It's one of the top rules of mine for running. Trust your gut and listen to your body. There have been plenty of times that I've had little things crop up here and there and I've felt confident that they'd go away or diminish in due time. And every time that's been right. The only real injury I ever had snuck up on me during Lakefront 2016 with little to no warning. But this time, something doesn't feel right. I'd mentioned that something was off right before 2018 Marathon Weekend. A slight calf pain. It hurt during the last few days of running and to and from the airport heading to Disney. Then, suddenly it was fine. I didn't really do anything and the issue was resolved. I successfully ran the 2018 Dopey Challenge with a 5k PR, 10k PR, HM PR, and only 2 min off the M PR. At no time during any of those races or afterwards did I ever get a hint of the same issue prior. Took my standard time off and never had any issues. First run back and it was there again. I'm not sure exactly the root cause or what exactly is the issue. I've continued the easy running for a week now and it's oscillated between being an issue during portions of non-running, to being fine, to diminishing during running, to coming back during running, to coming back during daily time. The best way for me to describe it is the feeling as if I'm running on a stilt on my right leg. At points, it feels like I get no energy return and I'm just running on the bone of my leg. It's not severely painful. But it's just there and makes running uncomfortable at times.
So just like I tell others, I need to listen to what my body is saying. Something is wrong, don't know what exactly, and continuing to run on it hasn't been beneficial. I've rotated through several pairs of shoes at varying levels of stiffness and freshness and there seems to be little difference. So, with that being said, I've got to shut it down for a little bit. Maybe a few days or maybe a few weeks. The end goal of 2018 is Chicago. I'd rather voluntarily take some time off now, then be forced to take time off later. If it ends up being days or weeks, then the loss of fitness will certainly be minimal and something that can be regained well before most of the races. Better to take that time off now at the beginning of training, then having to do it right before a race. I guess in reality I should count myself as lucky. This will be the first time in over 9000 career miles that I've ever had to take an extended period of time off when I had planned to be running.
Sorry about the injury Billy. Its a great call to shut it down now and get that resolved! The thing is finding the cause of the issue!. I hope you will report back that you are healthy and running again very soon. I am also dealing with that knee issue and i will be taking it day to day! I haven't gone for a run since Houston but we will find out more in the coming days!! Again, Smart move to shut it down and work to resolve the issue!
Get well soon!