Running: Difference between revisions
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** If they try to sell you fashion trainers, go to a different shop. Avoid soles that look like they don't bend | ** If they try to sell you fashion trainers, go to a different shop. Avoid soles that look like they don't bend | ||
** It's a good sign if they feel like you're wearing nothing at all | ** It's a good sign if they feel like you're wearing nothing at all | ||
* Hat and gloves when it's really cold or even a fleece | * Hat and gloves when it's really cold or even a fleece | ||
* Don't forget your keys like that one time | * Don't forget your keys like that one time | ||
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** One of the 40 min runs (Tuesday) should focus on fartlek or sprints, which will help improve your regular performance | ** One of the 40 min runs (Tuesday) should focus on fartlek or sprints, which will help improve your regular performance | ||
[[Category:Lifestyle]] | |||
[[Category:Wisdom]] | [[Category:Wisdom]] |
Latest revision as of 12:36, 19 April 2024
- Here's a brain dump of what I've learned over a decade of running for fitness
- Not everything on this page is running-specific but most of it is
- I like running because it suits me and is the most efficient way of burning calories, but you may prefer other cardio
Advantages
- Feel less tired
- Sleep more soundly
- Get ill less often and with reduced severity
- But flu will still knock you out for a week
- You will want to eat more, which is fine as food is great and you're going to burn it all
- Run for the bus without nearly dying, more stamina in general
- Use the walking lane up escalators because standing is too boring
- Improved tolerance of hangovers
- Joints become much stronger
- Improved blood flow everywhere, e.g. the brain which helps with thinking
Risks
- Injury, where the bad part is you may have to give up cardio for a couple of weeks until it goes away
- Cyclists who use the pavement will try to collide with you, so be vigilant
- Can become a minor obsession
Gear
- Get decent trainers, as you'll be using them a lot
- Tell the shop person what you're going to use them for
- If they try to sell you fashion trainers, go to a different shop. Avoid soles that look like they don't bend
- It's a good sign if they feel like you're wearing nothing at all
- Hat and gloves when it's really cold or even a fleece
- Don't forget your keys like that one time
- I bring my spare set without lots of keyrings so it doesn't jangle about as much
- Maybe keep them in a little bag so they don't eat their way through your pockets
- Cheap 3/4 length jogging bottoms from Sports Direct are cool in summer and warm enough in winter
General tips
- Listen to what your body is telling you, and err on the side of caution while you're still discovering what's normal for you
- Having to curtail a session due to some random niggle is frustrating, but better that than get injured
- Always do your stretches
- These will help prevent injury
- Always do them when warm (I use the middle of a session)
- Don't bounce, hold for 10 seconds while you feel tension and then release
- Most important stretch for runners is the calf stretch
- Calf injury is the most annoying and hard to shake off, you don't want it
- I also recommend the thigh stretch
- Groin stretch is good if you have a place to sit
- Give your legs a good shake after stretching, I don't know what this does but it seems to help
What happens to your body
- Your first session will feel much easier than subsequent sessions
- This is because you are burning your liver's glycogen store, which is a cheap source of energy
- The glycogen store takes a few days to regenerate, during which time you'll find training to be harder
- You are likely to feel muscle stiffness a couple of days after your first session
- Wait for the stiffness to go away (another couple of days) before continuing, it shouldn't come back
- At first, the mechanism that transports fat from where it usually accumulates to where it's needed (the muscles) is very inefficient
- This will gradually improve over time
Getting started
- Read the rest of this page
- Aim for 20 minutes 3 times a week
- At first you will only be able to run for a few minutes at a time, this is normal
- Stay out for the full 20 minutes even if you have to walk most of the way
- Over a few weeks you can build up to running the whole thing
- Take it easy, the time to push yourself is after you feel bored with what you're doing, not before
- If like me you're prone to fainting, bring an energy bar to eat after your session
- Remember to drink water but never force it down
Time of day
- Some like to go first thing in the morning, which I consider the height of masochism
- I prefer the evening, so I can have dinner when done
- This also seems to improve my energy levels in the evenings when I'm not running
Treadmill or outside
- I think outside is better to begin with, as that way you have total control while finding your feet
- It's also free, and saves time if your route starts and ends at home
- Treadmill makes it easy to monitor your pulse and progress
- And being a gym member gives you a spare shower to use if your boiler breaks in winter
Staying motivated
- Enter a race e.g. 5K in about 3 months, so you have the fear factor of not being one of those people who clearly did not train
- After the race, it's very easy to fall back into your previous lifestyle, so book another race and then take your holiday
- Music helps alleviate boredom
- Have an inline volume control so you can turn it down when crossing roads
- Sometimes I don't want to go, so I ask myself can I put one foot in front of the other? Then go
Resources
- The /r/Fitness wiki has good info much like this page, if you can ignore its obsession with lifting
- Couch to 5K
- Paula Radcliffe's half-marathon training guide for beginners, not online unfortunately
- As per #Getting started, then escalate to 40 mins 3 times a week (Mon/Tue/Thu) plus a Saturday run of up to 70 mins
- One of the 40 min runs (Tuesday) should focus on fartlek or sprints, which will help improve your regular performance