Stumbling across my first finish line
After years of being reluctant to do anything resembling "impact cardio" due to a belief that my knees could not handle it, I decided in mid-May to take up running as an addition to my overall health and well-being program. I discoverd two things very quickly: first, my body is much more resilient to the pounding on concrete than I had thought, and second, I am more stubborn (or stupid) than I am willing to admit.
The running itself posed no problems and I felt that I was capable to complete and possibly compete in a sanctioned race. On May 31 I committed myself to a 5k run that was far enough off in advance (Oct. 19) that I could prepare myself. One problem was that I did not know anything about training for a race as up until now all I had basically done in terms of fitness was based in a gym. I knew about weights (I have some muscle), I knew about cardio (I had managed to burn off some of my fat), and I had some vague ideas about nutrition, but I did not have a clue about what runners do other than get from point A to point B as fast as possible.
This is where I made my first mistake. Rather than actually seek out someone to help me -and there are plently on qualified and accessible individuals in my city- I thought it would be enough to print off a training program from Runner’s World.com. On top of that, I thought the beginner’s program was not challenging enough and chose a rather difficult 14 week intermediate program. Things went well until two weeks later I ended up in physio after blowing out my left knee.
I got over that obstacle fairly quickly and scaled down my weekly miles. This is where I made my second mistake. I had eight weeks to go and convinced myself that I had to make up for lost time so I increased the intensity of my training and made adjustments to the program where I decided they were necessary. Ten days later I was back in physio with a blown right knee.
With three weeks left to race my training consisted of one day of speed work (3×1200m repeats for example) and one day of running at an easy pace for 6-7 km. All other work was done on a stationary bike to keep my heart rate high enough so I could be in some kind of condition to race.
This is when I made my third mistake. I figured out that the speed I could maintain during repeats could, in theory, enable me to complete a 20 minute 5k. Now, these repeats have rest period in between which one jogs in order to recover for the next sprint. Totally irrelevant, I thought. I proceeded to shoot my mouth off to anyone that would listen that I would be finishing in under 20 minutes. It is one thing to have the encouragement of others and setting a standard as a motivator to meet those expectations. It is quite something else to assure that you will accomplish something without having the faintest idea of whether you can reasonably reach that goal or you are an idiot for even suggesting it.
I’ll admit that I was nervous several days before the race and that I had gotten myself in a jam and I would never heard the end of it if I came up short. I was calm the day of the race and inspite of problems that arose I had trained hard and regardless of the result I would walk away knowing much more about myself and the sport of running. I finished 40th out of 2073 runners at a time 20:32.
I’ve decided to make a serious attempt at a personal record for a race in March and looking back I don’t think 32 sec is insurmountable, but this time I won’t say what time I think I’m capable of.






October 20, 2008 at 1:18 pm
You go! Awesome! Good job…
October 23, 2008 at 1:10 pm
Hackweight.
As difficult as it is to follow a beginner program when you already in good physical condition for running, it is still important to do so. I’ll bet that your speedwork caused those pesky knee injuries! Only do speed workouts AFTER your have a base of at least three months of running. Otherwise, you’ll end up injured, with massive physio bills and potentially unable to run for months if not YEARS.
Obviously your finish time is excellent. Congrats. But you are also very lucky you didn’t cause more damage.
Go back and try in the beginner program - I’ll bet you’ll hit your 20 minutes and run injury free.
Best,
A fellow runner and running coach.
October 23, 2008 at 1:11 pm
Hackweight.
As difficult as it is to follow a beginner program when you already in good physical condition for running, it is still important to do so. I’ll bet that your speedwork caused those pesky knee injuries! Only do speed workouts AFTER your have a base of at least three months of running. Otherwise, you’ll end up injured, with massive physio bills and potentially unable to run for months if not YEARS.
Obviously your finish time is excellent. Congrats. But you are also very lucky you didn’t cause more damage.
Go back and try in the beginner program - I’ll bet you’ll hit your 20 minutes and run injury free.
Best,
A fellow runner and running coach.
October 23, 2008 at 4:17 pm
Ad astra per aspera. Thank you for your support.
October 24, 2008 at 5:40 pm
40 out of 2037 is darn good!