This past Saturday morning, I woke up at 4:45am so that I could be out the door by 5:30am for my latest training run - 22 miles.
I can't think of a training run, especially a distance training run, where I haven't learned something. What I learned Saturday was the notion of breaking large things down to manageable parts.
Now, I've always known that it's easier to break down a long run into smaller runs - ie - making a 22 mile run the equivalent of two 11 mile runs or two eight mile runs with a seven mile run. What I learned this Saturday is to break the 22 mile run into even smaller parts. I broke the run down into a series of one, two and three mile runs. I would run the distance I was shooting for, maybe a two mile run, and reward myself with a drink of fluid and a short walk of a block to allow my body to rest for a moment.
These short runs are great training for when I am in the "wall-" the time in a marathon when everything hurts and you question why you are doing the marathon at all. If I can train my body and mind to only worry about doing a one, two, or three mile run at a time, then if I do hit the wall, I only need to worry about going a short distance before I get a break.
See, breaking down a 22 mile training run into a 3, 2, 2, 2, 3, 3, 2, 2, 1, 1 and 1 mile runs is alot easier from a mental perspective. 22 miles is a long distance. Two or three miles is a nice warm up run. The perspective is different. I also come away with more mental energy because I only ran two or three miles at a time as opposed to the accumulated mileage.
Is all of this a slick attempt at fooling myself. Maybe, but it's working. I completed the full run doing a 10 minute pace, which includes rest times. I know it would have been a slower pace had I focused on the full 22 all at once.
Exit questions: What big project do you have - what's your 22 mile project? How can you break it down to manageable parts?
- Like what you are reading? Want more? Be sure to sign up for my free weekly newsletter - Passport for Success. It is delivered to your e-mail box every Monday morning. Sign-up at somedayisland.com