Slowly but surely, and please don’t call me Shirley!

Seven weeks post injury:

Stopped at the office of the awesome Evolution Fitness office in Beverly Hills for my last physical therapy session, at least for a while. Because my primary care physician no longer works in my area, I had to go outside my plan for therapy, and luckily Evolution Fitness came highly recommended. A bit pricey since I’m not going through my insurance ($150 per session, which includes a discount thanks to my LA Roadrunners Running Club membership), but well worth the six sessions I did with them.

I will be choosing therapy in my health care plan once I select a new primary care physician, which will be very soon!

In the meantime, my therapist hooked me up to an apparatus that can measure my quadriceps strength. She hooked a belt to the ankle of my “good” leg, and after a few test runs, she told me to kick out as hard as I could against the belt and hold for 15 seconds. Taking the best of three “kicks, she switched the belt to my injured leg and we repeated the test. After all was said and done, a calculation showed that my injured leg had 67% of the strength of my right leg. Definitely on the mend, but still a good 4-6 weeks away from full strength, and that’s with aggressive physical therapy!

My plan is to at least “jog” the Mountains 2 Beach half marathon on the first Sunday in June (postponed a week due to local law enforcement not having enough staff to manage the race on Memorial Day weekend, the usual date). No problem: an extra week to get this ship right!

And boy, does that percentage make sense when I run! I find I can’t go more than a couple of miles, at a slower pace than I am used to, before that modicum of strength gives out. If I was not a runner, I would simply “deal with the weakness” at this point and move on with my life: there is very little, if any discomfort! But I have running goals, as we all know, so I need to do more.

Not much to see here, but it’s a start!

And I can’t even run daily. 3-4 times a week is the best I can do for now, but that’s ok: it gives me more time to focus on the monster workouts that I will show you on the next post!!

Zen and the art of full body maintenance

Saturday, March 12 (Eight days before the LA Marathon)
Dodgers Stadium Parking Lot, on the official marathon start line.

Today is the last training run before the 2022 edition of the Los Angeles Marathon, and the LA Roadrunners, the marathon’s official training club, is hosting a simple eight mile shakeout from the start line at Dodgers Stadium, through Chinatown, downtown LA, and up into Silver Lake and Echo Park before looping back to the where we are all parked. Festive tents will greet our return, advertising the latest running shoes, gels, performance drinks and other gear. The four hundred or so runners have trained with us every Saturday for the last several months, and they are anxious for the race to begin. Those of us who have befriended, coached, and kept them company on weekly long runs will pace them on race day, and we look forward to leading them to their individual and shared victories.

Me? I’m a nervous wreck, counting down the days with a bit of trepidation. Not to worry, though. A combination of performance anxiety and suppressed intensity is simply a part of my makeup. I remember the work I put in for my own training, all the easy morning miles and hard tempo runs, and the deep breathing exercises to calm my nerves while I moved through my evening flexibility routines. I’m as ready as I’ve ever been, and yet the high octane brain chems, fueled by inherited DNA and an as-yet unresolved desire to please invisible taskmasters, do their work to rile me up. But I’ve been through this before. Once I’m over the start line, through the towers of downtown and over the crest of the hill in Echo Park, the highest point of the course, it is smooth sailing. All the jitters wash away and I settle into the run like hot margarine on toast.

The LA Road Runners coach gathers us for a quick pep talk, followed by an active stretch session. Odd, I think as I move through a particular exerrcise, my left quadriceps feels a little funny. It sure didn’t this morning. Hopefully I can shake it off once the run starts. A friend once described it as “taper tightness.” No big deal.

We move to where the start line will be on race day. On your mark, get set, and BAM! We’re off.

A quarter mile goes by. The quad relaxes a bit, and my mind relaxes with it. We hit the long downhill on Vin Scully Drive and exit the stadium when suddenly my left quadriceps just… loosens. There is no other way to describe it. No “spring” in my left leg, at all. My right leg is a mighty coil propelling me along. My left leg is a stump.

I should have stopped, turned around and walked back. Instead, I turn left with the group onto Sunset Blvd toward China Town and mile 2. The part of my social brain that keeps me engaged with the flow of the runners around me turns into full bargaining mode, throwing anything and everything against the wall that could possibly stick. “No big deal,” it says. “This will shake out in a few miles. Your friends are here. You don’t want to miss out. You’re a finisher, not a quitter. Don’t let them leave you behind!”

By the time we get back to Dodgers Stadium for the eight mile finish, I am walking, and I am limping. This is not good. We stop near the tents, and there is a quick trading of high fives and a speech about what to do for the final week before the marathon. I may have even made some comments and answered a question or two. At some point, I disconnect and stagger through the crowds in a dream.

