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Location:

Saint George,UT,USA

Member Since:

Dec 23, 2009

Gender:

Female

Goal Type:

Other

Running Accomplishments:

Mount Charleston Marathon 2016 - 3:17:51

Snow Canyon Half 2012 - 1:33:30

Spectrum 10K 2012 - 43:41 

Short-Term Running Goals:

Run a destination marathon. 

Complete a half Ironman.

Long-Term Running Goals:

Know when to hold 'em

Know when to fold 'em

Know when to walk away

Know when to run....

Personal:

Surrounded by the people I love. Life is good.

Passionate about my family, the University of Utah -- GO UTES, almond M&Ms, mountain biking, comfy t-shirts, Survivor, friends, and (of course) running.

Physical therapist at The Health and Performance Center at Dixie Regional Medical Center. I LOVE what I do. Seriously, living the dream!

Click to donate
to Ukraine's Armed Forces
Miles:This week: 0.00 Month: 0.00 Year: 0.00
Easy MilesMarathon Pace MilesThreshold MilesVO2 Max MilesCrosstraining milesTotal Miles
6.001.000.000.000.007.00

7 miles: AP 8:38.

*I think I am catching a cold. My goal is to get 9 hours of sleep within the next 24 hours. :)

Comments
From DonGardinero on Mon, Sep 13, 2010 at 12:46:56 from 75.162.164.84

Bummer about the possiblle cold. Nice run.

From Andy on Mon, Sep 13, 2010 at 12:55:42 from 199.190.170.28

Not surprising that you are catching a cold right now. You have taxed your body very heavily the past month and your immune system is compromised. Look at the next couple of weeks as a recovery period, not a taper. Your goal is to allow your body to recover while maintaining your fitness. You know better what to do than anybody else. Are you getting tired of me saying that?

From Kathie on Mon, Sep 13, 2010 at 12:56:22 from 63.248.105.188

Get feeling better the sleep will do you good! Great race on Saturday, it sounds like you had so much fun!

From Teena Marie on Mon, Sep 13, 2010 at 13:30:08 from 166.70.177.6

Thanks Dale!!!

Andy~

But what if I DON'T know what I am doing? Seriously!!!! I feel like I have learned enough in regards to how to get to SGM uninjured (knock on wood) but I want to get there in better condition than just that. Sigh.

Kathie~

I wish I didn't have classes through 4:30 today. I would go take a nap right this second!!! We missed you at Spanish Fork!

From RAD on Mon, Sep 13, 2010 at 14:20:33 from 67.172.229.125

sleep my dear Teena, sleep! :)

Nice work on the miles and paces, tapering is oh so very hard for me! So, I wish I had some advice, but I ain't got none :)

From RivertonPaul on Mon, Sep 13, 2010 at 16:21:25 from 67.42.27.114

Listen to Andy.

From Tom Slick on Mon, Sep 13, 2010 at 19:59:43 from 69.171.174.143

Dear Teena, it seems like your triping over dollars to save dimes. Your getting all kinds of good advice but you seem to be headed out on your own direction. This taper stuff wans't just thought up yesterday and tossed on you lap just off the watermelon truck.This is all tried and true stuff that really works. Honey your wore out and need a break.......and it's called taper time....tyi

From Smooth on Tue, Sep 14, 2010 at 00:08:53 from 67.41.235.104

SSF ~ Oh please don't get sick! Take extra EmergenC and go to bed! Just got your text...that means you're not sleeping! Please please take care of yourself! Love you!

From seeaprilrun on Tue, Sep 14, 2010 at 08:36:49 from 68.103.248.145

A noble goal! Sleep well!

From Tom Slick on Tue, Sep 14, 2010 at 08:39:22 from 69.171.174.37

Pay me now, or Pay me later! We either learn from the past or were doomed by it!

From fly on the Wall on Tue, Sep 14, 2010 at 11:29:09 from 204.113.19.47

I hope you got some good sleep and are feeling better.

If you do catch a cold, it is not the end of the world. It will just force you to get the rest you really need. You have 2.5 weeks to get rested and recharged for race day.

