Roundup: Week 5

week 5

Monday: nothing

Tuesday: 3.3 miles on the TM…was supposed to be 4, but I was rushed before work and had to crunch it down to just over 3.  Better than nothing.

Wednesday: nothing

Thursday: 5 miles on the TM (as reported in my previous post)

Friday: nothing

Saturday: 7 miles in the icy, icy outdoors

Sunday: 3000 swim.  Main set:

500 pull @ b +15 breathe 3/5/7/5/3 by 100
100 swim @ b
2 x 200 kick @ kb
2 x 100 swim @ b-5
Regroup
300 pull @ b+15 breathe 5/7/5 by 100
3 x 100 swim @ b
2 x 100 kick @ kb
4 x 100 swim @ b-5
Regroup
100 pull @ b+15 breathe every 7
5 x 100 swim–>odds @ b-5, evens @b

Set#2:
8 x 75 swim IM or stroke @ b+15
8 x 50 @ b+5 fast off the walls

I jumped in this workout at the 3 x 100 swim @ b, and then swam a 500 extra a the end for a nice round 3K.  It was hard, but not too, too brutal.  Plus swimming with the group makes everything go by 10,000x faster.

So…I basically ignored cross training this week aside from Sunday.  Paul had to get to the hospital early in the mornings and it was a hard week for sleep and logistics.  BUT!!  I stayed on schedule with the running and (I don’t want to jinx myself, but…) have managed to run this far with no pain.  A freaking February miracle.  I am running slow, but whatever.  I’m running.

Onward and upward.

My Love/Hate Relationship with the Y

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The local YMCA is located 3 blocks from my office.  Super convenient.  It has a (very warm) pool, a wide mishmash of quasi-functional treadmills, and elliptical-esque machines which I (attempt to) use when I am injured.

Because of the weather lately, I have been spending a lot of time at the Y.  And if you haven’t picked up on this yet, I am not a fan of working out inside.   I consider most stationary machines to be the modern-day equivalent of the iron maiden.

On those days, however, when heading outdoors is just not an option, I am grateful to have a gym where I can run.  And that that gym has Bravo TV.  We don’t have cable at home, and Vanderpump Rules is one of the very few things that will get me through an hour of running in place…especially since I’m doing slower runs with no real intervals or speed increases or anything.  Painfully boring.

My trips to the Y, however, usually go something like this (this is, step by step, my most recent experience):

I check the Bravo schedule, Toned Up is playing at 5.  Perfect.  Shoot down the street to the Y as soon as I leave the office.

Battle for parking.  Finally get a spot to go in and find…no available treadmills.  Which I think is pretty typical for any gym at 5pm.

After 5-10 minutes of hanging around, debating whether I should go warm up on a bike and lose my place in line, the first TM opens up.  It has no TV.  Conundrum.  Go linger on the machine, start setting things up, “stretch”, all while eyeing the TV machines waiting for someone to get off.  Just as I’m about to give up and hit start, the old dude walking on a TV machine at an extreme incline gets off!  Jump off TV-less machine, jump on TV machine.  VICTORY!

Turn TV to channel 59.  Plug in headphones.  Hit Quick Start button, get ready to rock.  The belt won’t start.  Hit button again.  And again.  And again and again and again.  Start hitting every button on the machine.  Belt won’t start.  I look around  a little embarrassed, kind of waiting for someone to tell me that either the machine is broken or there is some trick to starting it.  Of course nobody does.  After 5 minutes of feeling like a complete tool, see someone else get off another TV machine.  Ditch broken TV machine and head over to working TV machine.  All hope is not lost.

Get the belt going on machine #3 almost 20 minutes after I should have started my workout.  Try to change channel.  Realize that the TV might be on, but it is stuck on one channel with the menu bar covering up half the screen and has no sound.

Decide that at this point I just need to freaking get over it and start running. Feel extra stupid given the fact that if I had just stuck with the non-TV in the first place, I’d be almost halfway through my workout.

Spend the next 45 minutes watching a soundless, half-screen of Two and A Half Men.  Halfway through my run I look over at machine #2 to see if anyone has started to fix it.  Someone is walking on it perfectly fine watching the Food Channel.  Wtf.

Whatever, at least I got my run in.

And then there are the days like last Thursday, when I walked into the pool on a really tight schedule, and saw the Special Olympics team there…even though it was definitely not listed on the online schedule. ( And while I am glad the Special Olympians get pool time, I curse the Y for not updating their online schedule.  Ever.)

