Friday, September 24, 2010

Walking / Jogging / Fun Run

Motivation:

The signs of aging (body pains, growing waistlines, decreased energy) can be halted or rolled back through YOUR CHOICES.

The most common health problems (diabetes, heart disease, obesity, joint pain) can be arrested or improved though YOUR CHOICES.

YOUR CHOICES include: adequate exercise, better eating choices, moderation of alcohol, smoking cessation.


If you don't like the way you feel, do something about it.
The US Department of Health recommends 150 minutes of moderate exercise per week. This means:
  • A total of 2.5 hours that can be divided up throughout the week. Smaller chunks thorughout the day or a separate "exercise time" are both effective.
  • Moderate exercise means comfortable. You don't have to bust your butt, just a nice steady effort thate elevates the heart rate and breathing. If exercise is hard, you may be at level of "intense exercise."
  • If you want to complete your exercise more quickly, 75 minutes of intense exercise is equivalent to 150 minutes of moderate exercise.
The amount of time needed to train for a 5K/10K fun run perfectly fits this range. Pick an event goal (such as the DH Dash) and use this as motivation to get your exercise completed each week.
Walking / Jogging / Fun Run:
If you are new to this kind of exercise (or if it has been a while,) consider these strategies that make jogging much more comfortable.
Mindset: It is counter-productive for a beginner to try to run 1) continuously or 2) fast. That's right, if you are a beginner to fun run jogging then you should alternate between brisk walking and easy jogging. Start with 5-10 minutes of increasingly brisk walking to warm the joints and get your breathing rhythm established. Once you feel good at that speed try a very slow jogging pace.
Your jogging pace should be about the same speed as a brisk walk. Keep the pace comfortable and when you start getting out of breath (or the muscles start to burn) then shift back to walking. The goal is to stay in the moderate intensity. Do not focus on running fast. The goal is to build stamina first...speed comes later.
Other tips:
When you are jogging, focus on taking short quick steps. Do not try to "stride out" as longer strides will cause greater impact to the joints.
If you are just starting, exercise at most every other day. The body needs both exercise andrest. If you want to do more, do walking or low-impact cross training on the other days.
Make sure you have appropriate footwear. Exercise shoes is not the place to skimp or try to save money. Go to a running specialty store (Team Nashville, ACME Multisport, Fleet Feet) and get fitted for the correct size and model of shoe for your feet. It will make all the difference in comfort, and save a lot of impact on the joints.

Don't compare yourself to others or a perceived "ought-to-be-able-to" standard. The important thing is to participate in a healthy activity. Perhaps you were once in great shape, or you would like to achieve a certain time/goal. Be patient and persistent and you will reach all your goals. Become too competitive, and you may loose the fun. Worse still you may get injured.

Finally, if you experience pain while exercising (joints, arches, knees, back, etc) consult with a personal trainer or running coach about designing an strength and stretch exercise program. Many people go to a doctor or surgeon for exercise-related pain, whereas these are a normal challenge associated with strengthening the body. View these not as an obstacle, but your body giving you information on how to make it more healthy. Don't EVER "run through the pain."

(And of course have a doctor's approval before you begin any exercise program.)


Sign up for the DH Dash here.




Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Dean Britt Rises to the Challenge, Displays His Commitment


Dean Britt finished the Rev 3 Triathlon this past Sunday.  It was awesome to see him achieve a new level of accomplishment (first half iron) and surpass his time goal by 45 minutes!  Dean stated, "little by little I am learning that I can do these things, that I don't have to let limits hold me back."  He has also lost 25lbs training this season.

His next goal is to run a 25 minute 5K...that sounds like some great off season training.

We discussed the eventual goal to do an iron distance (I recommended Beach 2 Battleship.)  We agreed that it would be a good idea to take 2 years to build to that goal, with the plan to do two half irons next year. 

Dean wanted a little momento of his triathlon accomplishments this year, and a way to display his commitment to future goals.  So we paid a visit to Icon Tattoo tonight:





Dean: You are great.

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

New Addition to the Family

One of my long time clients Ronald celebrates a new addition to his family. 

Congratulations Ron!

He swears this picture is not staged....

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Ragnar Relay Boot Camp and Race Report

Below is an interesting Blog write-up that was forwarded to me.  The Ragnar is Nov 6-7 and runs form Chattanooga to Nashville.  The official Ragnar TN website is here

STtrainer is going to be putting on a Ragnar Training Boot Camp on October 15-16.  The Boot Camp will consist of runs on Friday: 6am / noon / 5:30pm  and Saturday: midnight / 6am / 11am.  That is 6 runs in 30 hours!  Runs will be between 5-8 miles each.  You will be ready for whatever the Ragnar throws your way. 

The Ragnar Training Boot Camp will also include guidance on pacing, nutrition, recovery, team morale, and logistics.

Cost is $25 if you can attend a minimum of 3 runs.  Head lamp and reflective clothing required for the night-time run.

Here is the Blog that was forwarded to me....I think it captures the experience well.  (Be sure to click below.)

Monday, September 6, 2010

Labor Day Open Water Swim

There is a good-sized group from the team heading to the Rev 3 half iron distance triathlon in Sandusky, OH this coming weekend, so we had an open water swim this morning.

Photo: A good turnout from the team for open water swim practice.  The slightly cooler weather had everyone psyched out before getting in, but the lake still felt like a bath tub.  Beautiful morning sunlight.

Everyone is swimming so well they had whipped out around the no-wake buoy before I could even get started paddling.  Amanda P was rocking the lead on the first lap.


Everyone getting ready for lap 2.  This is half iron taper week, so the whole workout was only ~30 minutes of swimming.  That doesn't count floating around and socializing, which is also nice.

1 year ago Barry Smith (pictured here swimming, with mohawk) had never done a triathlon.  Now he is less than a week out from doing his first half iron distance.  He has also been hugely supportive in encouraging some of his friends and many of his team mates to also do the race.  Good luck Barry.


Barry: That is one crazy haircut, man.  It will make you go fast!

Thursday, September 2, 2010

"The First Shall Be Last, and The Last Shall Be First"

The first shall be last, and the last shall be first...

I think this is ancient wisdom written somewhere, and I definitely believe it to be true.  On Tuesday I was pleasantly surprised to have a message from Cindee.  She introduced herself and said that she had completed her first triathlon at Cedars of Lebanon (finishing in last place.)  Her husband saw me racing (I won overall) and was impressed, so she wanted to meet me and learn from my coaching.  I am humbled. 

Photo: Cindee and Coach Steve after her first running lesson.  "I don't enjoy running," she explained, "but I am learning to."  Cindee's running program consists of a 3-2 walk/run interval, and finding similar pace running partners.

First of all, I think it is a hugely brave risk to begin training for endurance sports when you have not been active to that level.  Moreover Cindee, finishing in last place, came away from her first race with a enthusiastic, positive attitude.  She had fun, she felt great, she wants more.  Awesome. 

I have coached a number of beginning triathletes who have finished in last place over the years, and I am always in great admiration for the effort they display.  I was done with Cedars in a little over an hour, whereas Cindee finished in just under three.  That is a big deal in my book, and I have more respect for her finish than mine. 

I think it is appropriate that Cindee's last name is Gold.  I look forward to future running lessons with her. 

OSU Cross Country Team Video on FloTrack

Flotrack.com is a great website, great coverage of track and field (life is not all about triathlon.)

6 x 1 mile 3-4 minutes rest, choose your pace just make sure each one gets faster....hmmm...this workout sounds familiar.


Track and Field Videos on Flotrack