An example:

The Bedtime Blues

SNAPSHOT

Click goes the light,

you're all snug and tight,

into the night,

everything is right.

DIGGING DEEPER

Every night you try to get to bed on time.  You can't. It seems like such an easy task but you just can't make it happen.

I have been there, for years and years.

I remember in college as a competitive runner shutting the books and slipping into bed for my required 8 hours of sleep.  There was no option, I had to get my sleep and stay healthy. Yes, my GPA probably went down from a 3.7 to a 3.65 since I was a student-athlete. 

I am done having babies because I can't go through the sleepless nights. Those 8 years with infants was a long stretch of sleep deprivation where I should not have been even driving.

Then came the years of children's activities that sucked up all the afternoon and evening hours as I was out of the house attending to their schedule. 

All these years I have known the value of sleep. I know I need at least eight to nine hours, often more when training with high weekly miles. I understand that sleep will speed up my recovery, make my brain more alert, and in reality improve relationships with my family members. I can know. I can wish. But how can I actually make it happen?  I can't change the time the alarm goes off in the morning.  I can only influence the time I turn off the bedroom light.

Then came a night last fall when I returned home from my son's soccer practice to a house without electricity. I couldn't open the fridge, turn on the tv, use my phone or computer.  It was unknown when the electricity would turn back on, tonight, or late tomorrow. As I laid in bed at 8:45pm, I felt relieved. Early bedtime, finally check.

The next day after 10 hours of much-needed sleep, I was like a new woman. I did it again the next day, even though there was electricity. Two days of 10 hour sleeps, had me hooked. How would I make this my new routine?

When I woke up each morning I longed for that early bedtime.  I changed what I did throughout the day, inorder to make the appointment with my bed. All the must-do tasks that I filled the last hours of my old days, moved into the daytime. That way when the hour before bedtime came, I was prepared to end the day.

So what does this look like?

  • The most important task, even if it seems a bit awkward, is done first. That way if the day goes crazy you can say, at least I did ____.
  • Whatever I am avoiding is done first or second in the day.
  • Dishes go in and out of the dishwasher throughout the day. Rarely do I empty the dishwasher. Children can empty it very well while I am making their food or in order to eat the food I have shopped, prepared, and served them.
  • Emails sorted and responded throughout the day, leaving the lengthy responses to less busy days. Emails to read get put into the "to read" file where if I really want to read them they are easy to locate.
  • Lunches packed directly after dinner, while all the food is out and everyone is in the kitchen. (Yes, my 8 and 10-year-olds make their own lunches and so can yours.)
  • Reasonable expectations of what YOU can accomplish in 16 hours. Every new season of the year I write out a weekly by hour calendar of what I need to do, adding in time for managing the home tasks. It is like realizing that the huge dinner on my plate will not fit in my stomach and I need to trim off the excess. See another post from On My Mind on this topic.
  • Children 8 and older do their own laundry. You don't even need to nag them. When they run out of clothes, they can drag their basket to the washer and follow the directions on an index card on how to wash their clothes. 
  • No stacks of papers. NONE. Only files. (If you have a paper pile sitting right next to you, put it in a box in your basement and if you don't need anything from it within 1 month, throw it away.)
  • Touch something only once, put it where it goes the first time you pick it up.
  • Keep a quick pace while working and avoid sitting.
  • Social media is not bad, just have everything else done first.
  • Grace for the days that are unplanned chaos.

Most of all if you always have the bedtime hour on your mind and evaluate your actions to decide if they will help you get to bed on time, then you will be productive throughout the day and prepared for the end of the day.

Honestly, you can only do so much in one day. The sun will rise the next day and you will be rested and ready to work hard and have fun living life.

Several years ago, I learned a very tough lesson as I was training for the half-marathon.  My training was awesome but my recovery was horrible.  I didn't sleep enough to recover from all the miles and speed work.  Two weeks before the race I knew something was very wrong.  My legs were dead even though I was tapering my training. During the race, my body shut down and my dream of a low 1:20s half marathon blew up in my face as I watched my pace slow. Afterward, I took a hard look at my life and realized that I had not overtrained but had under recovered.  The two hours of training every day was not the culprit, it was the late nights limiting the much needed hours of sleep. The words under recovered hit home hard.

SOLUTION

My love abounds when I am a rested wife, mother, friend, and runner.

Please comment below with your solutions to working and playing for only 15-16 hours a day and sleeping the rest.

 

 

Those darn hills...

SNAPSHOT

"I was flying until I hit that hill."

"I hate hills!"

"I am so bad at hills."

DIGGING DEEPER

You either dread them or secretly wish for them. Those that wish to climb elevation have come to terms with the pain and determination hill running commands. Birthed out of the moment where you declared hills to be your conquered enemy, you learned how to climb with determination. 

There are a few techniques that you could employ to reach the top with energy.  However, don’t get lost in these tips, because truly it is your will that will get you there.  More on that after I cover the basics of hill running.

Thanks to Youtube for this example of uphill running form.  This runner will make it to the top!

Thanks to Youtube for this example of uphill running form.  This runner will make it to the top!