But when the single available lap lane finally opened up and  I finished my (shortened) warm up, I somehow ended up pacing the Special Olympians on fast 50s instead of doing the workout I had planned.  Which was way more fun than swimming by myself ever is.

And, as is always the case when I walk out the door of the Y, I’m so glad I went.

Roundup: Week 4

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Monday: 5 mile run, after work, on the treadmill…one of those runs where I had to take a towel to cover the distance because it felt like it was taking For. Ev. Er.  And did you know that in the last 20 minutes of any given Bravo show, you get 7 minutes of commercials, 5 minutes of show?  WTF

Tuesday: nothing.  I was beat.

Wednesday: 3 miles outside squeezed in before work…OUTSIIIIIIDE!

Thursday: 2000 at the Y nice and easy

Friday: 5 miles…treadmill…shoot me…

Saturday: It was sunny!  It was almost 60 degrees!  I wanted to run!  But I held off….3 mile walk instead with the fam as opposed to an indoor swim.  It was  gorgeous.

Sunday: 6 miles OUUUUUTSIIIIIDEE!!  in freezing rain…but whatever!

Slowly, slowly, back on the horse…

IMG_20140204_104002running to freeeedoooooooooom

The Postal Swim

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The USMS One Hour Postal Swim was this past Sunday.  The concept of the Postal Swim is simple: swim as far as you can in an hour.  It happens annually and I think I can fairly say it is the least anticipated–some may even say most dreaded–masters swimming event of the year.

The thing is, pretty much everyone that participates has done innumerable cardio workouts that span multiple hours in one sport or another.  But for some reason, an hour swim in the pool without stopping or any sort of set in there is just…awful.

Like with every postal swim over the past 3 years, I got to the pool early to help set up and get people signed in and registered with no real plans to do the swim.  And then at the last minute I decided to jump in and do it (I think, subconsciously, this is the only way I can mentally approach the postal swim.)

Two years ago I did exactly the same thing and went just under 4800 (4760something or something).  Which at the time, considering the shape I was in, I was pretty happy with.

This year I was in worse shape.

Two things that make the Postal Swim particularly unappealing to me:

  1. Swimming (or doing any sort of cardio, really) for a set period of time as opposed to a set distance.  Because seriously, what’s the point of trying harder if you still have 45 minutes to go regardless.
  2. Losing count of how far I’ve gone, which inevitably happens during this swim (I generally have trouble counting beyond 10 in the pool).  Once that happens, all structure is gone and mentally I am done.

So this year to combat both of these things (though I realize that this is not truly the spirit of the postal swim) I decided to break it up a little bit: 4 x 1000 with 10 seconds in between each one to grab some water (since I’d been sick all week), then a 500 for time.  I figured 4500 is a nice round number.

For this event every lane has a person at the end counting and taking 50 splits for the entire hour.  I told my counter to put the kickboard in the water when I hit the 900 mark (which he consistently forgot to do).

The UK pool has a number of large digital clocks that you can read from the water, which makes a world of difference when you’re doing a set like this.  We pushed off the wall when the clock hit 10:00.

For those of you unfamiliar with swimming lingo, you’ll probably want to stop reading now (if you even made it this far).  But if you really want to stick around, just for reference, a normal lap pool in the US is 25 yards long.  So one length = 25 yards, 4 lengths = 100, 40 lengths = 1,000 (math skillzzz).

And now, the mental exercise that is The USMS Postal Swim, as experienced in my head:

0-1,000 yds: “OK, breathe to the right…nope, nobody there…breathe to the left…nobody there either…OK, guess I’m doing this solo…this isn’t so bad…just stay long, hold your stroke together, breathe every three…1, 2, 3…1, 2, 3…I’m so glad I wore this suit instead of the other one, it fits so much better…1, 2, 3…. no parachute butt when I push off the wall…even if it is granny-cut….keep that elbow up, don’t let that left arm slip……1, 2, 3…GOD it feels good to clear out my sinuses…1, 2, 3….HHRRNK! HRRRRRRRRRRRNK!”

Hit the wall at 22:50 (so 12 minutes and 50 seconds after I pushed off).  Push off the wall at 23:00.

1,000-2,000 yds: “So if I want to just keep doing these 1,000s on 13 min, that means that I’m averaging…uuuuhhh…well, 1:20 per 100 would put me at…OK no, too confusing.   Half of 13:00 is 7:30….NO wait, 6:30…so I started at 23:00 plus 7 minutes is 30:00, minus 30 seconds puts the clock at 29:30…so I want to flip at the 500 before the clock says 29:30…so now I’m at a 250–oh crap was that a 200 or a 250?  CRAP.”

