PrincessV
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Jul 6, 2006
- Messages
- 14,175
Oh yes, been there, done that! My son is 14 now... he's the one who got me started with rD because he liked the idea of running a 5K at Disney - he was 9 at the time. He lost most interest shortly after turning 10, and has had NO interest in running for a couple years now. Don't take it personally - it's just teen stuff and figuring out what THEY like as individuals!My two boys and I ran our "Superhero 2.5K" yesterday evening. It was a really cute race, but my 10 year old had a serious case of "tween attitude." I think part of the fact was that he was tired (we always stay up later during summer break) and had been playing with friends all day, but he had the worse attitude at the start of the race. He was not running, he was not walking fast, he was SAUNTERING! I decided to just let him and I ran with my 7 year old, but then we stopped and waited for him. Anyway, by the end he was excited to be there, but it just bugged me b/c I'm used to my kids being happy by whatever I'm excited about, and I am not ready for the jaded teen thing haha.
So, this was more of a parenting rant than a running one- sorry! I've just been so excited to share my love of running with my kids. This was the first time I felt like it didn't work out.
I just want mid-to-back of the packers to know there are lots of us out there!


Congrats on getting started! I think 3 days/week is a perfect starting point. You may decide down the road that you want and benefit from running another day or two per week, but it's not necessary and probably isn't a good idea at this point yet. I used to run most days for fitness, but quickly realized I needed to scale back when I started building mileage for distance running. I work on strength on my non-run days with yoga, Pilates, and strength training - I think everyone can benefit from adding some kind of strength work to their running, but you have to find the things you like best and work best for you! I use iSmoothRun for my runs because I like its features, but then I sync it to Runkeeper to store all of my data. You could use Runkeeper as your data storage and use it on its own for non C25K app runs, I'd think? Personally, I don't believe there's any one "right" way to run: let your body move in whatever way it feels best!As I am beginning, is it correct to only run the three days a week, following the program? The other days, is it good to do non-running like elliptical, DVD workouts, and walking? I have the desire to do more. I also want to prevent injury.
Also, do some people use more than one app to track miles? For example, C25K tracks, but if I do a fourth run during a week, it has to erase one so the total miles are not accurate.
It is also confusing about developing the right run. I watched some videos about not heel striking. It should be midfoot. Then today I felt like I was reaching out with my toes. It felt unnatural.
Any insights and feedback are appreciated! Thank you!