This is the week I hit 60 miles. Why is that so important?
Because, that was my peak mileage that I ran before Chicago last year. And what a contrast this year has been to that year.
Last year around this time I was suffering from a knee injury that left me limping around, running or not. At that time, I had serious doubts that I would be able to recover and train for the Chicago Marathon in October. Not even rest was helping the injury. To make matters worse, I had been told back in April that my position at work had been eliminated – so kind of them to just eliminate my position and not fire me – oh, wait, they did.
So to keep my sanity and to at least enjoy the nice weather we had been having, I decided to go out and run really really slowly (i.e. Grandma Running). And it worked.
True, it hurt at first. I could barely go a quarter mile before I had to walk. But slowly, over time, I found the pain slowly subsiding and I was running more and more miles at an increasingly faster pace.
By August I was averaging around 50 miles a week and felt wonderful on most of my runs. At that time, my weekly running schedule consisted of two intermediate distance runs of around 9 to 12 miles run at roughly marathon pace, or with some faster sections; a long run on the weekends that peaked at 22 miles; and then several recovery runs of 5 to 8 miles run at whatever pace I felt like.
By the time October rolled around, I had peaked at 60 miles a week and was in my taper, which, if you are unfamiliar with the lingo or running, is a period of reduced running before a big race. I was feeling great and was confident that I would be able to run a marathon in under 3 hours 20 minutes. In fact, I ran it in 3 hours 13 minutes and felt great at the end.
So when I hit 60 miles this week I will have reached a milestone in my running. Instead of the injuries and doubts that faced me last year at this time, I will have reached the same level of conditioning I had reached before I ran the Chicago Marathon. Because of this, I feel my running has come a long way.
Yet I still have much work ahead of me. And I still have to run those sixty miles!
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