As a runner, I’m always looking for ways to improve my performance.
I set new goals, such as a sub-2hour Flower City Half-Marathon on May 1st, after being unable to run the Rochester Half-Marathon this past September due to injury). I register for local races in pursuit of PRs, one of which I did not achieve in a disastrous (but fun) Pumpkins in the Park 5K this past weekend). And I experience gadget-and-gear-lust as new products hit the market with the promise to make me a stronger, faster, or more effecient runner.
So when Personal Trainer Bruce Hedlund told me about an upcoming seminar at the club called “Ramp Up Your Run,” I was immediately intrigued.
He and fellow trainer Laura Regna are teaming up in early December to present a two-session seminar called “Ramp Up Your Run.”
One class will run on a weekday, and the other will take place on a weekend day. Each day’s session is 90 minutes. The seminar will include:
A dynamic warm-up
Strength-training exercises
Core training
Injury prevention exercises (I’m bringing a pen and paper)
A 30-minute stretch class focusing on three different styles of stretching that are most beneficial to runners
Bruce and Laura are the perfect trainers to host this seminar. Bruce has run 17 marathons, including 10 Bostons. He’s also the Strength and Conditioning Coach for the Rochester Amerks and for Penfield High School.
Laura teaches stretching classes at the club, and she specializes in flexibility. She’s also an accomplished dancer.
If you’re a runner and interested in this seminar (of course you are!), Bruce and Laura want to know which weekday time slot best fits your schedule. If you look in the right sidebar of the blog, you’ll see the Running Seminar Poll. Cast your vote for the weekday time slot of your choice. If none of these times fit your needs, please leave a comment and suggest an alternate time.
The weekend session will most likely run from 8-9:30am on either a Saturday or a Sunday.
Doug Rusho, personal trainer and cyclist extraordinaire, is answering your questions this month.
Doug holds several certifications, and is a National Strength and Conditioning Association Certified Strength and Conditioning Specialist, as well as a National Academy of Sports Medicine Certified Personal Trainer.
Kristi: How did you get started in the field of personal training?
Doug: I began strength-training in high school, which is also when I bought a textbook on plyometrics (a form of power training in which muscles are enabled to reach maximum force in the shortest amount of time). I have a B.S. in Exercise Physiology/Biomechanics, and I’ve always been interested in improving the performance of the human body. Cycling is a passion of mine, and I enjoy racing mountain and road bikes whenever I can.
Reader Question: I’m a new member, and I’m interested in getting back into shape after years of being away from the gym. How do you recommend I start? I’m about 20 pounds overweight, but otherwise, I am in good health.
Doug: The safest and most effective way to start is to hire a Personal Trainer! Many people think they need to “be in shape” to maximize a personal training session. In reality, a trainer will work you out in the appropriate manner especially when you are not in ideal shape. This will ensure you do not do too much, too soon, and get injured or frustrated. A Personal Trainer will also enhance your workouts in small increments as you get stronger. This will increase exercise adherence and tolerance and ultimately improve your long term success.
Reader Question: My current workout regime includes Pilates, weights, and cardio. However, I’ve been doing all three for so long, I’m getting bored. Help!
Doug: Pick up a sport or event in which you can compete. Working out is different than training. When you are training for a goal event or sport, it gives you much more direction and motivation. Your focus and intensity are inspired with a purpose and you will see faster results. The sport may not be your priority, but training for it will accelerate your progress towards your priority goal, for example, losing weight.
Reader Question: I recently read the article posted on the Facebook page about stretching not preventing running injuries. This goes against everything I’ve heard about the benefits of stretching. What’s the real deal?
Doug: The jury is still out on this, and will always be. My opinion is that it is different for every individual. I believe that an appropriate warm-up is critical (which may include stretching), especially for activities completed at high intensity (e.g. a 5k road race) or that require extreme ranges of motion. I also believe stretching will decrease the chance of injury if you have muscle imbalances (e.g if your right hamstring is tighter than your left). For some, stretching gives the feeling of more mobility, improving you efficiency of motion. For others they feel no difference. If after a low-intensity warm-up, you feel “tight,” stretch. If you feel loose and ready, go for the run, and stretch afterwards. You may also want to have a flexibility/mobility assessment done to pinpoint any problem areas, and especially any imbalances.