From Tom Slick on Tue, Sep 14, 2010 at 11:45:26 from 69.171.174.37

Edit postDelete postReport this postInformationReply with quote WSJ Article - Slow Down

by Pron8r on Tue Sep 07, 2010 7:17 am

From this morning's Wall Street Journal:

Why Trainers Say, 'Slow Down'

By KEVIN HELLIKER

When his running coach implored him to take rest days, Bill Carr didn't listen. Slated to run a 100-mile ultramarathon this month, the 36-year-old cranked up his workouts over the summer, running more and harder miles than his coach recommended.

Running coach Julie Fingar guides Bill Carr, who ran too much and injured his ankle, in drills at a Twin Rocks trail near Folsom Lake in Granite Bay, Calif.

"I wanted to make sure that I got to the event fully prepared," he says. But Mr. Carr won't get to the 100-miler at all. Last month, his ankle sustained an over-use injury during a workout, sidelining the Rancho Cordova, Calif., project manager for a vision-benefits company.

"Type A personalities will increase their training load until something backfires," says Julie Fingar, Mr. Carr's running coach, who says her biggest challenge is convincing her clients to take an adequate amount of rest. "In their minds, taking rest means they're not working hard enough."

Today, says Mr. Carr: "I'm taking Julie's advice and starting to cross train."

Roughly 10% of athletes preparing for an endurance event are training too hard, estimates Jack Raglin, director of graduate studies at the Indiana University's department of kinesiology. Research in the field has shown that injury rates rise as runners increase their weekly mileage. Besides injury, excessive training can contribute to or cause major depression, loss of sleep, anorexia and sometimes death.

"The overtrained athlete is so fried by race time that he either performs very poorly or can't perform at all," says Dr. Raglin, who specializes in overtraining problems.

A more-is-better mentality permeates the endurance-exercise culture. Novice runners in particular tend to think that finishing a marathon requires no end of training. In fact, however, under-training is rare. After all, more than 95% of marathon starters reach the finish line.

Statistically, the harder line to reach is the start line. Of the tens of thousands of Americans who pay as much as $180 to register for marathons, as many as 25% fail to make it to the race. Injury, illness and loss of motivation as a result of overtraining are major reasons for this.

But moderation is a hard message to promote among runners determined to reach extremes. For such athletes, no matter how conclusively science may prove the value of rest and recovery, the culture of endurance sports lionizes those who seemingly never rest.

"In running circles, there is huge pressure to do big mileage, to do the big training, to do the biggest races," says Sandra Ross, a 47-year-old runner in Auburn, Calif.

It also can be difficult for runners to know when they are training too hard. One red flag, sports-medicine specialists say, is an intensifying obsession with performance. Exercise, after all, is supposed to be stress-reducing, and amateur competitions by definition are recreational. Yet marathon fields are populated with runners who are visibly stressed out about whether they'll set a personal record or win their age group.

To head off overtraining, some coaches urge athletes to remain alert for the point at which greater doses of exercise cease to produce improvement.

"The body responds beautifully to the right schedule of training stresses," Lynn Bjorklund, who in 1981 set the still-standing female course record for the Pikes Peak Marathon, wrote in an email. "However, too much stress and not enough nutrition or recovery pushes your body toward injury and illness. You need to stay in that zone of just enough, and that takes a very high tuned and honest appraisal of yourself."

Ms. Ross, the California runner, says that for years she would suffer injuries while training for marathons. To help pace herself, Ms. Ross hired Ms. Fingar, the running coach, who enforced rest days, cross-training and trail-running as a lower-impact alternative to pavement.

The discipline paid off, and this summer Ms. Ross completed a 100-mile race. That accomplishment wouldn't have been possible if she hadn't resisted the impulse to match the weekly mileage of her younger running partners, she says. "If I ran as much as they do I'd be faster. But as an older runner I need more rest, and I also have a child, a husband and a career," says Ms. Ross, who works as an environmental consultant.