Hit the wall at 35:40.  Miley Cyrus is playing over the loudspeaker.  Push off 35:50.

2,000-3,000 yds: “…I came in like a WREEEEEEH-KING BAAAAWL!  All I wanted was to BREAAAK YOUR WAAALLLS!  All you wanted was to, wreh-eh-ehck me!  All you wanted was to, wreh-eh-eck me!  Wreh-eh-eck me!  Wreh-eh-eck me!  All you wanted was to, wreh-eh-eck me!  Wreh-eh-eck me!  Wreh-eh-eck me!  I came in like a WREEEEH-KING BAAAAAAWLL!…”

Hit the wall at 47:36.  Push off at 47:43.

3,000-3,500 yds: “OK, my face feels hot…I’m starting to get tired…I should drink some more water next time I stop…I wonder if I pushed a little bit too much on those first thousands.  Pushed it.  Pushed it good.  Sah-Salt and Pepa heeah….nah, nah nah nah nah–NO!  STOP!  Focus.  Maybe I should do 500s from here on out instead of 1000s.  How much more time is there?  NO!  DO NOT FIGURE THAT OUT!  Just see if you can hold 1:20s starting at THIS FLIP.  We want to do this 200 on 2:40. This is a 50.  50.  50. 50.  FLIP ok this is a 100.  100.  100.  100.  I’m definitely making this a 500 instead of a 1,000.  Eff the 1000s.  100.  100.  100.  FLIP…”

Touch wall at (what I think is) the 500.  Counter is confused.  I don’t even bother to explain myself.  Push off almost immediately.  I have no idea what the clock says.

3,500-4,000: “OK, let’s not lie to ourselves, we have no idea where we are.  We have about 15 minutes left…screw this, just do this last thousand nice and easy.  Just get to 4500.  That will be great. The next 900 just do 3 x 300s.  3 x 300s is no problem, do that all the time. Holy crap is it possible to be pulling no water at all?  I feel like I am swimming in place. I need to work on my upper body strength.  Maybe I should start lifting again.  Do I need more protein?  Maybe we should get a Vitamix.  But $400 is so much money to spend on a kitchen appliance.  Too much money.  Our Magic Bullet is fine.  I should start doing TRX with Paul again…I wonder if it’s really lame to go back and do Summer Sanders pregnancy video if you aren’t pregnant anymore…I really liked the upper body stuff she did with the cords…”

3,900 or 4,000: (the counter sticks the kickboard in the water. I have no idea what that means and ignore it).

4,000-the end:  “I feel better than I thought I would at this point…maybe I should try to do a 500 hard?  Just see what I can go?  Yeah why not!  I can do this!  OK, try to pick it up, and…NOPE!  Not happening.  That is definitely not happening.  Ok so we’re starting the third 300 now, that means at the end of this it will be at 4500.  Or is it 4400?  Did I do a 100 before I started counting the 300s?  DAMMIT.”

BEEEEP!  Time’s up.

Total distance: 4,650.  Avg 1:17/100.

I look at my splits.  My 2300 split: 29:27.  I like almost perfectly even-split the swim.  Which totally baffles me.

…and then spent the rest of the day like this:

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…watching True Detective, which btw is awesome.

Roundup: Week 3

Week 3

Well, this should be short.

Monday: nothing

Tuesday: nothing

Wednesday: nothing

Thursday: nothing

Friday: 2000 straight, easy swim

Saturday: 4 miles on the TM

Sunday: USMS postal swim, 4,650 yards

Last week I got sick after Sunday practice.   It knocked me totally out of the game through Wednesday.  I barely made it out of bed, let alone to work, let alone to work out.  However, the 4 mile easy run on Saturday felt surprisingly awesome considering how crappy I felt all week (probably because I was heavily tapered for it.)

This means a shift in schedule for this week: moving my long (5 mile) run to Monday (today), then bumping my shorter runs to Wednesday and Friday, followed by my 6 miler on Sunday instead of Saturday.  Then back to regularly scheduled programming next week.

In other news…

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Paul: Guess what today’s theme is?
Me: Uuuuhh….
Paul: FLOWER POWER!

What.

But this time of year, I guess you just embrace brightness and color wherever you can get it.

