Showing posts with label schedule. Show all posts
Showing posts with label schedule. Show all posts

Monday, June 24, 2013

Good, Bad & Yummy 6/21-6/23

Another weekend come and gone like the wind. 

I'll be honest, this weekend wasn't fabulous BUT it ended better than it started so I will take it. General frustrations and emotions got the best of me a few times, which just made everything else seem that much harder. No point in sugar coating it all, but like I said....I snapped out of it and ended the weekend on a much better note.

Friday: Work, Lunch with Mom, more work, and errands. 4 mile run fueled by frustration.
Saturday: Airport 5k, 40 mile ride, dinner with John's family.
Sunday: out the door by 4:30 AM to head to 'Cuse to cheer at Ironman 70.3 Syracuse, time with John relaxing when I got home

The Good
*Great to see my mom for lunch on Friday, much needed!

*Did well at the Airport 5k, closer to my PR! Recap later this week.

*I got a 40 mile ride in, super hot but I did it.
(Also tested out my new +Saucony tri-top and it was perfect fit and comfy!)
*On said 40 mile ride, it was my first time clipping in~ no falls(yet).

*I got LUCKY and didn't lose anything out of my bike pack...after realizing around mile 14 that I had left it open....with my car key, money, license, spare tube, and bike tools. 


*Dinner and quality time with John's family was a lot of fun Saturday night. Good food, good company and good conversations :)

*Cheering at IM 70.3 Cuse was serious inspiration/motivation boost (more on this tomorrow)

*Got to spend the day with good friends yesterday who I don't see often. Was spend the day with Debbie while her hubby, and our other friends were racing. 

*Yesterday was 41 years since Title IX was passed. As some who benefited from this as a HS and college athlete, this makes me happy to see women's sports getting more recognition!

*We bought a juicer! I'm excited to have one in the house now so I can do it more often!


The Bad
*My emotions and frustrations got the best of me this weekend...multiple times. I felt like a toddler having meltdowns. 

*Almost got taken out by a construction truck on my ride Saturday (extremely close), this triggered one of the above meltdowns: It wasn't pretty.

*This heat has been brutal, dehydration, exhaustion and sunburn are all in effect. 

*I think my Garmin Forerunner 405 is on it's last leg. The strap is partially broken, and it barely holds a charge anymore :(

The Yummy
*Friday night I roasted a TON of veggies for the weekend.

*Friday night treat for myself? Adult version of cookies and milk.

*I wish I had taken a photo of Saturday's meal with John's family: BBQ Chicken, shrimp, pasta salad, salad, quinoa, with chocolate covered strawberries and Wegmans Ultimate Chocolate Cake for dessert!

*Extreme heat called for ice cream this weekend: multiple times.

*Our first batch of juice from our new juicer was a success, yummy and healthy!



What did you do this weekend?

When was the last time you really let your emotions get the best of you? (We all do it, that is life!)

Do you have a juicer? Any recipes I MUST try?

Thursday, May 23, 2013

Just a few things: Recovery, Scheduling, Volunteering & Throwback

Just a few quick things today :) 
Hope everyone is having a fabulous Thursday!

1. Marathon recovery is going well, my legs are feeling really good and I am excited to run later today for the first time. I was going to run yesterday...but I tried being a smart ass and going without caffeine yesterday...how did that end up? Post-Marathon-Fatigue + NO Caffeine + Stupid Hot weather = Laura taking a 2 hour nap at 4 pm  Then when I did wake up, ice cream won the battle over going out and getting even sweatier. I'll blame that on the cravings and the heat. Am I upset about this? Not one bit...I ran a 3:25 marathon 3 days prior, I'm pretty sure that gives me room to be lazy for a few days.
Good news is, a running hangover isn't much different from an alcohol hangover (well the running thing is clearly more healthy than consuming a bottle of wine and 6 jack and cokes like some people do every night), but that's besides the point.
Cure to a hangover: refuel, rehydrate, and rest. 

2. I'm taking this time right now to really get organized and get back on track with everything that I have going on. I'm still working on getting my home office set-up and organized, which will be a big help. Studying for 2 huge exams (Series 7--for my job, and my ACE Certified Personal Trainer Exam), and planning a wedding while maintaining 2 jobs requires a schedule. Since I opted not to run last night, I spent my time from 6 pm until about midnight studying and also making a study schedule. This thing is crazy detailed and it's exactly what I need.
Yep, this is what my summer study schedule looks like!
This is the 'master schedule', I also have it broken down and printed out for each week to keep track.
Hopefully I can stick to this better than I stick to training plans. 
3. I think my race schedule is going to be changing a little. As of right now I am supposed to be doing the Keuka Lake Intermediate Triathlon in a little over a week. This would be my first triathlon and a real training test for me for my upcoming Half-Ironman in July. I think I am going to forego this race. My tri-training really has taken a back seat the last few weeks and I want to go into my first tri as prepared as I can be. I found another tri of the same distance that is 2 weeks after Keuka, which would give me 2 extra weeks to prepare. I know that I could complete Keuka next weekend, but I want to feel comfortable and confident going into it. Another option I am considering is doing the sprint distance at Keuka which would be much more manageable for me, and then the Intermediate Distance 2 weeks later. The plus of that option is that it gives me 2 triathlons under my belt before heading into Musselman 70.3 in July. I will decide by the end of this weekend for sure on what I would like to do, I need to make the right decision for me.