Overtraining can contribute to exercise-related anorexia, a potentially fatal syndrome that strikes nearly half of all women in so-called lean sports such as running, according to a book published this year, "Eating Disorders in Sport."

"I was diligent about cutting down the calories and increasing my workout schedule. The pounds fell away and it seemed to result in better racing," recalls Ms. Bjorklund, who says that soon after setting a Pikes Peak Marathon record she entered a hospital near death from anorexia.

"It is easy to think that if a little is good, more should be better. After a period of time, however, I would always crash and be forced to cut back," the 53-year-old wrote in an email.

Ms. Fingar, the running coach, says that early in her athletic career she was prone to overtraining and exercise-related anorexia. As a result she says she studies her clients and friends for signs of chronic fatigue, depression, compulsive training or privation. "It can be really destructive," the 35-year-old says. "When someone becomes addicted in a non-healthy manner, all other things suffer—work, family, friends and of course their performance."

Ms. Fingar says she tries to set an example for her clients. She refrains from aerobic exercise one day a week. Often, if she listens to her body instead of her mind, "I'll realize that I'm tired and I'll take another day," she says.

When training for an ultramarathon, Ms. Fingar runs about 70 miles a week, far fewer than the 100 miles that many other ultramarathoners log weekly. But unlike some other runners she is rigorous about cross-training weekly in the pool, on a bicycle and in yoga and Pilates studios. She says this training offers a break from the monotony and physical pounding of running, and provides flexibility, enhanced aerobic fitness and a strengthening of core muscles.

"Especially with trail running and endurance events, you need upper-body and core strength to ascend and descend the hills," she says.

Write to Kevin Helliker at kevin.helliker@wsj.com

From DonGardinero on Tue, Sep 14, 2010 at 12:02:59 from 75.162.164.84

Teena...I'm far from being an expert, but from what I've read, during taper you should keep up the intensity, but cut back on the mileage.

Someone correct me if I'm wrong because I'd like to know for sure, too.

From fly on the Wall on Tue, Sep 14, 2010 at 12:58:10 from 204.113.19.47

I've read what you've read Mr. Gardinero.

From Tom Slick on Tue, Sep 14, 2010 at 15:46:40 from 69.171.174.37

It's Taper Time

The final 3 weeks are the most important in any marathon-training program. Here's everything you need to know and do leading up to race day.

By Bob Cooper Published 12/09/2003

There are as many marathon-training plans as there are marathoners. So how do you know if you're following a good one? Take a look at the last 3 weeks.

Every good marathon-training plan should "taper" during those final 21 days. That means you run less and rest more. For some people, the idea of backing off on their training just before the big race seems counterintuitive. "So many runners train hard right up to the day of the marathon because they're desperately afraid of losing fitness if they don't," says Patti Finke, who coaches 250 marathoners a year as co-director of the Portland (Oregon) Marathon Clinic. "What they don't realize is that in those last few weeks it's the rest more than the work that makes you strong. And you don't lose fitness in 3 weeks of tapering. In fact, studies show that your aerobic capacity, the best gauge of fitness, doesn't change at all."

Research reveals a lot more than that. A review of 50 studies on tapering published in the journal Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise shows that levels of muscle glycogen, enzymes, antioxidants, and hormones--all depleted by high mileage--return to optimal ranges during a taper. The muscle damage that occurs during sustained training is also repaired. And if that isn't enough, immune function and muscle strength improve, as well, which reduces the odds you'll catch a cold or get injured just before the race. And get this: The average performance improvement by the subjects who tapered in these studies was 3 percent. That works out to 5 to 10 minutes in a marathon.

The review's main conclusion: "The primary aim of the taper should be to minimize accumulated fatigue, rather than to attain additional physiological adaptations or fitness gains." In other words, it's time to chill.

So don't blow it after all those weeks of training. The following plan shows you exactly how to modify your running, thinking, and eating in those 3 crucial weeks before you toe the line. So relax. We've got you covered.

3 WEEKS TO GO

Week 1 of the taper begins the day after your last long run of about 20 miles, 3 weeks before the marathon. The taper starts gradually, because this training still "counts," and a dramatic drop in workload isn't necessary yet. This week, you need to run a bit less, eat a bit more protein, troubleshoot your race plan, and choose your race-day shoes.