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Roundup: Week 2

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If Week 1 was the week that I felt like I was FINALLY getting back into the groove, Week 2 is the week that I promptly fell out of the groove.  It was brutal.  All week I felt as if the last 5 months of not sleeping through the night hit me in the face with the force of a thousand baby belugas in the deep blue sea (guess what Pandora station has been playing at home).

My energy levels these past 10 days have been off the charts low.  Throw in some travel for work (I had to leave at 6am on Thursday to drive to Indiana for a full day of seminars and meetings…on the way back I actually started to drift off the road even though my eyes were wide open)…and yeah.  Game over.

So while this week was one of the harder weeks I’ve had in a long time, it wasn’t a total loss.  Here it is, the week in review:

Monday: off

Tuesday: 3 mile run before work. no prob.

Wednesday: some sort of cross training on schedule.  Actually did: nothing.

Thursday: 4 mile run on schedule.  Actually did: nothing.

Friday: ALMOST stuck with my streak and did nothing, but instead rallied and got in a….2000 swim.  600 free warm up, 300 drill/kick/swim by 25 IM order, 8 x 100 free @ 1:20.  300 easy.  Quick and done.

Saturday: 4 miles in a blistering 15 degrees with a light breeze.  May have been the coldest run I’ve ever done.  It was, though, pretty wonderful to be off the treadmill…even if the Radio Lab app crashed THREE TIMES in less than 40 minutes and my face was covered with frozen boogers when I got home.

Sunday: 4300 swim (the whole workout was 5200, I jumped in late)
Main set:

  • Broken 1000 (200, 175, 150…25, followed by a 100 strong, 10 seconds rest in between each set)
  • 500 build every 25
  • 4 x 100 IM @ 1:50, descend to fast
  • 300 moderate recovery @ 4:45
  • 2 x 100 IM @ 1:50, faster than IM #4 above
  • 300 moderate recovery @ 4:45
  • 2 x 100 IM @ 2:00 REALLY FAST (faster than 2 above)
  • 300 moderate recovery @ 4:45
  • 4 x 100 non-free (I did IM) @ 1:50, descend 1-4 (descend was a stretch…at this point I was just happy I could still lift my arms out of the water to do survival fly)
  • 500 swim or pull, build every 4th 25

Enjoy your MLK day, here’s to hoping for a better Week 3.

Spring Training Schedule

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I have always found plans to be useless, but planning is indispensable.
~Dwight D Eisenhower

Sunrises lately have been ridiculous.

So last week I did one of my most favorite things: sat down and put together a training schedule.  I put some serious time into the presentation of my training schedules (that are generally excel sheets that only I see), color coding and making them look like this:

schedule

Because where’s the fun if you don’t seize every time you open up your schedule.

So, 2 half marathons in the next 4 months (late March and late April).  Time to get some structure up in these parts.

First: considering the fact it took me just about forever to feel normal running again, I am starting from the beginning.  Novice training plans.  No serious speedwork, no super hard runs.  I am not shooting to PR at either of these races, I  am just working to get my mileage base back since I’ve been out of the game so long and have found it so hard to get back.

Second: I have never been a competitive runner.  I’ve never had a coach.  I mostly run because just swimming all the time gets really boring.  But I do understand the basic structure of a training schedule for an endurance sport (thank you, decade and a half of swimming and coaching) and have done enough recreational running/triathlons to know at the very least what some of my limitations are.  Included in these are the fact that injuries tend to flare up when/if I:

  • Do too many consecutive days of running (especially after long runs)
  • Make every run a “hard” run
  • Don’t foam roll before and after every run
  • Don’t cross train/strengthen

One other thing that will be different this time around:

20140111_104104Yes, this.  I am working full time, (trying to) coach in the mornings again, usually running on minimal sleep, and dealing with a tiny HH.  Flexibility is really important.

When I put together a schedule for any race, I usually take a look at a few of the free options online (see: here, here, here, here for half marys…there are a ton) and build off of those.  (Runners World also has some more detailed training plans for a variety of different levels, but they cost money.)

Hal Higdon was my go-to when I trained for my first marathon.  Things I like about Hal’s approach:

  • He incorporates cross training/strengthening into the schedule.  It’s not just straight up running.
  • He provides alternatives on days that are not speed days or heavy mileage days, giving the runner some flexibility.
  • You can stick with his training schedule and avoid running multiple days  in a row.

