Saturday, November 27, 2004

Patience is a Virtue

So I've been reading some running blogs and "The Competitive Runner's Handbook," which routinely talk about running sub-8:00 and sub-7:00 miles on 10k and longer races, and I got a bit deflated.

I ran just under 9 minutes a mile (albeit hung-over and sleep-deprived) in the Veteran's Day 10k a few weeks ago, and my 5-mile race on Thanksgiving was a good but not exactly blistering 8:36-mile pace. Don't get me wrong; these are very good times if you're running just for fun.

But being the Type A sado-masochist that I am, I want to get better, good enough to fly through races. And right now, I cannot fathom running faster for miles on end. I am in awe of you speedsters.

Then I gave myself a reality check. I only started running in late August/early September. I entered my first race the following month - the Army 10-miler on October 24th. Since then, I've run in two more races (10k and 5-miler). I jumped into this running thang feet first (forgive the pun) on a lark, never realizing that I would get hooked.

Absolute beginner: I mean, I'm still trying to figure out the lingo, i.e. fartlek, tempo runs, etc. And I haven't even yet built up my running base: If I'm lucky, I run 15-20 miles a week, but running books say you should run 20 to 45 miles a week if you want to be competitive on any level.

So I really shouldn't compare myself to more experienced runners. I've got to put in a lot more time and log more miles before I can think of even keeping up with the Speedy Gonzales of the local running world.

Patience, I tell myself, patience.

3 comments:

  1. Yes, grasshopper, you must learn to run, before you can learn to fly!

    Heh, heh. :)

    Only since September? Well, then you're off to an amazing start! I think you'll be flying faster than you could possibly imagine soon enough.

    PS
    The term fartlek still makes me laugh. :D

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  2. I got faster without even meaning to...it just kinda happened after logging the miles. And of course, getting a little faster just makes me want to get a litle more faster...I relate entirely to your Type-A comment.

    Based on your times so far, you are well on your way!

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  3. You are off to a great start already. Patience and persistent probably helps too.

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