4. After Volunteering Tuesday night at Corporate Challenge, I am really excited for this weekend. I had planned to volunteer for the Buffalo Marathon so I can watch people like Heather, and my cousin Krysten kick butt in their races. I finally got my "volunteer assignment" I will be road marshaling shortly before mile 3. That makes me really happy to be early on because I can see everyone early and then be done soon enough to jump on my bike and ride the course cheering and providing support for people I know. Please let me know if you are running so I can watch for you!!

5. Until last night I had totally forgotten that the Sehgahunda  trail marathon/relay was this weekend. John and I know quite a few people doing this race, including one of his best friends Mark. So we will be going down to Letchworth for the day to cheer and support everyone we know. It's going to be a really fun weekend. Watching 3 races this week is seriously just what I needed to recover mentally and emotionally from the marathon. Let me know if you are running this wicked hard trail marathon/relay and I'll make sure to watch/cheer for you!
This is how I feel about me & trail running.... hence the reason I will be cheering and not running.
If there is a rock or a branch hidden 6 feet underground, my feet and face will find it.  
You can see SOME of the dirt I got myself into in tonights race..
Throwback Thursday: This was me in 2010 finishing my first trail race...oh wait first trail run too. You can kind of see the mud. I was covered in dirt and blood (I fell like 5 times...good times.), ended up with a sprained ankle and some good bruises! For the record, just about EVERY.SINGLE.ONE. of my race finish line photos are of me stopping my watch. I should work on that. Oh, and I never did a trail race again after this, maybe one day...not anytime soon.
What is the weirdest craving you have had after a big race?
Any thoughts on my triathlon dilemma?
Who is racing this weekend?


Friday, May 3, 2013

The Runners 'normal'

There was that one time I informed you that no one who works in the resturant bizzzz get's excited about Friday...

I'd like to retract that statement, at least for myself. 

I've cut back my hours at the restaurant lately, 
between the office, training, studying, and life....
there just wasn't enough time. 
Much easier to justify now that my 'job' at the office, 
turned into a money maker career.
What does this mean?
I don't have to spend every Friday working 16-20 hours. 
The 27 Stages Of Getting Addicted To A Television Show

I occasionally work a Friday if they need me to,
if I don't have something going on that weekend.
But lets be real, its flippin' race season.
Nobody has time for extra work during race season.

Somehow I managed to finagle getting tonight off, 
even though I don't have a race or anything this weekend. 
Wait...
hold the mother flippin' phone...
No work (except during the day today), 
and no traveling or racing??

A normal weekend??!!?!?!
And then it hit me...
What do normal people do on a weekend?
mow the lawn?
clean the house?
maybe go grab dinner?
grocery shop?
watch cartoons?

Hmm...

Here's what my normal weekend is going to look like
roughly 40+ miles of running in 3 days
add in a bike ride or 2 [assuming I get my tire fixed today]
Swimming laps at least once 
Remodeling/painting the guestroom/my office (so excited!)
Drinks with friends tonight who are in town from VT(yes!)
Spending roughly 2 combined hours stretching/foam rolling
Runner shopping (it's like grocery shopping, but more carbs & epsom salts)
Possibly going to Imagine RIT with the H2B, his sister, her man and our nephew
Going to watch a kiddo's triathlon to cheer on friends daughter
Most likely work on some wedding planning...

I guess this is normal?

Okay, I get it...
normal for me...
is not so normal.

I'm actually really excited for this weekend.
No time schedule on when I need to do things.
Can do what I want, when I want.
Can bum in crappy clothes while painting/remodeling
(and not feel guilty)
Can enjoy a drink tonight with friends, instead of serving drinks.
Can spend time with my man :)
I think this is what the doctor ordered.

Oh, by the way...
Last night we went and saw the premier of
with this leading stud:

I thought it was a great movie, 
actually my favorite of the IM movies.
Lots of action, and fighting, 
and RDJ looking fierce.

What do you deem a "normal" weekend?

As runners, do we have our own sense of 'normal'?

Anyone racing or running long this weekend?








Monday, April 22, 2013

Good, Bad, Yummy 4/19-4/21

This weekend was...INSANE.
It was a great weekend, but the entire thing was on a strict time schedule 
which didn't leave much room for error (no room for error in some cases).
And the only way to describe how I feel today, TIRED.

Friday: 
Worked all day
Errands/packing for the weekend
Played a Game all night with J's friends for one friends Birthday

Saturday: 
10 mile Run with Hollie & Jen
Wedding Venue tour on Keuka Lake
Seneca 7 Packet pickup/pre-race briefing 
Pasta dinner with our relay team/goofing around all night

Sunday:
Seneca 7 Relay (Full recap of this to come tomorrow)

The Good
*Not working Friday night was a nice breath of fresh air.

*I actually got to relax Friday night and have a beer.

*They caught that monster of a terrorist. In a boat. (The jokes are endless.)

*Friday night I was sent this picture of my nephew in my mom's glasses. Priceless.