Elements of Hal’s novice schedules that don’t work great for me:

  • The longest run on the schedule is significantly shorter than the race distance (10 miles for a half, 20 miles for a full).  Personally, I like to have one run that is close to race distance under my belt before race day, especially at this stage when I’m building back into a solid fitness level.
  • Race days are incorporated into the schedule.  I like this in theory, but in reality it probably is not going to happen.  Finding a 10K race somewhere in this region on one specific weekend requires a little too much logistical maneuvering than I am up for right now.  At this point I am less concerned with speed, more concerned with getting that base mileage in.

And so, for this spring, I have taken Hal’s basic outline and combined it with a slightly different mileage structure, and after taking into account a few other things (such as the fact that the race is on a Saturday instead of a Sunday…)

half mary
And yes, I am calling this a spring training schedule even though it’s January.

I will not hit every single workout on here, but it is what I’m shooting for.  I have, however, given myself five mandatory things I need to do each week (barring any extenuating circumstances, like an illness):

  • Complete the long run of the week, even if it doesn’t happen on Saturday.
  • Get at least 2 shorter runs in during the week, even if they aren’t the full distance.
  • On the days I can’t get a run or cross-training session in, complete hip/core strengthening exercises for at least 10 minutes, just to maintain a certain level of strength.
  • ROLL AND STRETCH before and after runs.  Because (a lot) of times I am squeezing runs into very tight time slots, this can be harder than it sounds.
  • Try to swim at least once a week at the very very least to stretch everything out.

You can also assume the majority of my cross training will be swimming (though the intensity/distance will vary), since I think I OD’ed on stationary machines the past 3 months.

Finished Week 1 yesterday.  So far, so good.

New Beginnings

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Today is arguably the most depressing day of the year.  And Kentucky (along with a lot of the country) decided to go all out for the occasion.

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Yes, that is 3 degrees Farenheit.  Plus 20mph winds.  The air burns.  It hurts to breathe in.  Our front door was frozen shut this morning.  Ice on the insides of the windows.  INSIDES.  I got brain freeze walking from the parking lot to the office (not exaggerating).

BUT TODAY!  Today is the Day 1 of Week 1 of Training Plan 1 for 2014.  Run the Bluegrass is 12 weeks away from this coming Saturday, and Margaret is flying to Kentucky for it, so there’s no backing out.

IMG_20140106_153425margaret!

And after 2 months of stop and go training, followed by weeks of painfully slow running (forcibly slow running on the treadmills is THE WORST), the shin pain seems to be under control (I’ve run for 3 weeks now sans pain), and Paul is done with interviews…I am so, so ready to get back on the post-baby horse.

Training schedule to follow.  Stay warm.

Wrong foot

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It is impossible to get up with the alarm at 6am, after being up at 3am for an hour, so you can pump/feed/change diapers and get out door for a 6:45am run when it is freezing rain outside and you know it won’t really get light until 9am.   IMPOSSIBLE.

Update: It is now blizzarding outside.  There go the odds of my after work run coming to fruition.

2013

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…is over.  And after the last month+ being mostly gray and gross, the first day of 2014 was pretty glorious by January in Kentucky standards.  Clear clear skies and mild wind.  Wintery glory.

And so, a day or three behind every other blogger out there (because that is how I roll), a brief 2013 recap:

Races:

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I did exactly one: the NYC ING half marathon in April.  Kind of a sad list considering the past few years, but this trip to New York was awesome and so was the run.

Chickens:

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…died.  And/or were killed by us (as humanely as possible) or wild animals.  Or at least two of them were.  One of them went to live on a big farm where she can run free and play with other chickens all day long.  No, seriously, she did.

Babies:

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Had one.  Was a little miffed that, although I delivered in August, in Kentucky, I was never offered a sufferin’ towel.

Garden:

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Pretty successful, if relatively uneventful, year for the garden.  Never found a better solution for turnips than mashing them up and serving with butter.

Kentucky:

KKAtattoo2pic via

Still here.  Still kickin ass.  (Proof: here.)

To cap it all off, I celebrated NYE with Spike, Nerlens, and HH at home (Paul is still traveling for residency interviews) and took exactly two pictures to commemorate the occasion.

IMG_20140101_202854Nerlens making it really difficult for me to take advantage of some quiet time with my book

IMG_20140101_202744…and HH totally enthralled by Frances Ha.

Wow.  With all of these monumental events it’s a wonder this blog doesn’t have more traffic.

In summary, 2013 was a pretty great year for me on a personal level.  Looking forward to the next one, though.  Think it might be even better.

Happy 2014.