Figment1990
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jul 29, 2008
- Messages
- 2,392
How do you pace yourselves? I was running about a 10:00 mm, but I have picked up speed and would like to run between a 9:40 and a 9:50. So last night, I had more wine than I should have right before a run, and my first mile was a 10:01. So, when my garmin shows me I am being a slow poke (for me), I pick up the pace and run the second at a 9:17, waaaaaay too fast for me. I did the third okay, but then I was too tired to finish the other mile and a half (it didn't help that I got up late and needed to get to work). I didn't have this trouble when I was running a 10 mm, but I am really having trouble pacing myself. Any suggestions?
I second all of the above. For me, i can usually "feel" how fast I'm running but I fall into that same garmin trap of trying to compensate. So I will tap my lap button anytime I feel like I need to settle down and get a true picture. I didn't know I could set it to .25, I might have to see if mine does that bc I would definitely try that. I don't use my garmin at all for mile times during races, bc I like to be able to make myself slow down or speed up to make sure I don't go too fast and fall apart.
All that being said, I also run on a track, and on the treadmill. Bc both have the ability to constantly give me feed back of my speed I have really "trained" myself to feel my paces, just from repeatedly running on the treadmill or track. That's part of how I learned my pace. But I also ALWAYS run w music and being a former dancer, I can't not run on the beat. So I've painstakingly found songs that keep me on the right paces i want to be. I even move my playlist around for races based on this. It's not perfect but it is close. So maybe until u find you can recognize the 9:45 goal pace by feel, u can use one of these methods (shorter garmin intervals, counting your steps in a 30 second time frame, music, track or treadmill) to "learn" it.