*Running with Hollie and Jen was great, nothing like running with 2 women who are insanely talented but the most down to earth people to spend time with...I wish we could run together more often.

*The Wedding Venue John and I toured Saturday was...amazing. I think we found a winner!

*Saturday night pasta dinner with out relay team was great. I knew all but 2 on the team, and by the end of the weekend I felt like I knew everyone for years. 

*Having an adorable nephew makes for great pre-race texts.
I got this text Sunday morning as a "good luck picture" of my Nephew from my sister.
*Seneca 7 falls under good category simply because I don't have an amazing category (I might have to make one). The race was one of the most fun things I have done in a long time, and I couldn't have asked for a better group of people to spend all weekend in close quarters with. We had a VERY fast team, which was incredibly inspirational...it took 7 runners (and 1 amazing chauffeur) 8 hours and 32 minutes to run 77.7 miles (6:34 average pace). 6th place out of 208 teams, BAM! I will write much more about all this tomorrow in a full recap, there is too much I don't want to leave out! 

The Bad
*I didn't get my run in as planned Friday afternoon, but I'm okay with it. But since it is a missed workout, we will file that under bad.
*The game we played Friday night for J's friends Birthday was... LONG. Let's just say it took 5+ hours and could have gone longer. It was fun but...yeah. 


*It snowed/hailed Saturday morning, who made Mother Nature mad?

*There were a few times yesterday things got stressful (we were going so fast, there were times it got difficult to get from checkpoint to checkpoint), it meant some sacrificing. We worked great as a team though which made us successful, but there were definitely some things on the course that made it hard! Stretching, warm-up/cool-down and proper fueling became challenging as the race went on and legs got closer together.

*My hamstring has a giant knot in it, that decided to show up halfway through the day yesterday (running fast, and multiple times and cramming in a van between probably didn't help)

*My stomach is NOT happy with me from this weekend (mainly yesterday), it was so confused as to what was going on. (run, ride in car, eat, cheer, repeat 3 times)

The Yummy
*Friday had some seriously yummy food bar stuff from Wegmans for dinner. 

*Double chocolate stout while playing the game Friday night...AMAZING.

*Sunday's relay was fueled by Bananas, brownies, cookies, and cheeseballs. It was amazing
For the record we had lots of healthy things too...but I will say, I DID eat 5 cheeseballs right before running a sub 20 5k on my second leg.
1lb. GONE after 77.7 miles and 7 runners.





 How was your weekend?
Any races/relays or fun things that you did?
What was your Good, Bad & Yummy for the weekend?





Friday, April 19, 2013

Friday recap and facts

I can't believe it is Friday already....
As I talked about yesterday though, at some point we must carry on.
As a part of the running community we run on and never forget what happened,
but honor it by moving forward and standing together in support.

Quick recap of the week so far

Monday:
Work both Jobs all day
Night time run (4 mi)[7:56,7:41,7:25,7:25]

Tuesday:
Morning run (4 mi)[8:12,7:56,7:41,7:35]
Work all day
Afternoon run (4 mi)[8:20,7:58,7:47,7:47]
Studied/relaxed all night

Wednesday:
Work all day
40 minute ride outside (11.38 mi)[17.1 mph]
Play date with a 4 year old (J's nephew)
Studied for Series 7
Wednesday's post-ride
Thursday:
Work all day
Afternoon run (5 mi)[8:05,7:42,7:37,7:23,6:56]
Studied all night for my Series 7
Sweaty Thursday! 78 and sunny!

Today marks 1 month until marathon #5 , I've said it before and I'll say it again, I am not going to be prepared as I should for this. The last few weeks have been off and I know that will affect it.  I am not going into the race with a PR goal (but that was always the plan for this race), it's another marathon and another long run. After lots of thinking, and bouncing ideas off some people... my plan for the next few weeks is to just be consistently running. I do NOT plan on tapering much for the race, maybe a few days (with the exception of biking, I most likely will not bike the week of the race, need fresh quads). Cleveland is not my goal race...Musselman 70.3 is(July), therefore killing myself  for a better time in Cleveland next month wont do my any good.

As for the duathlon I am doing next weekend, let's just say it won't be pretty. I'll make it happen, but I am very ill-prepared for it. I won't make excuses like some people will do, I will simply say I haven't been dedicating enough time for it lately and that is at the fault of no one but myself. My goal is to finish, and hopefully not fall on the bike or during transition.  If I can do that, I'll be a happy girl.

Weekend plans:
Friday:
Work all day
Afternoon run planned (3-5 mi)
Afternoon ride planned (30-45 minutes)
Spending night playing games with J and his friends 

Saturday:
Morning run planned (maybe 10 mi) with Hollie and Jen
Baking some yummy stuff for tomorrow
12:30 meeting with a possible wedding venue on Keuka Lake(eek!)
2pm Seneca 7 pre-race meeting/packet pickup
Spending the night on Seneca lake with the rest of our Seneca 7 relay team!

