16-06-2015, 07:26 PM,
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RE: June... my goodness how the time has flewn
Don't scare yourself so much CC5, you'll be fine. 20km is no problem at all. Now if it were 20 miles then you ought to be concerned.
Just kidding, of course. I have no doubt you'll breeze through 20 miles. Just stay injury-free, be relaxed about whatever time you might set and you'll get the job done. Promise.
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16-06-2015, 07:34 PM,
(This post was last modified: 16-06-2015, 07:37 PM by Sweder.)
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Sweder
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RE: June... my goodness how the time has flewn
(16-06-2015, 07:33 PM)Sweder Wrote: (16-06-2015, 07:26 PM)UMid Life Crisis Marathon Man Wrote: Don't scare yourself so much CC5, you'll be fine. 20km is no problem at all. Now if it were 20 miles then you ought to be concerned.
Just kidding, of course. I have no doubt you'll breeze through 20 miles. Just stay injury-free, be relaxed about whatever time you might set and you'll get the job done. Promise.
Ready my race report, it's a piece of cake.
Bwahahahaha ...
The harder the conflict, the more glorious the triumph
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16-06-2015, 07:36 PM,
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RE: June... my goodness how the time has flewn
Sweder's right. I was being too nice.
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17-06-2015, 07:15 AM,
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marathondan
Back on the road
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Posts: 2,335
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RE: June... my goodness how the time has flewn
Well done for taking the plunge Charlie. I agree with MLCMM, don't obsess about times too much. I know you like to track pace to monitor your progress, and there's nothing wrong with that. But there will always be fast runs and slow runs, and you mustn't worry if one session comes in slow. I think you should just put in consistent effort over increasing distances, and then perhaps over the course of a month you will see an improvement in pace. But ultimately your pace will be what it will be: so long as you're putting in the miles at a good level of effort, there's not much more that you can do.
I should also mention the race day fairies. You won't believe in these till you experience them. But on race day, they will sit in your pocket, on your shoulder, tucked into your water belt, and will somehow make you run 30-60s per mile faster than you do in training. I don't know how they do it, but I think most here will vouch for their existence.
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17-06-2015, 07:44 AM,
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Sweder
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RE: June... my goodness how the time has flewn
Yep, those little blighters are real enough. If you're not careful they all jump out at the start and before you know it you've overtaken Mo Farah. There are also nerves, or butterflies as they are sometimes known. The secret of match-day butterflies, I was once informed via a golfing instruction, is to get them flying in formation.
The harder the conflict, the more glorious the triumph
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20-06-2015, 11:35 AM,
(This post was last modified: 20-06-2015, 11:41 AM by Charliecat5.)
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Charliecat5
Find me a mountain...
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RE: June... my goodness how the time has flewn
My thought for the day.
I ran 11 miles this morning, uphill and down. It was bloody tough... I had to fight for every mile.
In those rare moments when my mind had time to think… not distracted by the grumblings and talk of rebellion coming from various other parts of my body… it started to reflect on the concept of ‘fitness’. What does it actually mean? How does it really manifest itself?
Then it came to me. It has been staring me in the face for months, or rather crossing my path for months. Fitness is the ability to pass through a gate without breaking your stride. To run right up to a gate, pass through and continue running without a single pause for breath.
When I can do a gate without slowing down 10 paces beforehand, without the sluggish pass through… checking not once, but sometimes twice, that the gate is shut properly, perhaps a quick slurp of water and then the 10 paces afterwards building back up to the pre-gate stride… then, and only then, will I know that am properly fit.
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20-06-2015, 02:14 PM,
(This post was last modified: 20-06-2015, 02:15 PM by Mid Life Crisis Marathon Man.)
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RE: June... my goodness how the time has flewn
(20-06-2015, 11:35 AM)Charliecat5 Wrote: When I can do a gate without slowing down 10 paces beforehand, without the sluggish pass through… checking not once, but sometimes twice, that the gate is shut properly, perhaps a quick slurp of water and then the 10 paces afterwards building back up to the pre-gate stride… then, and only then, will I know that am properly fit.
Couldn't you just vault it?
In all seriousness though, I was having this very discussion about what constitutes fitness with some of the fitness freaks at work the other day. We concluded that the only fitness that really matters is cardiac fitness, which is obviously directly linked to overall health and longevity. Everything else is just a measure of how fit you are for whatever it is you are doing.
So, you can measure your important fitness through resting and recovery heart rates, blood pressure, cholesterol levels and the like.
You might be right about the gate thing, but I can't see too many doctors installing them in their consulting rooms somehow.
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23-06-2015, 09:06 PM,
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Sweder
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RE: June... my goodness how the time has flewn
Sessions like these - where you could easily have blown it out and gone to the pub - count for more than you'd imagine.
Nice work.
The harder the conflict, the more glorious the triumph
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25-06-2015, 05:58 AM,
(This post was last modified: 25-06-2015, 06:01 AM by Sweder.)
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Sweder
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Posts: 6,577
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RE: June... my goodness how the time has flewn
Beach running, very Chariots of Fire. Tried some in Brazil, towards the end of a rather challenging 15k. I hadn't figured on the sand having the heat of a thousand suns, or that the waves might arrive with such alacrity as I was distracted by the local, ah, fauna. A tale told here.
Anyway, good on you for not allowing me to make so much as a dent in your mileage this week.
Safe travels.
The harder the conflict, the more glorious the triumph
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