Sunday, 18 November 2007

LOOK ON THE POSITIVE SIDE

For the last 4 days I have been in bed with the flu, this was no ordinary flu, this was man flu!

I read about an American runner called Le May - when he was at the peak of his training he would avoid taking public transport and sometimes even his family. Is this extreme? If you are not into running you might think so but after spending 4 days in bed feeling like death I am coming around to his way of thinking.

Due to the recent change in weather in the UK everyone gets ill; it’s only a matter of time before it hits you. After a particularly gruelling track session on Tuesday evening I went around to visit my girlfriend who had not been feeling too well, instead of me looking after her she had to look after me. I was totally exhausted and that night my immune system must have been hugely weakened as I woke feeling awful.

Waking in the middle of the night to find your sheets drenched in sweat that smells like TCP due to all the medication you have been taking is particularly unpleasant, coughing until your lungs are red raw is excruciatingly painful especially as due to my asthma they are highly sensitive. I remember going into a pub once before the ban and coming out feeling like I had smoked a packet. The only thing that you can do is take you medicine, rest and wait.

It has put my training back a bit but I have decided to look at this minor setback as a positive thing. I am prone to training too hard at times and maybe jumped back into hard training too soon after the Amsterdam half marathon while my calf muscles were still very sore. The way I am viewing it is that if I had not picked up the flu I would have probably picked up another injury, so the forced break although frustrating is not the end of the world. To look at it another way my legs are feeling amazingly pain free this evening.

Sunday, 11 November 2007

CONFIDE IN YOUR DIARY

Since starting the project almost 22 months ago I have used various methods of keeping track of my training through the use of a diary or training log. The success and length of these logs has varied hugely with some entries lasting a matter of days due to the complexity of the information. Before long you miss a few days, forget what you did and lose interest.

When I started training again back in July this year I decided that to keep my focus, attempt to identity the early signs of over training and most importantly what works I kept a diary for 90 days leading up to the Amsterdam half marathon in which I ran a big PB of 1:13:46.

In the past I have laughed at people who kept diaries, why worry about the past when you can look forward to the future. However to understand where you are going you need to know where you have been. I kept things simple with five entries;

1) Resting heart rate
2) Weight
3) Food
4) Exercise - including distance
5) Over all comment

By the end of the first month I read back all the entries and started to see a pattern emerging. I could see instantly where I had performed well in my training, what I had eaten before hand and what areas needed work on.

A friend down at the track told me a story of when David Bedford was at the peak of his training. One evening he was relaxing in the bath after a hard week. Tallying up the number of miles he had run for the week he suddenly realised that he might be a couple short of his target, instead of just accepting that he might have made a mistake he jumped out of the bath and ran another 6 miles just to make sure, before getting back in the bath.

Using a diary can be a great motivational tool, however beware as you can become a slave to your diaries desire for the distance box to tally up.