Reader Question:I’m rehabbing after knee surgery. I want to get back to lifting weights, but I’m unsure and nervous about it. How do I ease back into my workout safely?
Doug: Depending on your surgery you should complete some rehab/strength-training with a Physical Therapist. Once you are cleared by the PT, look for a Personal Trainer knowledgeable in post-rehab and orthopedic considerations. Once again, it is key to progress your workouts in small steps, gradually building mobility and stability, and then strength and power.
Reader Question: My friend recommended protein shakes for muscle development. I’ve tried them in the past and have not liked the side effects. Do you have a recommendation for a good one that’s easy to digest?
Doug: High protein shakes are really overkill for most people. Research does generally agree that athletes involved with a high training load do require more protein than the average individual. If your goal is muscle development, this means at least 1-2 hours of strength-training 4-5 days per week. Otherwise, a normal diet has plenty of protein to meet your needs. As far as recommendations, I would suggest Orgain and Bolthouse Farms’ Protein Plus available at Wegmans in the Natural Foods department and the Produce section.
Thank you, Doug!
If you take group cycle classes, you will not want to miss a new eight-week program Doug is launching in October. Stay tuned to learn about Pscylewerks 2.0 on this blog in the next few days.
You’ve submitted some great questions lately, so if yours was not answered this month, look for it in October’s “Ask the Trainer” post.
And don’t be shy! If you have a question you would like one of the personal trainers from the Fitness department to answer, you can post your question as a comment to this post, or email it to me at kristi@meetme-atmidtown.com. If you email the question, I will ask it anonymously on your behalf, and post the question and answer (but not your name) on the next “Ask the Trainer” post. You do not need to be a member to ask a question.
Five weeks ago, I sustained a calf strain in each of my legs (the right worse than the left). In early August, I did 11.5 on a Saturday, and when I woke up on Sunday, the nagging calf soreness I had been experiencing for about a week had turned into significant pain. Walking was moderately painful. An attempt at a short three-miler was excruciating.
I immediately launched into panic mode. I set aside my training program, to which I had been adhering like glue. I took a week off from running, implemented the R.I.C.E. (Rest, Ice, Compression, Elevation) method of injury treatment, and when running after seven days of rest was still painful, I went a little nuts in pursuit of self-healing. My list of remedies included, but was not limited to:
Three-times-a-day sets of two different calf muscle stretches, each stretch held for 90 seconds (which seems like an eternity), recommended to me by the wonderful Jim Briggs, one of the PTs at Rochester General Physical Therapy, located inside the club.
Sets of seated and standing calf raises in the club’s weight room, two-to-three times a week.
Cross-training on the cardio machines, using the intervals programs
Daily ranting sessions to just about anyone who would listen about how much being injured this close to my half-marathon truly sucked.
But last week, after I tried to run again and had to stop just a few miles in because the pain was that bad, I came to the realization that my half-marathon dream, the one for which I had been fighting (and at times, with the insanity of my life, getting my training runs in was truly a fight, both mentally and physically) needed to be shelved.
It was over.
My injury came as a result of pushing myself to my limits (but not beyond them). I did not train to run a half-marathon. I trained to finish a half-marathon in around 1:50. I was clocking long runs at an 8:20 pace. I increased my mileage according to my training plan. I did speedwork with a three-day break following long runs. I followed the rules and I trained hard.
I know I would have finished a sub two-hour half-marathon. I would have met my goal.
Today, I had an appointment with a chiropractor who specializes in sports injuries. He gave me a phone consultation weeks ago, and put me on his cancellation list. I wasn’t able to get in to see him until today. He performed electrical stimulation therapy on the damaged tissues in my calves, followed by ART (Active Release Technique). I have two more sessions next week. He said I should be back running in a week to ten days. He wishes he had been able to see me earlier.
To say I am disappointed does not cover it. What I’m feeling right now requires expletives (and many of them) to even touch the emotions that are swirling. I will spend Sunday either drinking or baking heavily, I haven’t yet decided which.
But if I’ve learned anything over the past six months of training, it’s this:
I can accomplish any damn thing I want to do.
I am now a stronger, faster, fitter, more hard-core runner than I ever was before, even when I was running 30 miles a week, every week, seven years ago. I have an incredibly supportive circle of friends both at Midtown and in my personal life who get what my training meant to me, and who understand how devastating this injury is.