Training Checklist

1. Last week should have been your highest-mileage week. This week, stick with the same basic running schedule you've been following, just decrease your total mileage from last week by at least 20 percent.

2. Your shorter weekday runs shouldn't be much different than last week's, but shave a mile or 2 off your longer midweek runs.

3. Generally, weekday training should consist of one medium long run of 8 to 10 miles, one marathon-goal-pace run of 4 to 6 miles, one nonrunning day, and two runs of 3 to 5 miles.

4. Your weekend long run (2 weeks before the marathon) should be a 12- to 14-miler at the same pace--not faster--as the previous week's 20-miler.

5. Except for the marathon-goal-pace run, all running this week should be at a relaxed pace of 11/2 to 2 minutes slower per mile than marathon goal pace.

6. Avoid running extremely hilly courses, hill repetitions, or speed workouts. This kind of training leads to muscle-tissue damage, which you need to minimize throughout your taper.

Mental Preparation

7. "Think of all the problems that could arise and work through how you'll handle them," says Kate Hays, Ph.D., a sports psychologist, longtime runner, and director of the starting-line "psyching team" at the Toronto Marathon. "Doing this will provide solutions so that you won't panic in case one of the scenarios does occur, and it reduces your anxiety because you'll know you're ready for any situation." Mentally rehearse the following scenarios:

 It's warm, freezing, or blustery. Less-than-ideal conditions mean you have to adjust your time goals. Headwinds can slow your finish time by several minutes, and heat or cold by even more. A survey of marathon finish times suggests that 55 degrees is the ideal temperature, a temperature of 35 or 75 degrees adds 7 percent to your time, and an 85-degree day adds 10 percent.

 You start out ahead of goal pace. Slow down to goal pace as soon as you figure this out (hopefully no later than when you hit the first mile marker), because running an even pace is crucial.

 You start out slower than goal pace. Speed up, but only to goal pace, because trying to "make up for lost time" is a fool's game. You can still achieve your goal time by speeding up slightly during the second half of the race.

 You slip off goal pace midrace. This is the time to become your own cheerleader. Coax yourself back into the groove by thinking about all the training you put in and how badly you want to achieve your goal.

 Your old (knee/shin/foot) problem acts up at midrace. Decide in advance how bad it has to get before you'll drop out. A good guideline is that if the pain forces you to alter your stride, drop out so you don't develop a long-term injury.

 A side stitch strikes. As excruciating as these can be, plan on hanging in there, because most stitches vanish within a couple of miles--especially if you slow down and apply pressure to the area where you feel the stitch.

Nutritional Needs

8. "Take in a lot of protein this week to aid in the repair and recovery of muscle tissue damaged during the high-mileage phase of marathon training," says Alan Tichenal, Ph.D., a University of Hawaii sports nutritionist and 20-time finisher of the Honolulu Marathon. Shoot for 75 to 100 grams of protein per day.

9. If you don't eat meat, fill up on protein from eggs, beans, dairy, and soy products.

10. To rebuild your literally "run-down" immune defenses and possibly prevent a cold or flu, load up on Vitamin C. Kiwis, orange juice, red bell peppers, broccoli, and strawberries are the most potent food sources.

11. Stock up on lysine, an amino acid found mostly in meat and fish that will further help your immune functions. Wheat germ or a 500-milligram supplement are the best vegetarian options.

And Don't Forget

12. This week, buy the shoes you plan to wear in the marathon, and wear them on most of your runs until race day. Stick with a brand or model that's worked well for you in the past.

13. If you already have shoes in mind for the race, be sure they're adequately broken in, but not worn down. Most running shoes lose their cushioning and resiliency at 300 to 500 miles.

2 WEEKS TO GO

Week 2 is a transitional period. You're halfway between the agony of your last 20-miler and the ecstasy of the marathon. Rest truly replaces training as the most important element of your race preparations, and race strategizing takes on increasing importance.

