In two weeks I will be southbound to Louisville to run my first ever half-marathon. Nervous is an understatement at this point. I don't feel prepared and I have no one to blame by myself. Could I have run more? Absolutely!
A few weeks ago I was vacationing in Grand Cayman and the temperature shock to my body made it difficult to breath while running. I stuck to my plan and ran on all of my scheduled run days but they were slow and I took more walk breaks than I should have.
Once I was back in Michigan I had a hard time getting back into my training plan. I skipped runs when I knew I shouldn't and I wasn't drinking enough water, which made the runs I did do, difficult.
Last Saturday I headed out for a 10 mile run, the longest scheduled run on my training plan. I completed it, and with a pace that would get me across the finish line under my time goal, but it wasn't without some problems. The first 5 miles were great. I had a good pace and I was feeling good. I ran all 5 without stopping for a walk break. After that, it was all downhill. I walked a lot and when I ran I had pain running up the back of my right leg. When I sat down in my car after the 10 miles a sick feeling hit me like a semi-truck. I made it through the car ride home and then I got sick.
I am sure my lack of fuel before the run is to blame. I am heading out for another 10 miler tomorrow morning and I have planned a hearty breakfast of oatmeal, a banana and peanut butter, the same thing I plan to eat in two weeks before the half.
I'm going to make it through this half and then decide where I want to take my running. It might be 5k's for the rest of the summer.
For me, running is hard. I tend to compare myself to other runners and I need to stop. I don't know their stories. They may have been running since they could walk. It comes natural to some. I compare my pace to other runners and I feel defeated when I don't match up.
Tomorrow I am running by myself, for myself No running partner, no time goal. I just want to get through the 10 miles and still feel human when I'm done.
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