Category Archives: running

Stop and go

I’ve written and posted a lot about my experience as a runner.  You might have noticed a significant lack of, “Yippee, I finished my marathon” posts.  In late January and early February, as I started what I consider my “really long runs” I started having pain.

I couldn’t sleep well because joints and muscles were complaining at night.  I felt pretty good during the day but when my body and mind had time to rest, the complaints came loud and clear.  Additionally, my run times were getting significantly worse.  I’ve never worried about being a slow runner, or even a slow walk/runner, but I was losing time in a big way.  On my 18 mile run, some of my miles were a full 5 minutes slower than regular miles.  It was grim.

My instincts told me I needed to stop trying to get to the marathon and listen to my body.  I checked with a friend who coaches college runners, and he agreed.  He told me that my base mileage wasn’t sufficient to support the marathon training.

Here’s what that means:

  • I was running 3 mid-week runs averaging about 10 miles total
  • I need to be running 3 mid-week runs that average around 20 miles total before I add on the marathon long runs.

I was under-prepared and my body knew it.

It was a sad, rainy Sunday afternoon when I sat down at my computer and cancelled my registration for the New Orleans Marathon.

I cried a lot.

But I also had the sense that I’d done the right thing, and that by listening to my body, I had avoided real injury.

Sometimes, it’s really difficult to do the right thing.  I had to put aside what I wanted to be true and just look at what was really true.  I had good feedback from my body.  It took weeks for all the aches to stop, but I am now pain-free.

My new challenge is now to start running again.  That seems ironic to me.  I struggled to let myself not run 22 miles, now I’m struggling to get out the door to do 2 easy miles.  Maybe I’m afraid they won’t be “easy” or perhaps I’m afraid I can’t really run 2 miles.  I don’t fully understand it.

Let's go!

But sometime this weekend, I’m going to lace up my shoes, turn up the volume on my iPod and get a road-level view of the wildflowers.  Since my mileage goal is low – 2 miles with a rest break in between mile 1 & 2, it’s not going to take me long to do the run.  In fact, I’m certain that writing and publishing this post will take longer than that run.  But it’ll be a big run in terms of conquering fear, and I’m looking forward to a new beginning.

Inside my head…

I signed up to run a marathon in New Orleans. This is a sampling of my daily mental preparation.

“There’s no way I can run a marathon.”

“I can do it, I can run a marathon.”

“26.2 miles – you have to be joking.”

“I think I can do it.”

“It’s going to be hard and maybe scary.”

“I can do it.”

“Are you crazy?”

“Just a little further every run and I’ll have it.”

“No way.”

“Way.”

Some days it ends with “No way,” others, “Way.”  

Argh.

Hey, I’m a Guest Blogger!

My pal, Jennifer Luitwieler, invited me to be a guest blogger – the subject:  why I run.

I used to teach with Jennifer’s husband Kurt, and Jennifer and I have struck up a friendship on Facebook and DailyMile.  Jennifer is bright, witty, and a good person.  She is also a writer with a new book coming out this fall.   I can’t wait to read her book, and in the meantime, I hope you’ll check out her blog and of course, read my piece:   Why I Run.

Tales From the Road

Friends of this blog know that I committed to running a half marathon in honor of my 50th birthday. Although I originally planned to run the 1/2 in November 2011, I decided that was far too long to wait so I signed up for, and ran, the Zooma Women’s 1/2 Marathon in April – 4 days before my 50th birthday.

I haven’t blogged much since I started preparing for the race, due in part to the time it took to get ready.  I’m always a little hesitant to use the word “race” because I’m a slow runner.  So the mornings when I would normally blog or tweet, I was outside somewhere, running and walking and generally enjoying myself.  I remember Roger Soler telling me that he doesn’t run marathons any more because of the time it takes to train.  I understand what that means now.  If you go out and run 8 miles, it takes the time to do the run, and then the rest of the day to lay around and be exhausted.  Okay, probably not for Roger Soler, but that’s my general training plan.

Cynthia McKenna on Garden Gate Blog

This is me just before I ran 8 miles, with a little help from Kendall Jackson

I was afraid that this blog would turn into a blog about running and I didn’t really want that to be the focus.  Now it’s June and I think skipping the “blogging about running” was a mistake.  I learned so much from the training and running, lessons that can be applied to other aspects of life.  I missed out by not sharing them.  So here’s the plan:  I’m going to blog about running, and hope you’ll come along for the ride.  There will be regular “Garden Gate” type posts too,  but writing about running will free up some of my brain space and besides, I think it’ll be fun.

The single biggest lesson I’ve learned (so far) is that I’m strong.  I mean that in a physical sense.  I can run 14 miles and not die.  I can run when the weather is cold or hot or really windy – it might not be pleasant, but I’m strong enough to push through it and “get ‘er done.”

I’m also strong emotionally.  I had knowledge of my emotional strength before taking on the 1/2 marathon, but I have a “don’t give up” spirit that I haven’t been tapping into enough.  My training for the 1/2 marathon generally meant that I’d get dropped off miles from my house, and I’d have to get home.  I could run, I could walk, I could crawl if necessary, but the only way home was “through.”  I had to run through my fear of failure, through my aches (and internal whines about being much too old for this sort of thing), through legs feeling like lead, through disappointment that I wasn’t running an 8 minute mile (man I’d love to do that.)

Katy Perry’s Firework is on my running playlist and includes this lyric:

“It’s always been inside of you, now it’s time to let it through.”

That sums it up for me.  We have inner strength that we don’t necessarily use and it’s time to let it out.

You gotta ignite the light and let it shine!

Baby,  You’re a Firework!