Training Checklist

1. Your mileage this week should be about half to two-thirds the amount you ran during your highest mileage week.

2. Almost all running should be slow (11/2 to 2 minutes slower than marathon goal pace) except for 2 miles run in the middle of a midweek 4-miler at marathon goal pace. "Even this small amount of goal-pace running is important because it physically and mentally reinforces the pace you want to run on race day," says Finke. "This follows the rule of specificity--simulating as closely as possible what you hope to do in competition." It's also fine to throw in a few 100-meter strides after one or two workouts just to help you stay smooth and loose.

3. Weekday short runs should not exceed 4 miles.

4. Your longest weekday run should be 6 to 10 miles.

5. Your weekend long run (1 week before the race) should be 8 to 10 miles. Any longer and your muscles may not be able to fully rebound before the race.

Mental Preparation

6. "Set multiple goals so you won't come away from the race empty-handed," says Hays.

"Set three time goals-- 'fantastic,' 'really good,' and 'I can live with that' finish times." These can each be separated by 5 to 15 minutes.

7. Set general goals, such as not walking, finishing strong, or simply enjoying yourself.

8. Check the race Web site for race-morning particulars such as start time, and work out the details of how you'll get to the start on marathon day. Logistics you'll want to consider: where you'll park; how early you want to arrive (an hour before start time is ideal); where you'll stow your gear during the race.

9. Also check the race Web site for the course map and study it.

10. If the race is local, drive the course or run key sections to make it easier to visualize between now and race day.

Nutritional Needs

11. Your mileage may be dwindling, but keep those calories coming in as usual. Your body still needs to repair tissue damaged during your mileage build-up. "This is no time to diet," says Tichenal.

12. Even though you're running less, resist the temptation to cut way back on fat. A reasonable proportion of dietary fat (30 percent of your daily calories) is beneficial because it can be accessed as a backup energy source when stored carbs are used up. Fat reserves can therefore postpone or prevent a race-day collision with the notorious "wall."

13. Eat foods that are high in unsaturated fat, such as nuts or fish cooked in canola oil. Limit foods that are high in saturated fat and trans fats, such as pizza and ice cream.

And Don't Forget

14. If you've been lifting weights as part of your training program, stop. Weight training at this stage of the game can't help your race, but it can sap your strength or cause an injury.

1 WEEK TO GO

During Week 3 of your taper, things can get ugly. Two weeks ago you ran 20 miles in a single run, but now you won't run this amount all week. And as your mileage plummets, your worries can skyrocket. But take comfort that thousands of other marathoners preparing to race this coming weekend are going through the exact same thing. And take refuge in your final mission: to ensure that your body is sufficiently fueled, hydrated, refreshed, and recovered for the task.

Training Checklist

1. Beginning on Monday, do no runs longer than 4 miles. And when you do head out, remember that these jaunts are more for your head than your body, because training has little effect this week.

2. Almost all running should be at 11/2 to 2 minutes per mile slower than marathon goal pace--except a Tuesday 2-miler at marathon goal pace, sandwiched by 1-mile jogs. Again, if you want, throw in some quick 100-meter strides after one or two of your workouts. This helps fight off the sluggish feeling that can occur during your taper.

3. Three days before the race, run just 2 to 3 miles easy.

4. Two days before the race, don't run at all.

5. On the day before the race, jog 2 miles to take the edge off your pent-up energy so you'll sleep better that night.

Mental Preparation

6. "Confidence should be the focus of the final week," says Hays, "but you may still experience anxiety. If so, remind yourself that you're physically prepared because you did the necessary training, and you're mentally prepared because you did the necessary trouble-shooting and goal-setting."

7. Try to minimize job, relationship, and travel stresses all week.

8. If you're nervous about the race, try breathing exercises to relax. Breathe in and out as slowly and deeply as possible, letting your belly expand as you inhale. Focus your attention on the breathing and any positive, calming image.

9. If you're too super-charged with energy to sleep, try this relaxation exercise. First tense, then relax your muscles, one at a time, starting with the muscles in your face and working down to your toes. Sex can also help relax your mind and body.

