Shanghai Running Magazine Shanghai Running Q2 2014. Volume 2 | Page 34

I Learned About Running From That! By Ray Heraty Sometimes I feel like I’m trapped in my own running version of Groundhog Day. Due to the same silly decisions I keep making the same mistakes and suffering the same silly consequences. If it’s not downing chocolate bars and chugging cans of Coke in the midst of an ultra marathon (see the last edition of Shanghai Running Magazine for the results of that little adventure); it’s going on lengthy sightseeing trips on foot the day before a marathon. Lately though I made a rather more costly mistake that I’ve made in the past that cost me an entire race and 4 weeks of running. I had planned to write a review of the Tokyo Marathon for this edition. After four years of entering the lottery my number finally came up and I paid the entry fee. I generally prefer trail races now but I was excited about doing my first major road marathon. After my last race (the North Face Endurance Challenge in San Francisco) I had planned to go right into training for Tokyo. The North Face Race had gone very well so my confidence was high, the fitness was there and so I was going to concentrate on speed work. With about 12 weeks between the races I felt like I had a decent chance 34 of qualifying for the Boston Marathon at Tokyo and that was my main training goal. The North Face race was early December. Right after that I had a business trip, a sick kid, a Christmas family vacation and another business trip where I got caught up in the Polar Vortex. The end result was that 4 weeks passed with only 170kms logged, about half of what I had planned. Back in Shanghai by early January, my 12 weeks had shrunk to 7, but I wasn’t too worried, the fitness was still mostly there and I figured I’d make up for my bad month by increasing the intensity of my workouts. The problem is, I’m 41 now. I’m in the best shape of my life but the reality is that my body doesn’t recover quite as fast as someone in their 20s or early 30s. I knew that the single biggest cause of injuries among runners, especially older runners, is ramping up their mileage too much too fast. I’d made this mistake once in the past and ended up © Shanghai Running 2014 with a groin injury that resulted in Grandma’s Marathon being the first time I’d run in a month. That race didn’t end well, though thankfully it did finally end. Despite being fully aware of the above risks, I launched into a 120km training week the second week of January, with quite a few high intensity workouts.This was a mileage level I had last reached in early November. I followed that up with a week of 110km, running 13 out of 14 days straight. By midlate January I was ignoring a niggling little ache deep in my groin somewhere. This was my body raising the caution flag but do you suppose I was smart enough to listen? Chinese New Year was a skiing trip to Whistler. In addition to skiing each day, I would go for a run afterwards. I also put in several high intensity hill workouts in the snow (running up a mountain in shorts as people ski down it around you can now be crossed off my bucket list). But near the end of the week I could no longer ignore the problems I was having. Sneezing and coughing hurt like heck and running had become uncomfortable enough for me to make an appointment to see a doctor. With the aid of google, I first self diagnosed a hernia, but it turned out that was not the case. Instead I had injured my psoas muscle. Personally I feel a slight stab of pride when I hurt something I’ve never heard of, but google once again helped out and I came to understand that this muscle is more commonly known as the hip flexor. Of course reading the web you hear about all the people with chronic problems and there are plenty of people out there willing to tell you about how hideous a hip flexor problem can be. My doctor suggested a week of rest and gave me hope that Tokyo was still a possibility. To be cautious I took 10 days off and then the week of the marathon I decided to try a run to see if going to Tokyo would be a viable option. I had set out to do an easy 20km but after 5km I was in agony and hobbling. I flagged a taxi and went home terribly disappointed. Clearly my first marathon major would have to wait. Who knows when I’ll win the entry lottery for Tokyo again as it is 11-1 oversubscribed. The latest on my injury is that I’m back running, albeit easily and slowly. The pain is not gone, but it is manageable. I’m also under the care of a physical therapist here in Shanghai who has prescribed exercises and massage. (Honey, I’m off to get my groin massaged – doctor’s orders!) I’m ramping up the mileage VERY slowly this time. My goal is to be able to complete my first 100 mile race in June (the Kettle Moraine 100) and along the way finish the Ultra Trail Mt Fuji © Shanghai Running 2014 STP (essentially half the UTMF course) which is in late April. So why did I get injured when I knew there was a high probability that that would be precisely the expected outcome when I launched into high mileage weeks after weeks of low mileage. I dunno – maybe in my head I’m still 25 years old, maybe I just hoped I’d get away it, maybe it was a little bit of magical thinking. But you know what, it’s OK. I think without some magical thinking I’d never have lined up for my first marathon. And I know there was a lot of magical thinking when I lined up for my first 100km having never run more than half that distance prior. But in both those cases the result was magical and lead to a lifelong addiction to this thing we call running and more recently a desire to run distances that most people don’t even want to think about driving. So even if it does occasionally cause problems, maybe a little magical thinking is just what every runner needs. 35