Overheard
recently (Aug. 25) in Prospect Park, from a high school running coach in
conversation with a 40ish-year-old running enthusiast, who I’m assuming was seeking
pointers about how to get more out of her relatively newfound pastime.
“Build in speed
portions in your workout. If your jogging pace is a 10-minute mile, do some
interval sprints. You want to regularly go twice that fast, if you looking to
run stronger and faster. So bring some speed intervals into your practice.”
Oh, boy. If words alone could stretch hamstrings (for miles and years accustomed to a go-slowish pace) to the breaking point, those would be the ones …
That being said,
I am a firm believer in doing things differently, to testing yourself. But,
please, for your own health and safety, consider your running goals carefully:
how fast, how far, how long. As my recent hamstring injury has taught me, there
is no shame in going slow.
My rehab is thankfully going pretty well. I’m scaled back from doing hills, and staircase
intervals on long runs. The longest run I’ve put in since my injury more than a
month ago has been 45 minutes. I didn’t make the five-mile mark, but I also
didn’t feel any muscle pain, or even soreness.
So, I’ll keep it
slow. I haven’t given up on the Brooklyn Marathon just yet. After all, as the
subject heading says: don't stop for nothing. But, when you get a little older, or if
you’re just starting after an extended layoff, take it slow in the beginning and build up only bit by bit ...
Next: Running for
Your Life: If the Greats Were With Us Thursday