I was running around Grapevine Lake this morning at 5:30am and was amazed how many people were out and about. Seems like everyone was going around 20 miles today, so they all started really early. Everyone had a fall marathon on their schedule; some going to Lake Tahoe, some Chicago, some New York. And of course, a lot of people gearing up for the Dallas White Rock Marathon in December.
It is amazing how the marathon bug has bitten so many people! Even Amani Toomer, former New York Giants' wide receiver, is running the New York City Marathon this year for charity. I remember when I planned to run my first marathon in 1999, most people thought I was a little crazy, and the Cowtown Marathon only had less than a thousand people every year. Now, it seems almost everyone is attempting a marathon or two; and the local marathons are busting at the seams with entrants. The Houston Marathon even went to a lottery because it has sold out so quickly the last few years! Wow! So many runners and so many "training theories" for people to hurt themselves with!
Here are a few tips to keep you on the roads and out of my office:
Tip #1: Do not increase your mileage by more than 10% per week. The body grows stronger if it is stressed in small increments, but starts to break down if it is stressed too much. Studies show that increasing your mileage by no more than 10% per week will help you grow stronger without breaking you down. Avoid increasing duration and pace at the same time.
Tip #2: Always follow a hard workout with an easy one. The body’s like a cell phone. If you continue to use it without recharging, it will eventually wear down. By incorporating easy workouts or cross training into your program, you’ll allow your body a chance to rest and repair itself.
Tip#3: Add strength training to your workouts. Strength training is usually absent from most training programs, but cross training with weights is the only component that has been proven to reduce running injuries. Proper strength training can help you overcome muscle imbalances that lead to injury, as well as strengthen connective tissues that help support your joints.
Tip#4: Do regular self-checks. Tune into what your body is telling you. How do your muscles and joints feel? How does your breathing and heart rate feel? Are you straining to keep up your pace? Anything that doesn’t feel the same may be an early sign of overuse. Keep a training log of not only your mileage, but how you feel during and after each workout. Fatigue over a period of a few days is a huge red flag that your body is trying to tell you something.
Tip#5: Respond to pain immediately. If you experience pain during or after a workout, follow the rule of R-I-C-E (rest-ice-compression-elevation). Use an ice massage or cold pack for 10-15 minutes every 4-6 hours to relieve inflammation and swelling. Elevation is also quite helpful in the first 48 hours. Apply a compressive wrap and hang out on the couch for a few hours and rest. After 48-72 hours, if the inflammation has subsided, apply heat to help promote healing.
Tip#6: Do not take pain-relief medication to finish a workout! Non-prescription anti-inflammatory medications can reduce inflammation and pain, but they do not speed healing. Taking anti-inflammatories prior to a workout may decrease your discomfort and allow you to finish a workout, but they also allow you to overstress already damaged tissue. This can prolong the healing process. Pain is a sign you should not ignore!
Tip#7: Choose relative rest over inactivity. Active rest, or easy exercise, is better than inactivity because it stimulates blood flow and promotes healing. If slow running is painless, but picking up the pace is painful, then stick to slow running until you feel better. Or do other activities, like swimming, cycling, or aqua running until you can run pain-free.
Tip#8: Don’t wait too long to seek professional help. If your pain does not respond to a week of R-I-C-E and cutting mileage by at least 50%, see a sportsmedicine specialist. Not only can a professional help you diagnose and treat the condition, but they may also help you determine and biomechanical abnormalities that can lead to recurring injuries.
Tip#9: Try to maintain a positive attitude. You immune system fights injuries with a complex army of nutrients and special cells. But, you immune system doesn’t work alone. Your mind also has a voice in what goes on. Attitudes and feelings are organized in your brain to communicate with your immune system with chemical messengers. A positive attitude can go a along way to help speed healing.
Tip#10: Ease back into your regular training program. Remember, too much, too soon, too fast is what hurt you in the first place. It’s tempting to jump right back in where you left off, but your injured tissue may not be fully recovered. It’s during the first few weeks back that most runners get re-injured. Use the 10% rule to ease back into mileage….
Above all, have fun! Marathon running is a challenge that is mental as well as physical. The miles between 20 and 26.2 take determination, stubborness and probably a tiny bit of inner insanity! Whether you finish in 2 hours or 6+, you are still a marathoner forever after you cross the finish line!
Run Happy! And Injury Free!
Geovany Soto and His Os Trigonum
10 years ago