  1. Break the hill into sections. Climb each section one at a time. Small goals are easier to reach.  Many small goals add up to the big goal you want to achieve.
  2. Slightly lean into the hill.  From your heels, not your hips, lean with the hill.
  3. Knees up, strong arms
  4. Use the same effort over the top of the hill and let gravity pull you down the decline.  Gravity will do a portion of the work, giving you a chance to rest.
  5. Don’t lean back while running downhill, you are breaking yourself and causing extra stress and wasting the free speed of the downhill.
  6. Run hilly routes, don’t avoid them.  I remember one run with my 3 boys on bikes and my daughter in the stroller, in addition my friend with her daughter in her stroller where we were in search of all hills in the nearby neighborhoods. This was at the request of my bikers since flying downhill was what kept them from giving up on our adventure.  Look forward to hills. See the upside of hills.
  7. Hills are cardio and strength training at one time: multi-tasking as a runner.
  8. WHAT GOES UP, gets to go DOWN. Unless your start and finish are in different locations, you will have the opportunity to run downhill as much as you ran uphill. 

My first 5 years of running consisted of conquering Colorado foothills and flying down the backside of high grade “hills”.  The Death Quest hill workout was a Monday staple and summer Wednesdays at six A.M.  brought a fierce fight to the top of the Horsetooth Reservoir switchbacks where you look out at the city of Fort Collins. Most cross country races were ruthless all the while a mile high in elevation.  This was normal.  This is what I had to conquer over and over.  And I liked it. I liked the challenge.

More experience, more determination will rid you of fear. Map out the hills near your running routes and loop them into your miles.  Use the tips above to make the most of your steps.

Hill Lovers Challenge - Bridge of Flowers 10K in August - The elevation map above is from this race through a small town in MA. "You said it was hard, but that was unspeakably hard." Yet, we still keep coming back.

SOLUTION

This coach is proclaiming, “You got this!”

Comment below with your favorite hills.

Perseverance

SNAPSHOT

Expect Pain

DIGGING DEEPER

Kristen’s Story

Remembering a snippet from a conversation at the summer pool enabled Kristen to train for her first marathon. “It is ok to feel pain while and after running.  However, you don’t want it to get out of hand and change your running stride,” were the words that kept her on track to obtain her goal.

Yes, I said it will hurt to run.  Your body is not accustomed to jumping from one foot to the other in a continual quick motion.  You are shocking it.  Even if you have run ten miles before and are only running one more extra mile, your body has not run this extra mile recently or perhaps even ever.  It is ok to feel pain.  You will make it.  Keep putting one foot in front of the other and you will reach the end.

However, there is a bad pain that is not good.  It leads to injury.  You will know if it is a bad pain if it causes you to change your stride or limp.  At this point stop running and seek rest and help. It does not mean that you are done running forever and need to lay on the couch for the next two weeks in mourning. If often means your training will change to cross-training until your amazing body heals itself.

For the pains that are not changing your stride try this method. When you have pain, pause and stretch the area.  Try to relieve the pain.  Then attempt to run again. 

If your pain decreased, continue for your allotted distance.  

Pain that increases will change how you land or move through the air, causing a more serious injury. This is the point where you rest and seek professional help.

Runners persevere through hardship and strive forward through pain and discomfort.  The reward is worth the effort.

SOLUTION  

Your determination will yield rewards, but be wise.

Share with me your perseverance stories by clicking comment below. I am so curious.

CHANGING THE WORLD by Passing On the Joy of Running

SNAPSHOT

How can you introduce and include running in a child's formable years?  Freedom

Run alongside a child this week. You will change their world.

DIGGING DEEPER

Set aside your usual view of children's running and foster a theory of freedom. Children intuitively train their bodies through the phases of early growth. From rolling to walking to running from you, they challenge their bodies to develop stronger muscles and greater stamina. The child who falls asleep half way through his or her dinner has eaten just enough to let the need for sleep take over. This is intuitive and natural. They know when to rest and when to play. Read more of the Passing on the Joy of Running, Adirondack Sports article.

SOLUTION

Share the benefits of movement with the young around you.  Volunteer and support groups that provide running teams for children. See links below for local youth programs. 

Girls on the Run 

Just Run

USATF Adirondack Association

I must add STEM RUNNING to the list even though they are a group for adults.  They are passing on the joy of running with great passion!

 

 

The Registering Dilemma

So many choices...

So many choices...

SNAPSHOT

To register or not, that is the question.

DIGGING DEEPER

The options are swirling around.  One training group is running the Philly Marathon this year, another one is going for casual 5Ks, you are stuck in between not knowing what to choose? All the while your heart has been stuck on trying a mountain trail race.

Here is a simple guide to help your registering nightmare become blissful!

1. What do you love, distance or speed?

2. What do you need, distance or speed?

3. If this was your last chance to race in America, what event would you participate in?

4. Which race would you drive 3 extra hours out of your way to pick up a friend or family member in order to run the race together?

5. What race will you get up at 5 am or stay out on the road after work in order to train for?

6. Will training for this race distance prepare you for your lifetime running goals?

7. Does your coach or experienced training partners agree that your top choice is within reach?

I hope through answering these questions you have found your "A" race of the year!  Now go and put your heart into it each and every day.  

If you would like more help sorting through what is the best choice for you, contact me for a coaching session where we can plan out your training and racing seasons.

SOLUTION

Read my NO DAYS OFF post (following post) about spending every day recovering from yesterday and preparing for the next day.

Colleen Cahill in her glory after a CA trail race.

Colleen Cahill in her glory after a CA trail race.