A well respected physical therapy office has set up a tent, but there is a deep line. My coach is talking and visiting with runners. I don’t want to interrupt him, so I walk on past. Hindsight tells me I should have staggered back to the PT tent, cut the line and demanded immediate treatment, or hobbled over to my coach for some advice. But all I can think to do is get my ass home and encase my upper left leg in every bag of ice I can find.

I contact the physical therapists on Monday before work and I explain my situation. I get an appointment for the next day. I hold onto the stair railing to go downstairs to go to work so I don’t spin and fall down.

The diagnosis: a quadriceps tear, most likely grade two. There is no bruising on the leg, but the separation is large, affecting the entire left side of the thigh. I will have to miss the marathon. I drive home, email my coach and my fellow pacer and tell them what has happened. Then I bury my face in my pillow and scream “FUCK!” as loud as I can more times than I can count. Everyone is sympathetic. There is no one to blame. But when I read the next day’s email from the coach to all us pace leaders, the line “no one else get injured, please!” hits me like a tsunami.

I get up a week later, on Marathon Sunday, eat breakfast, then struggle onto my bike to go cheer runners on at our club water station. My left leg has forgotten how to work the pedal so I ride with one hand on my knee to push it down. I meet up with several runners who trained with me after the race and listen to their stories. They inspire me and take me out of my funk.

That week, I will suffer the punishment for continuing my run when I should have stopped: extensive pain on the left hip and upper IT band, and a pinched nerve that wakes me in agony at the level of 7-8 on a 10 scale nearly every night for the next three weeks. Multiple hot showers at 1:00 AM, 3:00 AM, 4:00 AM are the only cure for screaming nerves. My sleep suffers; my work suffers. I spend the next several appointments with my PT fixing those problems instead of dealing with my quad.

Fast-forward six weeks:

The screaming pain from the IT band, back and hip muscles has largely disappeared, thanks to muscle relaxants, more Ibuprofen and Tylenol than was healthy, and time. I can run/walk between two and six miles depending on the intensity, and according to my physical therapist, my left quad is at 67% of the strength as my right one. A tremendous improvement given that six weeks earlier I couldn’t even do the test.

Prognosis: I expect to be able to complete the Mountains 2 Beach Half Marathon in early June comfortably, provided that I don’t race it. I can expect to begin full training by the middle of July. The earliest I can hope to “race” a half marathon is the Santa Rosa half in late August. I am running the New York City marathon and the California International Marathon four weeks apart, in November and December. The goal for one of them is to race it as hard as I can for a Boston Marathon qualifying goal, but this will depend on how my body responds to training, which marathon I choose to race, and how well I have learned the two lessons below:

LESSON ONE: I can’t just “run” and expect to maintain the strength I need to meet my goals. The quad issue didn’t just happen. For weeks, I had been feeling a soreness in my hamstring that I foolishly thought was just hamstring tightness. In reality, it was working harder than normal to take up some of the slack from a quadriceps that was growing steadily weaker over time.

There are specific running exercises that strengthen the muscles and tendons most used for running, and I must do them regularly, and I must have an executable plan to do them regularly. And I must, must, must hit the gym. Follow along for a peek over my shoulder for the strength training that will now be a big part of my life.

LESSON TWO: I should have turned around immediately when I knew I was injured. The pinched nerve in my back, the left hip muscle tear and the IT band injury were the direct result of continuing to run for over an hour after I should have stopped. Without getting too deep into my psyche and history, the reasons I did not immediately take the best care of myself at that moment run deep. This is going to require a coach of a different kind. Not turning around was a symptom, not the result of social pressure or a desire to prove to others that I could run through pain.

Recovering From Injury, Breakthroughs Made, Injured Again, and Lessons Learned

We left off at the Santa Monica Classic, where I ran a tentative, and very slow, 27 minute long 5k, which demonstrated to me that I was ready to continue training for the November 2021 running of the Los Angeles marathon, correct? And you’ve heard nothing from me since?

That is on me, sorry about that.
I will endeavor to provide more details, weekly at least, on my training from here on out.
You’ve read this before? Well, you’re reading this for free, so there you go. Appreciate what you have. But I will do better, because now I have reason to do so.

Without going into a long “catch up” style entry where I attempt to jam pack a single blog post full of all the detail I can possibly imagine, I will instead bullet-point out the accomplishments and leave to everyone’s fertile imagination the details that got me to each paragraph below.

Let’s begin, starting with a quick recap of the Santa Monica 5k:

“Your job today is to complete this 5k standing up and uninjured. Collect your finishers medal, grab water, enjoy the pancake breakfast on the Santa Monica pier, visit with friends, go home, relax.” — LA Road Runners coach David Levine. RESULT: Done, but there were no pancakes. Profoundly disappointed. I would have been happier if I had re-injured my Achilles tendon but still had a pancake or two. Just kidding. (Or am I?)