Sunday:
Seneca 7 relay! (my first road relay!)
I am runner #7, so I run legs 7,14 and finish it off with 21.
I will be running a total of 10.9 miles 
(each person runs 3 times, with a total of 9.4-12.1 miles)
My first leg is 4.1, 2nd is 3.1 and my final leg is 3.7
Cheer for team "Sloppy Sevenths!" :):):)

Some Friday Facts:
  • 1 month until Cleveland Marathon
  • 86 days until my first Half-Ironman 
  • 505 days until our wedding (tentatively!)
  • Fact: I heard a girl last night at Barnes & Noble telling her friend that she went to go for a run, and collapsed at 1 mile and had to call for a ride. Then she said how she 'googled' it and found out it was because she ate a salad before she ran, and that its a common problem among runners and that it happens to elites all the time when they eat salads before they run....I kid you not, I smacked my forehead and wanted to pull her hair for this. Seriously ladies, don't make yourself sound like an idiot, I highly doubt you read that on the internet, and if so, you need to learn to judge quality of info! [my assessment: she got tired at mile 1 and called for a ride, due to the fact that she is overweight & out of shape and it was extremely hot yesterday...keep running, it will get easier and you will get healthier and not have to make up stupid excuses why you can't run more than a mile. I am not trying to be insensitive or mean, I'm simply stating that it won't get easier until you keep working at it, and making stupid excuses isn't fooling anyone]
  • Less than a week until I get to see my baby nephew again! Isn't he just the cutest thing EVER! ( No, I am not biased...he really is the cutest)



Boston Tribute Updates: I am loving all of the planned tribute runs around the country, makes me proud to be a runner. I am implementing my own small little tribute...I am going to be making some blue/yellow ribbon pins to wear at races over my heart.... something little but sentimental. Let me know if you want one or have any ideas (I'll post a picture when I get one made up)!

What are your plans for the weekend?
Have you ever done a road relay (Ragnar, etc.) before?
Whats the lamest excuse you have heard before regarding someone's workouts?





Thursday, April 18, 2013

We carry on...


Life has been anything but simple lately,
I can't begin to describe everything going on.
There are times I feel like I am getting through it,
and times I struggle more than I will ever show.
Crazy schedules, more to-do's than time in a day, motivation levels on a roller coaster, 
sometimes we have to step back and make a plan.

I sat down with my therapist this morning, 
realizing it had been far too long since I had done this.
Okay, maybe not that long (a few weeks).
But the last few weeks have proved to be eventful,
and life altering.
My words were coming out a million miles a minute, 
she had to tell me to slow down and breathe.
We brushed over everything that has been going on, 
and slowly tackled each one...HEAD ON.
The biggest thing that came out of this mornings session:
I must more forward, and carry on.
Despite everything going on, we can't forget about ourselves.

The next few weeks I am going to be focusing on some issues, 
and really trying to get where I want to be.
Time to pick up the pieces of everything 
and put them back together.

The biggest thing I need to do is get more organized.
I have so much going on right now that it's hard to keep track of...well...anything.
Good thing is that will be much easier in next few weeks.
Why's that?
Because at this point we have 5 (yes, 5) people living in our house, 
with....1 bathroom (no, I didn't stutter).
What's a bigger issue than that,
I don't have a room for my things.
Currently I'm living out of a dresser, and half a closet.
My belongings are in the garage.
I NEVER know where anything is, 
and I don't have a space to call my own.
In a few weeks, 5 goes down to 4 people!(4 to 3 in June!)
Biggest thing that happens, I GET A ROOM!
It will be an office/guestroom/Laura-cave.
I can't begin to describe how much this will help me.
A place for me to be organized, 
place to study, 
place to relax and be alone if need be,
a place for Hollie to stay when she visits
 (since she has to be moving so damn far away).
Simply put, I can't wait to make this house, feel like home.

[For the record, when I moved in with my fiance, 
I knew this was going to be the case.
I knew it would be hard, 
and I knew it would be rude to count the days (out loud) 
until I had a room for my things. 
Either way, life gets easier soon.]

Now I should probably talk about some fitness things,
because it's no secret I haven't been on track lately.
Marathon #5 is a month from tomorrow.
I should probably take it more seriously, hmm...better go for a run later.
My first multi-sport event (duathlon) is in a week and a half 
[hmm...how do those transitions work?]
My only best ab workout lately was last weekend with the stomach bug.
My first triathlon is in 2 months, and well...I better take the floaties off.
 (I think they frown upon those, let me know if I am wrong)

Okay so that makes it sound worse than it really is,
 but honestly I know I am not where I should be. 
The thing I can tell you though, is I won't stop until I get there. 

One thing I REALLY need to learn.
How to ask for help.
If you have figured out a way to do this, 
please let me know.

So bring on the organizing.
Bring on the studying.
Bring on the workouts.
Bring on the hard talks.
Bring on the little sleep and lots of work.
Bring on the emotions from whats going on in the world.
That emotion...yeah...it means were alive.

We all have things going on, 
my lack of organization and crazy busy life
yeah they're nothing compared to some.
My reaction to Monday's horrible events, 
overwhelmed and emotional to say the least....
and I wasn't even there.
I can't change what happened, 
and I can't do much to help those who experienced it.
What I can do is be grateful for all that I have,
and use my ability to run and ride and be active
 in honor of those affected by Boston.
Each run...is for me...and for Boston.
Each ride...is for me...and for Boston.
I will stand by my running family, 
even though I have so much going on in life,
I will NEVER be too busy to help my family/community.