And when I’m 100% again, I’m going to take all the discipline, all the preparation, and all the skills I’ve gained through training for the half-marathon I’m not running this weekend, and turn it into a killer performance in another half, probably in early spring.
And next fall?
I just might try for the full.
“Our greatest glory is not in never falling, but in rising every time we fall.”
– Confucius
On June 12th, I ran “The Fast and the Furriest” 10K to benefit the Verona Street Animal Society in Rochester. I took more than three minutes off my time from the Lilac 10K back in May, and ended up with a PR (personal record) of 50:31.
The very next day, I could not run at all.
I had experienced a lingering pain along the inside of the upper thigh of my left leg for a week previous to the race. It never bothered me while I ran, but it would hurt after my runs. I finished the race and felt fine, but later that day the sharp pains would hit with virtually every step. Walking up stairs was exceptionally painful.
The next morning, I foolishly got up at 6am, laced up my sneakers, strapped on my ancient Shuffle and set out to run. I didn’t get very far before I had to stop. In the light drizzle of a cool Sunday morning – weather that would have been perfect for the seven-miler I was planning – I had to stop and limp back home instead.
The next morning, I headed to Midtown, tracked down the club’s unofficial trainer for runners, Bruce Hedlund, and asked for his advice and help. I was in full-on panic mode, terrified that I would lose to this injury my training progress, pace, and leg strength that I had been working so hard for during the last four months.
He talked me down from the ledge by assuring me that I had plenty of time before the half-marathon, and told me I should cross-train instead until I felt better. He set me up on the Arc Trainer (who knew there were cardio machines at the club besides treadmills?), and said he would introduce me to the magic of the foam roller later in the week when my injury wasn’t as acute.
Two days later, Bruce showed me a bunch of exercises similar to these that I could use to speed up my recovery. Bruce said the foam roller is the runner’s best friend, so if you run, I would highly recommend you check them out because the exercises helped me quite a bit.
After eight days of cross-training and no running, I did my first treadmill run on Tuesday and another yesterday. I am off pace and running shorter distances than my half-marathon training plan dictates, because I am hesitant to push myself this week.
But after wallowing in self-pity and experiencing daily panic attacks brought on by the belief that I would never run again and that my half-marathon dreams were over, I am running again.
I know that injuries are part of training. A marathoner friend recently told me that runners are always a single step ahead of an injury, and now I know that’s true. Training for the half-marathon has become a part-time job of sorts for me: I have to get my miles in, I have to do my intervals, I have to stay healthy. And with the relative insanity of balancing training along with my work, caring for three children under the age of four, and ensuring the health department doesn’t condemn my house for unsuitable living conditions, for a brief moment I thought that a break from the rigors of training would be welcome.
But it wasn’t. I hated each and every day I was off the road or the treadmill.
On Saturday night, I watched Spirit of the Marathon for the first time. Admittedly, watching this movie while injured was not the wisest choice I’ve ever made. I was a blubbering mess through most of it. But while I was sobbing quietly in the dark and hoping my sleeping husband wouldn’t hear me, I was watching some of the most incredible stories of perseverance and triumph over adversity I’ve ever seen.
Most of the runners profiled were “ordinary people.” While two were superstar professional athletes, the others in training for the Chicago Marathon included a 30-something single mother, a 26-year-old PhD student, and a 70-year-old man who ran his first marathon at age 65.
Each of them had a reason why they were training for the marathon. Whether it was to mark a return from a devastating injury, attempt to qualify for Boston, or simply to accomplish something many people just cannot do, the people profiled in this documentary would not be side-tracked by pain, personal circumstance, or the allure of a warm bed on a freezing cold morning when a 20-mile run is on tap.
I might not be training for a full marathon (yet), but I could completely identify with the runners in this film. And watching this movie made me really think about why it is I’m adding yet another “thing” (as my grandma calls my training) to an already very busy life.
I am running the Rochester Half-Marathon in September to prove to myself that I can do it and to show my children that with hard work, they can achieve anything they want to do.
I’ve set a goal. And I will achieve it.
Period.
(Of course, I may achieve it from the back of an ambulance because I have passed out from exhaustion at Mile 5, but either way, I’ll get there.)
“When you cross the finish line, it will change your life forever.”
Kristi Gaylord is the Director of Social Media for TCA. An avid writer and reader, Kristi’s other interests include distance running and children’s nutrition.
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