wellesleyprincess
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jun 10, 2005
- Messages
- 1,850
Hey everyone!
So this is going to seem like a dumb question but how do you know when you're getting close to your plateau? So here's my story. I started seriously running in mid-June at roughly a 10:30-11 minutes per mile pace. I've been gradually improving and now do my standard runs (3.5-4 miles; significant hills for the first 2 miles) at roughly an 8:30-8:45 pace and last night ran a 5k at an 8:15 pace. This has been over the course of about six weeks so I have definitely seen significant progress (about a minute off of each 5k time). I know eventually I will reach a point where my pace won't be changing and especially not changing as quickly. My fear is what it'll do to my mental game when I don't see as quantifiable progress. So, how do you know you're plateauing? And when you do how do you keep challenging yourself and changing your definition of progress?
I'm working on moving from a 5k to a 10k, so on a slightly different note is it unrealistic to think that in 8 to 10 weeks I could run a 10k at my current 5k pace?
Thanks,
Jennifer
So this is going to seem like a dumb question but how do you know when you're getting close to your plateau? So here's my story. I started seriously running in mid-June at roughly a 10:30-11 minutes per mile pace. I've been gradually improving and now do my standard runs (3.5-4 miles; significant hills for the first 2 miles) at roughly an 8:30-8:45 pace and last night ran a 5k at an 8:15 pace. This has been over the course of about six weeks so I have definitely seen significant progress (about a minute off of each 5k time). I know eventually I will reach a point where my pace won't be changing and especially not changing as quickly. My fear is what it'll do to my mental game when I don't see as quantifiable progress. So, how do you know you're plateauing? And when you do how do you keep challenging yourself and changing your definition of progress?
I'm working on moving from a 5k to a 10k, so on a slightly different note is it unrealistic to think that in 8 to 10 weeks I could run a 10k at my current 5k pace?
Thanks,
Jennifer