How do you stay organized?
With the busy lives we all carry, how do you stay sane?

What are you doing to cope with everything going on?
How are you paying tribute to those affected?
Share your pictures, tribute runs, etc. (I'd love to see & Share!)




Thursday, April 4, 2013

Cookie-Cutter Training Plans



There are plenty of people who are:

Faster
Skinnier

Smarter
more experienced
BUT that's life. Not just in running.
& that doesn't mean I can't help people (or myself).

My secret: I do what works for me


THERE IS NO COOKIE-CUTTER TRAINING PLAN!

When I started training for my first half-marathon: I had no clue what to do, I just kind of ran a few times a week and tried to get some longer runs in, and that worked for my first.

When I started training for my first marathon: I knew I couldn't wing it, distance is not something that comes easy to me. So I looked on every site, and read about all different plans. I was frustrated, I didn't like anything I was seeing and wasn't sure how I was going to be able to pull it off. I ended up going with Runners World Smart Coach, you input race date, recent race time, how much and how hard you want to run and it comes up with a plan for you. It's a free plan (they also offer a paid version), and it worked pretty well for my first. [I am NOT bashing the RW smart coach, I think it's great as long as you know that you need to make it work for you]

 But the thing is, I found myself moving things around for my schedule, and changing things when I was tired or sore, and by the end it looked nothing like it did when it started.

Every training plan I have done, I have altered it...constantly

You need to find what works for you.

Some people hit 40 mile weeks and they are injured and over-training, 
while others feel most comfortable at 40 mile weeks. 

Some people can do only one 20+ run before the race, 
and others need more like 2-4 to feel comfortable at distance come race day.

First timers don't really need a lot of speed-work in their training, 
but training for improving your time you will need to put some in your plan.

One of my biggest pet peeves is:
"you run so fast all the time, don't you know you need easy miles too"
I really get annoyed when people tell me what my pace should be.
According to this Training Pace caclulator
I used my most recent marathon time, and these are the paces they gave me...
I agree with some of these, but my issue is that this forces you to be "numbers driven".
I run more by feel (yes I do get focused on numbers [more on mileage than pace], 
it's ingrained in me). 
When I go into a run, I know if I want Easy/tempo/interval etc. and I find a pace that feels comfortable for what it is supposed to be.

For example: I start an 'easy run' and 7:45 feels incredibly comfortable and easy and doesn't take much effort, I'll stick with that instead of forcing myself to slow down. As long as I am not pushing to get to that pace, and I am not over exerting myself, I don't see why I can't go with what feels easy. There are other days 9 minutes is the only thing that feels easy, so I go with it

Yes there is something to be said for slowing yourself down and making sure you are going super easy, but in reality no "easy pace" will be easy every day. We all have good days and bad days and sometimes we feel more comfortable a little faster or slower. LISTEN TO YOUR BODY.

Our bodies are amazing things, they can do so much, and more importantly they can tell us so much. They're the best tool we have and we often shut it up and take it for granted. 
If you're feeling good, mentally and physically go with the pace that's comfortable, if something is bothering you or your feeling sluggish then take it easier.
No pace is perfect for all of your runs. 
You don't drive the same speed on the same road every time right?
You slow down or speed up based on the conditions...same with running.
If it's icy and crappy out, you'll slow down so you don't slip and fall. Or if your body isn't feeling great and you have a pain somewhere, you won't be doing that tempo run, or your easy pace may be 30 seconds/mile slower than normal. 


My other issue with training: NEVER changing the plan.
There's a lot to be said about making a plan and sticking to it.
There's also a lot to be said about taking it as it comes and going with the flow.
Life happens, injuries happen, off days happen, the fact is: 
YOU ARE GOING TO MISS A WORKOUT OR CHANGE ONE.
For anyone who says they NEVER miss or change a workout, you are full of crap.
You might not admit it to people, you might write it up on Dailymile that the run went perfectly as planned, but who are you kidding? No one will fault you for saying you had to change something, or you didn't hit the paces you planned, none of us are perfect.

At the beginning of a training cycle I sit down and make a plan.
I break out the computer and the books and the snacks 
and spend HOURS piecing the training puzzle together.
I think about what my work schedule is, what personal things I will have going on. Also making sure to have a step-back week every few weeks to give the body a break.
If you look at the plan I am using now, that was made in January when this photo was taken...you wouldn't recognize it.
Life happens, sick happens, 
personal things happen. 
Plans change, and I go with it.
I change my plan WEEKLY.

Every Sunday night I sit down and see what I have planned for the week.
Then I look at my work schedule, and appointments and then I think about how I am feeling.
Usually the mileage stays roughly the same, but divided up between runs differently. 
Sometimes I will throw in some extra cross training; sometimes it happens sometimes it doesn't. 
Maybe I haven't been feeling well and I need a few days rest,
 or need to take out the tempo run and make it easy run.
There are times I won't change a thing and will force myself to stick to original plan.
There is a lot to be said about forcing yourself to do something you don't feel like,
 but you have to remember that this is also usually when injuries happen. 
If you are physically tired or feeling some pain somewhere, 
pushing through is not always the best option. 

