On another note, I am having a lot of trouble encouraging DH with his running. He is so frustrated! Before his shoulder injury, he was able to run 9-10 miles at a sub-10 pace. Now, he says that his endurance is totally gone. He says he can't even run 4 miles without having to stop and walk. His goal has always been to run the entire 13.1 miles (and he has already done it once) and he is getting beyond frustrated. I've told him to try the run/walk intervals like me. He says that he is already doing that...sort of. I encouraged him to PLAN the walk intervals, not just walk when he gets tired. He says that once he starts walking, he has trouble getting back into running again so I told him to use longer run intervals. He is just so bent on running the entire way that he considers any training run a failure if he couldn't run the entire distance. He's the opposite of me! I can find the success in any run, and he is so frustrated, he finds the failures in all of his runs. I don't know how to slap him out of it!! He is the person who said he never wants to run in an organized race because if he can't win, why bother?

So, he decided that it is a "personal victory" to run a 1/2 Marathon, but now that he is questioning his ability to do it, he is reverting to the "why bother?" mentality.
I, on the other hand, have set into a nice training pattern that I really think will work out great

. I am trying to do a 12-minute pace so I do 4 minutes of walking and 8 minutes of running. That way, I know that I have to go at least 0.25 miles with each walk interval and at least 0.75 miles with each running interval. If I want to lengthen my run interval, I will make it 3 minutes of walking and 9 minutes of running. I have a "routine" that I do during my walk portions...catch breath for first 45 seconds...hit inhaler and breathe for 15 seconds...drink fluids during second minute and eat energy chew if needed...third minute is wipe off sweat, readjust clothing and accessories and mentally prepare for next run interval. I figured out that the 3-minute walk interval is the least I will do on the longer runs. I need all 3 minutes, and I really prefer 4. If I want to lengthen my run intervals, I could walk for 4 and then run for 20 and repeat, but I doubt I would be any faster...just more tired. With this plan, I am hitting a walk interval at every mile. This puts me in perfect position to take pictures of each mile marker without having it mess up my running interval. It will also FORCE me to slow down. It's no good if I run the first 4-5 miles under 12 minutes and then have to crawl across the finish line and feel like crap for 2 more days

.
Oops...sorry for the rambling

...time to get some work done

.