Training for a Belt Buckle

April 29, 2024

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Location:

Sandy,UT,USA

Member Since:

Jan 01, 2008

Gender:

Female

Goal Type:

Boston Qualifier

Running Accomplishments:

PR's: 50 Mile 13:07 (Pony Express 2010), 50K 8:35 (Buffalo Run 2008), 25K 4:02 (Buffalo Run 2006), Marathon 5:09:12 (St George 2008), Half Marathon 2:28 (Provo 2008), 10K 1:17, 5K 27:54

 

Short-Term Running Goals:

After 1/9/2010 - I am taking a year off from marathon length distances and focusing on building up my base speed on half marathons and shorter distances.

2010 Speed Goals:

  • Build up my base speed on training runs to 10 MM miles or better
  • Half Marathon - break 2:05 (9.5 MM avg)
  • 10K Goal 1 - break 1:00 (9.67 MM avg)
  • 10K Goal 2 - break 55 minutes (8.87 MM avg)
  • 5K Goal 1 - break 26.35 minutes
  • 5K Goal 2 - break 25 minutes

Long-Term Running Goals:

Long Term Goals:

  • Complete a 100 Mile race
  • Complete a 100 K race
  • Break 12 hours in a 50 mile race
  • Run all portions of the Wasatch 100 course
  • Break 5 hours in a marathon
  • Break 4.5 hours in a marathon
  • Qualify for and run Boston

Personal:

I need to figure out something inspiring or funny to write here. For now - I'll let the suspense build.

For further unexciting information on my life, check out my blog: Adventures in Running

Favorite Blogs:

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Miles:This week: 0.00 Month: 0.00 Year: 0.00
Vibram FiveFingers Lifetime Miles: 452.95
Montrail Streak Lifetime Miles: 195.69
Montrail Vitesse (9.0) Lifetime Miles: 89.75
Mizuno Wave Ascend 3 (2009) Lifetime Miles: 228.50
Brooks Advantage (Blue) Lifetime Miles: 271.42
Crocs Black Lifetime Miles: 80.85
Vibram FiveFingers - Black Lifetime Miles: 65.50
Hoka Mafate Lifetime Miles: 36.95
Hoka Stinson Evo 2012 Lifetime Miles: 53.50
Easy MilesMarathon Pace MilesThreshold MilesVO2 Max MilesTotal Distance
4.000.000.000.004.00

Went and ran 3 miles with Leslie tonight wearing my Vibram FiveFingers.  The legs felt pretty springy - which is a good thing.  Then Odee and I went running for another mile to get in a little more mileage.

I have a feeling my ankles will be sore tomorrow because when Leslie called I had been playing Guitar Hero Aerosmith for about 45 minutes standing on my balance board to work on my ankles and calves.

55 pushups.

Night Sleep Time: 0.00Nap Time: 0.00Total Sleep Time: 0.00Weight: 0.00
Comments
From marion on Tue, Sep 30, 2008 at 00:48:46

55 pushups! You rock! Too cool!!! Guitar hero! You are a super rocker! Any my new favorte song is the "Going through hell" one. It's my new theme song!

From montelepsy on Tue, Sep 30, 2008 at 03:48:45

What a way to work out.

I'd gladly give up half of my pushup capacity for some Guitar Hero skills.

From leslie on Tue, Sep 30, 2008 at 13:57:42

push ups suck!!

From Sasha Pachev on Wed, Oct 01, 2008 at 18:31:00

Maurine:

Some thoughts on your training. I see no reason why you could not run a 4:20 marathon if you adjusted some things in the training and in the life style.

Starting with the principles. Avoid anything impulsive, and choose steady. Steady training, steady eating, steady rest. No hero acts, but no slacking either.

More detailed. Train 6 days a week, and take one scheduled day of rest. Your day must not end until you've run at least 4 miles. No walking breaks. Just plod along at 13:00 pace or so, but do not walk for any reason. Even if your running pace slows down to a near-walk, still move the legs and the arms in a running motion. Do not count your walking mileage.

At this point do not worry about long runs. Learn to run at least 4 miles 6 days a week without skipping. No excuses, no exceptions.

Diet - if you know it is bad, do not eat it. If you know it is good, eat it to satiation. If you run 30 minutes after eating it, and it makes you throw up or feel extremely uncomfortable, it is bad, do not eat it again. This would take some paradigm shift, and self-control, but that is ultimately the secret to eating right. Stay on the trail. Do not look for a short cut. Suggested shortcuts are a trip up a mountain through some nasty thick bushes.

Sleep - early to bed, early to rise. I find having a strict bed time curfew very helpful.

Other - true commitment and 100% consistency are very important. You need to be willing to sacrifice lesser privileges to achieve higher goals. Work on doing it without a grudge or looking back and saying "I miss my old behavior". The fruits of the old behavior are a 5:00+ marathon. The fruits of the improved behavior are 4:20 marathon. A tree is inseparable from its fruit - the quality of the fruit is determined by the quality of the tree. You must have the courage to abandon the tree that yields 5:00+ marathons.

Part of the ability of the 4:20 tree to grow lies in how well you can do the right things even when you are not in the mood to do them. While having the right attitude can provide some physiological benefits, those benefits still accrue at nearly the same rate when you do the right thing with supposedly the wrong attitude. Human physiology is a very just, in a sense, but at the same time very merciless judge. It does not care about intent very much, and rewards you primarily according to your actions.

From tarzan on Wed, Oct 01, 2008 at 21:17:04

Thank you, Sasha. I appreciate the advice and will put it into practice after St. George!

From marion on Wed, Oct 01, 2008 at 22:38:01

Sasha- About the eating before the run. Do you mean never eat that ever again, or just before you run?

From Sasha Pachev on Thu, Oct 02, 2008 at 16:05:46

If a food takes a long time to digest, 30 minutes after you've eaten it you will still have a hard time running. Usually this means it should not have landed in your stomach in the first place. I am not suggesting running 30 minutes after you eat. Rather I am suggesting only eating foods that would allow you to run with a reasonable degree of comfort 30 minutes after you've eaten them. Rather than say - do not eat food X or food Y because it has too much fat, etc, have your body tell you how well it can handle the food.

From marion on Thu, Oct 02, 2008 at 16:39:08

I understand. The 30 minute test is a test of how your body handles a particular food for everyday consumption, not just for running.

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