You have to learn to tell the difference.
*Am I just being a baby and over-tired and whining? GO RUN
*Am I overtired from training so much and not sleeping enough? You might need some rest.
*Is that pain in my leg an injury or just a problem? Maybe cut back the mileage or slow down.
*Wow, did someone go Tonya Harding on my legs? REST.
Learning to listen to your body and adjusting your plan accordingly can mean the difference between running a race (maybe your fastest, maybe not) or not getting to the starting line at all (injury, or something else).

Like I said before, I am no expert.
There is nothing that makes me more qualified than a baboon to be telling you this information.
But here is what I can tell you:

I have run 4 marathons: each was a PR. ( I know this will not be the case all the time)
I have run 10+ half marathons: not all were PR's, but I can pinpoint exactly where I wen't wrong each time it wasn't (fueling, ill-preparedness, etc.)
I have a Boston Qualifying Marathon time...by over 14 minutes: It took me 4 tries (#3 would have been a BQ had they not changed the standards).
My last marathon was a 16 minute PR & I ran the second half of the race 7 minutes faster than the first (progression training works well for me)
I started out just like everyone else: yes I ran in high school and college, but NOT distance. I had to  face the fear of  my first 5k, and the fear of my first double digit run, and struggle through my first 20 miler. I have bonked races, I have fallen down, I have been injured, I have struggled.

I am not superhuman, I have worked hard to get where I am.
I've had lots of help along the way, and still ask for it all the time.
I didn't get where I am, 
by using what works for someone else.
My success is by my own standards, and on my own terms.

My running became better when:
*I started running for myself
*running based on how I feel
*I stopped "running by the numbers" all the time
*letting others tell me what is right for me

Cookie-cutter training plans are general guidelines 
and remind me of control freaks.
They tell you when to run
how fast to run
how far to run
when to rest.
Having a guide to follow is good, especially when you're just getting into it. 
But you need to make sure that guide has YOUR best interest at heart.
You need to make sure you are taken care of and you are comfortable. 
You need to be honest with yourself and figure out what works for you.
No one can tell you how to run your life.
People like that are toxic, and so are cookie-cutter training plans.
Remember you are in control, ask for help when you need it,
make sure your sources of help are true to you.


Some things about cookie cutter plans:
~If everyone followed that same plan out of the back of the book: you would all still run different times(doesn't that tell you something?)
~They don't take into account your age, weight, gender, past injuries, etc. (these are important)
~Every person is built differently, some need more long runs and some react better to more runs with lower average miles/run.
~Just because you have run one, doesn't mean you're ready for a higher level plan
~Just because you have never run one, doesn't mean you need the lowest/easiest plan out there.

When making a training plan, some things to consider:
~Mileage
~Your work schedule
~Things going on in personal life
~Family schedule/life
~Amount of sleep you need?
~How much time you can truly commit to training?
~What paces are most comfortable for you?
~Past injuries/ current health issues
~How many rest days you might need?
~What is your goal race?
~What is your goal time for the race (and pace)?
~Is your goal to finish? or to better your time?
~Who is your go-to person for help/support?
~What is your current fitness level and endurance level?



What are things you consider when making a training plan?

How do you feel about cookie-cutter training plans?









Monday, March 11, 2013

5k, 20 miler, Monster Trucks & more!



Oh boy was this an eventful weekend! Top it off with losing an hour, lets just say there are 2 extra shots of espresso in my latte this morning (and that may not even be enough).

Friday: Typical, worked 16 hours between both jobs, came home and crashed.
Saturday: up early, had a 20 mile run with a 5k race in the middle of it.
Saturday Night: Monster Jam Monster Truck Rally with my Fiance, his brother, sister and her man and their 4 year old son (Hence the reason we were going to this....)
Sunday: Baby shower for my sister (I made a great running themed gift!!)
Sunday Night: Went to the Rochester Auditorium Theater and saw the musical "Book of Mormon", then dinner out

Saturday's run was a 20 mile 5k sandwich, not typical way to get 20 miles in, but either way I got the miles in and that's what matters....It's not like I break all of my long runs up like this, not many of them at all actually. But it was important to me to do the race in my hometown to support a program I used to be a part of, and still get my training miles in.

This was the first time they have done this race, and it was to benefit the soccer program at my Alma Mater. For a first time race it was very well run, and had 202 people finish the race! It was great to see so many people I know, and see so many people becoming more active. The winning male time was 17:14, and I took it for the females in 20:00. Not a PR for me, but I was super happy with this time, as it is my first race of the year. Training the way I have been is paying off. I may be dysfunctional at best with my training, but obviously hard work pays off.



