Tuesday, September 18, 2012

It’s a Long Slow Road from Scorched Earth and TEAM PAWS


As anybody who reads this blog is aware, this will not be the marathon year for me. With the downtime from the Easter stress fracture, I’m coming back from ground zero or as we economists like to say, from scorched earth. I’m just starting the third week of a training program under the guidance of a running coach and I have to say, although none of this is something I couldn’t have figured out on my own, having a coach has been good for me. When I start to do more than Caroline has prescribed, I say “no, there’s a reason she only wants you to do…. Fill in the blank” and I behave. I guess this says something about my personality. I always did my homework in school and still like following rules. With the start of the third week, my aspirations are starting to be bigger than my current capability – I want to run that marathon, dash that half marathon, etc. These things may come but not now.

If you can’t beat ‘em, join ‘em. So, I can’t run the Chicago marathon but I paid for the bib. Even though I cannot run, I planned to attend the health and fitness expo on Friday, October 5th. Why not check out all the vendors, charities, etc.? Then it occurred to me, maybe they need volunteers and maybe TEAM PAWS my charity group needs help? Sure enough, I am now working the health and fitness expo on Friday morning and will be able to look around in the afternoon. Then on marathon day, I will help them dismantle the TEAM PAWS charity block party and be there to cheer runners at mile 14. I hope to be there early enough to help them set up too but 6:30 am from the western suburbs might be a push. I’m almost as excited to be volunteering as to be running. OK, well maybe not that much but it is exciting.

My TEAM PAWS donation page is still active at http://pawschicago.kintera.org/faf/donorReg/donorPledge.asp?ievent=1006413&supId=352351163 I would be very grateful for your donations. I’m a suburbanite and have adopted all my best friends from ADOPT or the Naperville Humane Society but Chicago is full of unwanted animals and PAWS does a great job. If you got your best friend from an adoption agency, won’t you please consider donating.

More about PAWS Chicago below:

“In 2007, PAWS Chicago opened the Midwest's only cageless, state-of-the-art, No Kill shelter. With proactive adoption and spay/neuter programs, more than 5,000 dedicated volunteers, and a nationally renowned shelter medicine program, PAWS Chicago is transforming animal welfare and saving lives.

In 2011, PAWS Chicago found homes for more than 4,300 homeless pets and performed more than 18,000 free and low-cost spay/neuter surgeries, the majority for families who could not otherwise afford the procedure. These two efforts are reducing the number of unwanted pets entering shelters and increases the number of lives saved.”

Thank you all!!!





Saturday, September 8, 2012

Coming Back Slowly....

I am now making my third attempt at a comeback after a stress fracture laid me down in April.  Hoping that the third time is a charm.  Time to start the blog up again.  A few weeks ago, I started a comeback program that I found in a spring copy of Runners World.  It is clearly a not too much, not too soon program starting with 20 sec intervals of running followed by 40 sec intervals of walking ramping up over 4 weeks to 45 minutes of 30 sec run/30 sec walk intervals.  Then, however, it just leaves you cold.   Although the program was working, it just didn't seem like it was going to get me to where I need to be.   So, I started Googling "running coaches" in my hometown.  After a little research, I called Caroline Yashuda and boy am I glad I did.  Just meeting her is inspirational.  Caroline has run many marathons and ultra marathons, paces for other runners and is just an all around upbeat lady.  I have to say her fitness level is a bit intimidating but heck, shouldn't a running coach be fit?

267 hmmmm there were only 209 runners
Her plan for me is different than what I was doing with longer running intervals followed by even longer walking intervals for now.  She also has worked strength training and cross training into my plan.  I am just finishing up my first week working with Caroline (it is mostly via email although we did run together on Thursday morning) and I'm pleased.   Today, I ran my first 5K since last year's Thanksgiving Turkey Trot.  Ok, I only partially ran it, but I was out there.  Caroline worked the 5K into my program and I mostly stuck to the run walk intervals that she suggested.  I got a little carried away and ran a bit more than she had mapped out but I was pretty careful.  It was a miracle that I even got there!  Last night, Peter was baking bread in Chicago and got home late.  Although he was very quiet, I woke up a little when he came in, disrupting my sleep.  Then, this morning, it was so cool and comfy in bed that I could have easily convinced myself not to go.  But, the run was for DuPage PADS (public action to deliver shelter) and I had checked runners in last night and it looked like a bunch of good people.  I forced myself out of bed, ran the run and was home before 9:30 AM.
DuPage PADS Race Shirt


It took me 38 minutes to finish and I was 170 out of 209 runners.  Not exactly a PR but it was a lot of fun.  It was 55 degrees at race time with a crystal clear sky.  Perfect running weather.  By the end of the run it was actually hot -- 61 degrees.  If you're feeling cold, get out there and run.  It is like a free furnace.

I still want to run longer runs and eventually get to the Chicago marathon.  But first, I'm hoping with a bit more care I can become a daily runner.