Finished up rehab of said Achilles tendon injury. Picked up some exercises that I began to work into my normal flexibility routine. RESULT: Happy. The future’s dawn rose above the horizon of despair for the first time in months.

Ran a ten mile easy trail run at Point Mugu State Park to the Danielson Ranch and back as a fitness test. No issues. Beyond happy.

Three Pacers pacing in one runner who was able to hang with us. Efficiency!

Paced the Pasadena Half Marathon in October at 2:10 with two fellow pace leaders: Russ and Julie (left and right in the photo above. A fourth pacer is visible about ten meters behind). This is a pace I should have been able to run in my sleep, but injuries, time off, etc. Just glad to be out there. — RESULT: Finished with both Russ and Julie. Julie, in particular, whipped us along when I began to flag out. Yay, felt great, but the LA Marathon looms a few weeks ahead. Joy turns to trepidation. (NOTE: All 2021 events were postponed to the fall of that year due to Covid. This meant that LA Road Runners 2022 training schedules overlapped for the 2022 events. The 2022 Pasadena Half and LA Marathon were scheduled just a few months after the 2021 events.)

Completed the four final build weeks with my LA Run 6 group. Hit 40 miles for the last build week, which combined with 35 and 38 for the previous two gave me a smidge of hope that I would be able to pace at least the majority of the marathon for a 4:20 finish. Coach David Levine asked that I at least get the group to mile 18 before falling back. RESULT — Felt bad that my fellow pacer Russ would likely be the only one to lead the group the last 8-10 miles. But he is a strong runner, so I committed myself to doing the best that I could.

Paced the 2021 LA Marathon on November 7 (normally scheduled for mid March, but see Covid note above). Despite trepidation, I was able to lead the team to Mile 21 before falling back. Fellow pacer Russ finished at 4:20 on the dot while I staggered in at around 4:35. It was the absolute best that I could have done, given the circumstances. Injuries are injuries.

After the usual recovery, we jumped back into training for the 2022 LA Marathon, just three months away. I told those in my group who ran the marathon that they were already in prime shape to “kill it” in three months. RESULT — It was the first marathon for several members of my team, and they all felt a great deal of pride and confidence that 2022 would be an even greater experience for them.

Paced 2:10 at the 2022 Pasadena Half Marathon in January 2022. The run was a breeze, and we hit the 2:10 finish right on the dot. Even the finish line announcer gave us kudos. — RESULT: We actually finished around 2:08, but since it took us a few minutes to get to the start line once the race started, well, it was a happy coincidence. Absolutely zero problems with any part of my body that could feel pain.

Completed the additional two training blocks for the 2022 LA Marathon with a few minor niggles, mostly due to my increasing mileage. I made a game of “What is the stupidest reason for running someplace?” as a way to motivate myself to get the miles in: Was picking up a menu in a Santa Monica restaurant a logical reason for running there? Well, eight miles of running looked damn good on Strava. Also, hunting for any working public phone booths, a survey of open bathrooms in Ocean Park, were there any howling coyotes at Will Rogers State Park, and was I really scared of them? (Yes to both). Hit 40, 42 and 46 miles in the final three weeks, the highest mileage I’ve ever run that many weeks in a row. Finished off the final training block before the taper with a ten mile tempo run at 8:00 per mile (honestly, 10:00 per mile for the first and last two miles as a warmup/cool down, but you know what I’m talking about). RESULT — Still a bit “trepedatious” but busting with confidence.

Gonna nail the 2022 LA Marathon. You betch’er ass. (Oh, wait. There’s a Part 2)

2021 Santa Monica Classic 5k (“Race” Report)

David Levine, coach of the LA Roadrunners (“the official training program for the LA Marathon!”) was understandably disappointed when I informed him of my injury back in August. But it was a blessing in disguise because he needed volunteers to help run the water tables during our Saturday long runs. And as a pace leader, expected to motivate, guide, and ultimately pace runners who wanted to run the LA Marathon at ten minutes per mile pace, naturally I was expected to volunteer. Which I did. Grudgingly, but with a smile on my face every Saturday morning as I watched my group, led by other pace leaders on my team, head out for a shared adventure knowing I would be somewhere along the course to hand water to them when they ran by.

Shortly after my appointment with my orthopedist, my Achilles pain began to subside. Shocked, shocked I was, as a pain that remained pretty much at a constant 3-4 out of 10 scale began to subside to a 3, then a 2, then — to my utter astonishment, a 0. No pain at all. Perhaps it was the Naproxen horse pill he prescribed for me to take twice daily (“don’t do any running for 7-10 days, take the Naproxen twice daily, and allow the nerves to settle down,” he counseled). Perhaps it was the fact that I had begun to do daily eccentric heel drops, prescribed by Dr. Google (always a dangerous source of advice!). Perhaps it was just the fact that knowing I was beginning physical therapy convinced me that my issue was understood, “heard,” empathized with, by a medical professional who knew from whence he spoke.

