time is, I just want to do this for me.
Ah, the going out too fast dilemma. It happens to everyone. A couple of years ago I ran a half marathon, one I have done before. I started too close to the front so I was running with the fast runners. I was going at a 7 min/mile pace, faster than I have ever run and I was feeling great! I remember saying to myself, "wow, if I can keep this pace, I will blow my PR out of the water!" Well, I held that pace until mile 8, then all hell broke loose. I burned my glycogen store, I didn't have gels with me to eat, I was feeling like crap and I dropped to a 10 min/mile pace. I felt so sick and had to stop and walk a few times because I was on the verge of getting sick. Then it happened, 40 yards from the finish line I threw up. Thankfully there was a garbage can that I made it to, but there were crowds all around and the medics came over. I was worried they wouldn't let me finish, but they did, they just rode their bikes behind me. My husband didn't see what happened so he was trying to snap pictures of me and I felt like crap but was trying to smile. I finished with a good time still, but it was not fun. A month later I ran another half marathon. I wasn't going to make the same mistake so I picked up a pace bracelet at the Clif Bar table. I was paying very close attention to my pace and made sure I keep it nice and slow and even in the beginning. I finished that race 5 mins faster than the half from hell and I started off at a slower pace. Pace means everything! You can make pace bracelets online for any distance. It is nice to wear one as a reminder or write your pace on your hand to remind yourself to slow down. Or you can take walk breaks in the first mile to make sure you don't go out too fast.
Sorry for the novel! Oh and you are not nutty for scoping out the course. I always look at the course maps and elevation changes so I know what is coming. I do like to not run a course too much before a race because then it is fresh on race day and I find my mind is distracted by looking at the course and not thinking about the actual run. So I would advise you to not train too often on the course.