Surprising Oneself
I skipped Mondays regular 5km recovery run because my knees were a bit sore from the Sunday long run and so I'd been itching to run again for a couple of days. That being said, I felt tight, I have not been sleeping well (thanks for nothing Home Run Derby, or should I say Commercial Derby!), and I've been feeling a bit under the weather on top of it all. So as today's interval workout neared I wondered just what I would have to contend with and was resigned to "just get through" and get back to resting and icing.
After looking at the various printouts of marathon training plans on which I loosely base my training I settled on what looked like a decent workout that I thought would be difficult to achieve, but somehow was easy on the brain and achievable for the body. This was to run 3 1-mile repeats with 800m recovery jogs in between. The goal pace was 4:15/km, or roughly 6:51/mile. Given my last two interval workouts I thought that this would be really difficult, but potentially doable. After all I had run 5x800m last week at an average pace of 4:00/km, and the week before that I ran 4x1000m with 1000m meter recovery jogs at an average pace of 4:08/km or so. Moving up in distance (total of 4.8km versus 4.0km) as well as longer interval distances I thought that slowing down to 4:15/km pace was reasonable. That being said, I was feeling a bit worn out and somewhat wonky in the knees. My quads felt tight, glutes ditto, calves yup yup yup. "This is going to hurt," I thought to myself as I left the house once getting back from work.
But then the surprise part started. The easy warm up jog over to the track felt pretty good, though not exactly speedy, and by the time I got to the track I was more optimistic than when I left. I dropped my water bottle on the grass and started into my first interval. The sky was overcast and threatening a bit of rain. A girls soccer game was going on and lots of people and dogs were milling about, but they seemed respectful of the three or four runners who were out there with me and stayed clear. After the first 400m I checked the trusty old Garmin and saw that my pace was hovering a little below 4:00/km pace, much faster than I thought I was going. I said, "Oh Oh!" and wondered how the rest of the mile would go, let alone the other two that I still had in front of me.
The impending doom never happened. I completed the first mile repeat pretty gassed, but not as much as one would expect. I slowly jogged the 800m recovery, dropped the water bottle again, and set off with a mind to running the next mile in the same time. After the second one I was really gassed. That last 400m was really tough. I had to walk the first bit of the 800m recovery jog and told myself that I only had one more interval to go. I knew it would hurt, but at least then I'd be done. Rain had started falling by this time, but it wasn't heavy enough to matter. In fact I'd wished for it to just open up and cool me off, but to no avail. As I started into the last interval I knew it would be a battle to the end, but was determined to get'er done. Here are the surprising results:
- 6:19 (3:57/km)
- 6:22 (3:58/km)
- 6:20 (for some reason this shows up as 3:56/km on the Garmin data)
Garmin don't lie.
9 Comments:
Terrific job! Those are some speedy, long repeats!
Nice job!
Sometimes even though mentally we are wiped out, the day of rest really helps. I have the same feelings a lot, and the day off usually does the trick.
Nicely done. One mile repeats are tough.
That's pretty fast. You are primed and ready for an ass kicking 10 miler. Go get it!
Rockin' it on the repeats. Unlike my man Brandon Inge in the homerun derby...ouch. Who were the idiots who chose him again? Surprised he didn't strike out...
Ace: I think technically he DID strike out! With the 10 strikes that he had to work with it seems ridiculous! That was a pretty pathetic performance, and I felt for him towards the end. And then, when it got to 9 outs and no home runs I started to hope that he would end up with zero because THAT seems like a more difficult accomplishment than to hitting a bunch.
Cheers!
Thanks for the comment on my blog, I love getting comments from new readers. I've been having a bit of a look around on your blog too. Nice job by the way, both on the progress with your running and the blog itself.
I'll answer your question re the knee taping on my next post.
Would you mind if I added your blog to my blogroll - it seems like your journey is very similar (and also interesting).
Nice 5K PR by the way - I'm trying to get mine down a bit too, but don't think I'll get it down to yours.
BTW (and if you mind me asking, just tell me to go away) but what age are you?
Oh, one other thing, I'm quite jealous of your "I did the Hundred" badge of honour. I failed miserably at thatm but am thinking of trying again.
Sometimes we just have those runs where it works!
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