Take Advil. Be selfish. Skip the “junk miles”. The advice keeps coming, and I’m soaking it up like a sponge. I’m lucky to have a great group of supporters who have run dozens of marathons between them, and who are happy to share what worked for them, what didn’t, and their golden kernel of “if you do just one thing” knowledge.
My official marathon training begins this Sunday, June 28th. My goal is to run the City of
So yeah, I’m 47 years old and just now getting around to the marathon. I’ve run several half’s over the years, and was frequently asked when I was going to do the full. I always replied that I was happy to stick with 13.1 miles, thank you so much, the marathon is just not for me, here’s why: my knees, my lungs, my life, my whatever…
So what changed? I’m not sure. I still have the same knees and lungs, and pretty much the same life. I’m so inspired by those who have completed 26.2 miles all at once, whether on foot, on wheels, or on prosthetics, and want to join their ranks as marathoners.
I want to push myself past any physical and mental limits that I have encountered to this point in my life (excluding child-birth, but like they say, you forget that pain). I want to prove to myself that I can do it, to feel that wave of emotion, of pride and awe of what one’s mind and body can accomplish if only given the chance.
So enough writing for now. Thanks for tuning in, and thanks to the wonderful folks at the City of
Next time: “Love your shoes!”
I have only one bit of advice: Run Less, Run Faster. The book is put out by Runner's World, and if you have a life other than running, it will get you to Boston, with out piling on too many miles/hours training.
ReplyDeletesounds like my reason -- just wanting to do it, to have done it. my training will "kick off" at the 4th of July 5K in Merrimack, and I look forward to following your progress, matching it with my own.
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