After 4 months, I have finally finished a major project at work and on Saturday, I ran my first 5K since January.
What is interesting isn’t the 5K, but the short training I did leading up to the 5K.
I have been doing hill runs for about 3 or 4 months with my son. We go out each week and run 6 – 7 miles of hills in a neighborhood next to ours. These hills are big and exhausting. Sometimes (like yesterday) I don’t know how I’m going to make it home. All in all the runs are about 8 miles.
Rewind to last week. With our 5K on Saturday I started to really get concerned. I had increased my mileage a lot over the winter, but had also slowed my pace. In fact in April of 2014 I averaged just over an 8:30 pace. This April I was closer to 9:45. This slow down was intentional. I really wanted to gain mileage, build my base and stop getting hurt. I accomplished all three!
However…
With the 5K less then a week away I was concerned that my slow pace would really mess my race up. Monday last week I ran hills run with TJ. Tuesday I just ran 4 miles. I was tired to say the least. I finished my run and noticed that I ran near a 10:00 pace. I was so disappointed. I wondered if my 22 minute 5K were over for good.
Then it dawned on me. I had just finished my run. I was breathing heavily and tired. But in less then a minute my breathing returned to normal and my heart rate slowed right down. Hmmm, I thought. If I can recover in less than a minute, maybe I’m in better shape then I thought. So Wednesday I went out for another run. I started slowly the first mile as I always do, but I ran faster then my normal first mile. I got into the second mile and picked up my pace. The last two miles I ran much faster with my last mile under 8:00. I was tired and breathing heavily, but once again, as soon as I finished I recovered. By the time I got to my car to go home, I was breathing normally. Thursday was the same. I ran, I recovered and I felt fine.
So the hill runs and the distance runs did what I wanted. They build my base and gave me the ability to run hard and not get hurt and recover quickly. I simply lacked the confidence and speed work to get me going faster for my 5K.
How’d the 5K go? I ran it slower then my usual pace a year, but I also ran it 1:13 faster then my 5K in January. I came in at 23:20, 2nd in my age group and 33rd overall out of 500 runners. I’m pretty happy about that considering I had only 2 speed workouts and had gained some weight during my 4 month project.
I am going to keep doing what I am doing. I’m going to add some speed workouts in the mix to train my body (and brain) to run faster. I’m going to lose the 5 lbs I gained and try to bring my time down below 22:00 this year.
Hopefully this will help someone else in a similar situation. Listen to your body and your recovery. It may be telling you something that your brain is not!
Tom
So what you are saying is you think the better your body recovers the better shape you are in? Also, great post.
Thank you! Yes. I think recovery is a major indication of physical fitness. Though most of my theories are just from experience. 🙂
Congrats on a strong run and an age group rank! I always think recovery time is a great indicator of overall endurance. The speed will come back quickly. The endurance is the hardest part.
Thanks!!! It is fun afterwards, but torture during the race. 🙂