Pre-race run: 6.68 miles @ 8:13 average pace
Race: 3.1 miles in 20:00 (6:27 pace)
Post-Race run: 10.6 miles @ 8:03 average pace

Total: 20.4 miles @ 7:51 Average Pace

 Me and a group of wonderful ladies from my hometown who have taken up running....(I am 2nd from Left)
While collecting my award for winning, this was my "oh hey" when the guy on the left called my name and was like "wait, Laura Anderson who I used to coach in soccer when you were little", hence the "oh hey that's me" look, everyone got a kick out of it, he kept saying "you're all grown up, and fast...you always could run circles around everyone on the field"

Moving on....Saturday Night
Saturday nights festivities, you know the monster trucks and the family time and food.....I have never been to a show like this before but I have to admit it was entertaining. Most importantly it was great to spend time with my "future" family, even though I already think of them as family. J's nephew is the cutest little 4 year old ever (I'm not bias...), and I spent most of the show with him on my lap as he was mesmerized by the trucks. For the record, if you like people watching as much as I do, grab a ticket for one of these things, we were surrounded by a plethora of different kinds of people (not that this surprised me)

 When a 4 year old asks you to put on a race car hat, you must kindly oblige. Oh, and I ate cotton candy for the first time in 20 years....

And....now to Sunday
On Friday I posted  that I had my sister's baby shower this weekend and that I was making her a RUNNING THEMED BABY SHOWER GIFT, so to my running friends, you should appreciate this. Again this was not the only thing I got her, but this was her non-boring gift ( I got her the car seats and stroller...things she needs, and need to keep my little nephew to be, safe). My sister and I have an odd relationship, we love each other and will always be there for each other no matter what though.
 I made onesies (color printer, and iron on transfers)
"First steps today, 26.2 tomorrow", "my mommy & aunt are faster than you" (with a picture of my sister and I from a race), "Who fartleked", "Mommy's future running buddy", "Daddy's future cycling buddy", "When I am cranky I take a nap, when mommy is cranky I send her for a run"...also made a few that said "I love my aunt" (duh.)
"Race Bibs" (Clever, I know!)
"Race 4 Huggs" (Hugg is my sisters last name), Diaper Dash and the bib # is their anniversary, A medal, Go green 5k, Pumpkins in the Park 5k (My sister and I always do this race together), I <3 to run, Boston 26.2 (My sister qualified a few years ago but didn't go because she was in fertility treatments), and Baby Steps 5k.
 This was the "Baby Race Kit" that I put together for my sister.
Bottles (Hydration), Baby Food (GU), Sneakers, Ice pack, Baby cereal with vitamins in it (Carbs and supplements), Bib's and pins, Diaper Rash Spray (Because no one likes Chaffing), all of the onesies I made, Finish Line says April 2013 (When she is due).

What would a baby shower be without Cake? Folks, I know some people say they wont eat cake because they are runners, let's be serious I eat cake, I run, I eat some more cake and I seem to be doing just fine. So get off your high horses you non-cake eaters.


Sunday Night
The show was incredible, funny, crude and very entertaining. I laughed through the whole thing, and also laughed at watching people's reactions to things. But here is the thing, folks it was created by the same people who made "Southpark", what did you expect, sunshine and daisies? Some people were clearly not amused (It mocks religion, and well...everything else under the sun), I get we all have our beliefs, but you have to be able to have a sense of humor and laugh at things.







So my first 20 miler of the year/ this training session is done, and it was on a great weekend. May have been an unconventional way to do it but the fact is I got the miles in and had a wonderful weekend. I call that a success.

What did you do this weekend? Did anyone race or do anything fun??

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Beating the Madness & PLRB

So let me share a secret with you, Monday's crap-tastic madness almost got the best of me yesterday. There are a few reasons for this, including why it has to do with fitness/running, and life obviously. I managed to survive the madness and end the day on a good note, by doing some things that work for me, getting a little sweat time in, indulging in some crap food, and with support from my 'team'.

Reasons Yesterday ALMOST got the best of me

  1. It was Monday, and as Monday's go, it's a dumb day.
    1. If you want a reason to laugh at me, listen to this song...."C'est La Vie" By Shania Twain. It has my thoughts on Monday nailed down. My mom and I used to listen (and sing..duh) to this song a lot when she would drive me to school when I was in Jr.High/High school(crap..I'm aging myself)....but if you really want to laugh at me.... Listen to "River of Dreams" by Billy Joel (it has nothing to do with monday madness), Mom and I used to sing this one in the car when I was really little (I was 6 when it came out).
  2. Okay now that you're done laughing at me, back to reasons yesterday was just not my day. Had to deal with stupid things at work, and by stupid I mean clients who don't do what I tell them to do, and then yell at me when things take longer. (If your financial planner, or anyone handling your accounts tells you to fill out paperwork and send it in ASAP, DO IT. Because your account won't magically do what needs to be done without it.)
  3. Traffic was crappy as all hell. I live 3.9 miles from my office ( I know, crazy long right?), well it normally takes me 15 minutes or so to get to work ( love morning traffic). Yesterday it took me 32 minutes. If you're like me and looking at those numbers, you'd realize that I could have run 3.9 miles in less than 32 minutes. 
  4. Post-Long-Run-Blues. Now some of you may have heard of this and some of you may not have. I noticed this a few years ago when I started doing longer runs training for my first marathon. The day after a long run, feeling very tired (expected), agitated, and just not myself by any means. At first I just thought it was fatigue, but after seeing it more and more and reading about other people dealing with it, I realized it was more than that. Long runs put your body and mind through a lot, and post-long-run-blues is actually more common than you would think. Some people get it the same day as their run, I notice I get it the following day. I struggled a lot with this for a while, until my doctor suggested choline supplements. I read more about it, in articles like this one : Choline Supplementation, which I found to be helpful in understanding it more. Taking Choline supplements really helped diminish my post-long run blues.  While training for Marathons 2-4 I didn't have any issues with PLRB so I didn't supplement, but now training for #5 , the blues are back and I'll be hitting GNC later today to stock up on Choline. During your long runs, you blood-choline levels go down, and low levels can lead to fatigue, and even mental issues such as depression and anxiety (Cue PLRB). Like I said, not everyone gets this, and those who do might see it happen the day of or the days following a long run. I have done a lot of research on PLRB (my term for it), choline supplements and other contributing factors, if you want to know more, comment or email me and I will gladly share.
  5. General Exhaustion. As I have mentioned before I am a very busy person, 2 jobs, planning a wedding, training, everything. There are times this wears you down, especially when at least 2 days a week I work both jobs, which makes for a 14-16 hour work day(not including training time, and getting ready). Those 2 days are usually sandwiched around the weekend (Friday and Monday), and that makes for 4 long days in a row (Saturday's and Sundays I usually have a lot going on). Yesterday I was not in the mood for a long day, to be honest I don't think I could have done it without screaming, or crying or falling asleep at the wheel. Luckily I was able to get someone to cover my shift last night so I my 14-16 hour day was cut in half, actually more.
  6. Friend Drama: I won't go into detail about this to spare everyone from being involved in drama. But you should know this was something weighing on my mind, and had me feeling less than fabulous.