Nutritional Needs

10. "Emphasize carbohydrates more than usual in the last 3 days before the race," says Tichenal. About 60 to 70 percent of your calories should come from carbohydrate sources. Pasta, potatoes, rice, cereals, and fruit are healthy choices, but even sodas and sweets do the job. It all turns into muscle glycogen.

11. Wash all those carbs down with fluids so your energy and water levels are high on race morning. Alcoholic beverages don't count toward your fluid totals, however, and you'll need to make up for their diuretic effect by drinking extra fluids. You know you're adequately hydrated if your urine is clear or pale yellow in color.

12. Don't restrict the salt in your diet. Low salt intake combined with excessive hydration can lead to hyponatremia, a rare but dangerous condition that can afflict marathoners. Drinking sports drinks and snacking on salted popcorn and pretzels will help keep your sodium levels up.

13. Don't look at the scale. Because of your fully stocked fluid and fuel stores you're likely to gain a couple pounds this week. But it's worth the weight. Having your body's energy reserves at full capacity will do more for your race than weighing a little less--and you'll lose those pounds by the finish line anyway.

And Don't Forget

14. Don't do anything tiring. Let the grass grow. Let the kids take out the garbage. Let the dog walk himself.

15. Don't try anything new. No new foods, drinks, or sports.

16. Don't cross-train, hike, or bike.

17. Don't get a sports massage unless it's part of your routine. You may feel bruised a couple days afterward if you're not accustomed to it.

18. Stay off your feet and catch up on movies, books, and sleep. If you go to the pre-race expo, don't stay long.

19. Remember: During this final week, you can't under-do. You can only overdo.

The Final Hours

Feeling calm, confident, and in control is your mission on race morning. Here's how to come by the three Cs:

1. Be sure your race outfit, shoes, timing chip, number, bag, and map to the start are set out the night before, so a treasure hunt isn't required in the morning.

2. Eat a light, easily-digestible meal, such as oatmeal or white toast and a banana, at least 2 hours before the start. Make sure you've eaten these foods before a few training runs with no adverse effects.

3. Drink 8 to 16 ounces of sports drink 60 to 90 minutes before the race.

4. Arrive at the start about an hour early, so you won't have to rush.

5. Joke around with friends or fellow runners before the race to lighten your mood.

6. About 25 minutes before the start, do some walking, slow jogging, then a few 50-meter pickups at race pace. Visit the port a john one last time. Mentally review your race plan.

7. Position yourself appropriately at the start according to your projected pace, and remind yourself to start easy! You'll be glad you did when late in the race you're able to pass all those runners who started too fast.

Taper Tips for Shorter Races

The taper is nearly as important for a short race as for a marathon; it just doesn't need to last as long.

1. For half-marathons, limit your long run on the previous weekend to 8 or 10 miles, and cut your usual run distances in half the rest of the week.

2. For 5-Ks to 10-milers, cut your mileage in half for 3 to 5 days before the race.

3. If you do any speedwork in the last 3 to 6 days before a sub-marathon-distance race, make it only a third of a normal speed session.

4. Carbo-load in the last 3 days before a half-marathon if you wish, though it's less crucial than it is for a marathon.

5. Don't carbo-load before races shorter than 10 miles, because it doesn't help and the extra weight you may gain will slow you down.

6. If you're nervous in the days before a sub-marathon race, remind yourself that you can run another one in a few weeks if it doesn't go well.

From Teena Marie on Tue, Sep 14, 2010 at 16:07:46 from 174.52.45.85

Thanks everyone!!! You are all so good to me!

After reading several articles now, reviewing what has worked best for me in the past, taking an honest inventory of where I am at, what my goal is, what will fit nicely in my schedule and getting solid advice from a handful of people I have come up with a taper plan that I feel will work best for me! I will post a quick summary of it on my entry for today. :)

I can not tell you how much I appreciate all of you. You really have helped me put the pieces together in a much better way than I would have if left on my own. I am so lucky to have so many wonderful and incredibly talented friends! Thanks again! :) :) :)

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