After getting someone to cover my shift, I decided I was going to take an even shorter day...Sue me. I got what I could done at the office and was gone. But by doing some things for me, I was able to beat some of the madness out of myself. 




Anti-Madness/Anti-PLRB Routine
  1. Do something for someone else: I went to BuyBuyBaby and A.C.Moore to get things to make for my sisters baby shower this weekend. Being giving always makes you feel a little happier.
  2. Indulge in something: Totally grabbed a diet Pepsi (I don't drink a lot of soda), Pretzel M&M's and sat in my car inhaling them (while I got my oil changed). 
  3. Do something for yourself: When I got home, early afternoon... I took my shoes off, kicked my feet up, put in season 4 of Alias and watched 2 episodes, completley ignored my phone and laptop and just got lost in mindless TV while not moving a muscle.
  4. Sweat it out: Besides Choline supplements one of the things that helps me with PLRB is to sweat a little even if it means working out on a rest day. Giving your body a little boost ("exercise gives you endorphins, endorphins make people happy, happy people just don't shoot their husbands".....hmm I may need to watch that movie later.) I didn't kill myself in a long workout, but I gave myself a little sweat time on the bike (30 minutes), 15 minutes of core fitness, and then ran a mile.  Even a little workout can boost your mood.
    1. With this I will also say...sometimes the best way to beat the madness is to take a day off. Even if you have a workout planned, sometimes you're body is in madness mode because it needs rest. Yesterday was supposed to be rest day so I worked out a little to help me, sometimes making a workout day a rest day is what you need, learn to listen to your body...it doesn't enter madness mode for no reason, it's trying to tell you something so LISTEN.
  5. Take a step back (from work): This is when I got someone to work for me at night, and took an early day at the office. Sometimes you need to back away. Madness mode doesn't make for a productive employee.
  6. Be quiet ( give yourself time to think and process everything going on): shut off the phone and laptop for a bit, read a book, relax, don't worry about analyzing anything, just breathe and embrace some peaceful time. I went from 3pm-7pm(when J got home) without speaking a word, 1st of all I avoided human contact once I got home, and I gave myself alone time.
  7. Get some rest: This could mean going to bed at 8 pm, which I was going to do...(but then Biggest Loser came on). Or getting some rest could mean simply relaxing, those chores and things that need to be done, they can wait. Kick your feet up and allow yourself to be lazy, you work hard, you earned a little down time.

Let me also say this, I have one kick ass Fiance....all I told him yesterday before I left work was that I wasn't in a great mood and that I wasn't going to be working the rest of the day. Here's how he handles this....
 ( We always say how we are a team, both being athletes, it's just how we are, nerds and I love it.)
He came home from work around 7 with dinner from Panera (including ever fattening mac& cheese...my favorite), chocolate (duh), Starbucks (enabling my addiction), and a giant hug....my mood was instantly better, mainly because seeing him does that, but because he knows the things that make me happy (especially the hug). Having an off day can be made so much better, just by having support and understanding from the main people in your life.

I spent the rest of the night laying in bed, eating fattening food, tearing up watching the Biggest Loser (Danni is my absolute favorite, Jackson and Jeff crack me up, Gina annoys the crap out of me...), and being grateful for the fact that I have a lot of good things in my life, and that tomorrow (today) is a new day. I ended the day feeling better than I started, that is when you know you beat the madness and didn't let it get the best of you.



So, Question: Have you ever felt Post-Long-Run-Blues? 

What puts you into Madness Mode (Monday anyone?) and how do you get out of it?


For the record, I posted last week about an off day, last weeks off day was lacking motivation, yesterday was monday-madness and PLRB, there is a difference. If you would like me to explain, let me know. I'm not a debbie downer all the time, I really am not, but we are all allowed to have off days, and times when we need help.
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