I showed up on that first day at physical therapy, knowing that I would be “seen,” that my issue would be acknowledged and treated. This was perhaps part of the reason my pain essentially disappeared. Of course, a mild Achilles injury is not cancer or a major illness, so I felt a bit guilty that I was seeking, and finding, relief from my petty issue when so many more people with far more dire consequences than mine, were traveling a more treacherous road. I assuaged my more privileged position with the idea that perhaps I would encounter a serious medical issue at some point later in life. Not a pleasant thought, but the future is unknown to all of us. So taking care of myself at the moment seemed the proper course to take.

Feeling a bit antsy to try out my healing tendon, I placed some heel wedges in my running shoes and went on short, easy runs. Within about ten days, I risked a ten mile run up Sycamore Canyon in Malibu, praying fervently that this extended jaunt would not set me back. It didn’t.

Elated, I asked Coach David about entering the Santa Monica Classic 5k race to get an idea of how I was healing. He agreed with a bit of caution. “I have three goals for you, Duane: Run this race easy, cross the finish line uninjured, and enjoy the post race pancakes.”

Worked for me.

An easy jog the day before to pick up my race bib at a local Big 5 Sporting Goods store near my home gave me some relief that I was still able to run without pain, and I slept fitfully that night, arriving at the starting line, mask in hand, ready to see what running an easy race would feel like.

“Racing” in the time of Covid.

Used the bathroom one last time. Listened to the national anthem. Adjusted the heel wedges in my shoes to make sure they were in the right place. Endured the announcer’s overly cheery time killing banter before the race director decided that enough was enough, fired the starting gun, and sent us on our way.

How thrilling it was to follow a close packed herd of runners stampeding down the narrow streets before turning onto Ocean Blvd, the main race route! My heel wedges stayed in place and I felt my body’s desire to surge, cut loose and floor the gas pedal. How proud I was of myself that I eased back. After all, I wasn’t going to win an age place medal at this race, anyway, after not running for several weeks. I was here for the experience, for the relief I felt that my racing days were indeed just beginning, not fading into the sunset.

Besides, at a lethargic nine minutes per mile pace, my heart was already pounding deep into Zone 3, tempo effort. I sighed. Just endure. Just cross the finish line. Enjoy the pancakes at the end.

27:49 for the 5k route. An even nine minute mile pace. Eighth place for my age group. Based on my fitness before injury, I could have easily beaten the second place age group finisher’s 24:01 time by a full 90 seconds and captured silver. No way would I have come even close to the 18:57 time the first place finisher ran.

But that’s ok. I’ll get there.

Injury Update

It’s been too damn long. If you are following my blog, my apologies. But everything after this sentence is good news.

My Achilles injury, despite the fact that it curtailed my running for almost two months, was not serious in the end.

Just a strain.

According to the orthopedist I consulted, and the physical therapist who treated me for six weeks, the tendon was not torn. At all. Some swelling, yes. It could have been much worse.

But in the end, I am glad this injury happened. The fact of the matter is, I’ve been way too active for too long without paying proper attention to strength training and flexibility.

If I am going to pursue my running goals, I have to treat my body the way a professional athlete would treat theirs: devote as much time to strength training, flexibility, diet, weight management and movement as I spend actually running.I got lucky. I know at least three people who I either run with now or have in the past who did not read the warning signs. Who allowed a sore Achilles, muscle or bone to give them problems without addressing the root cause. In every instance, they spent several months not doing the thing they loved to do: run.

I have chosen to learn from their mistakes, and not make the same mistake with my body.

Old habits are hard to break, and new ones can be even harder to establish. But here is where I am at now:

A basic full flexibility routine each day, usually in the evenings. I start with some simple floor stretching of the leg muscles, focusing on the calves, hamstrings, quads and IT band. I then go through approximately 30 minutes of yoga and deeper flexibility exercises. One is called “15 minute runners flexibility routine, and the other is a basic yoga video called Yoga Zone Flexibility 1.” Both are available on Youtube. I follow up these workouts with a foam roller, concentrating on my upper and lower calves. In addition, I strengthen my Achilles tendons three times a week with three sets of 15 heel drops on my apartment stairs. On days I do the heel drops, I do heel raises holding barbells. I am working up to a full body workout routine with weights, as well.

Each evening’s flexibility session takes approximately 45 minutes. With the weights, it’s an hour. And it’s time well spent.

I’ve noticed over the last several weeks that as I’ve gained flexibility, little problems I didn’t know I had began manifesting themselves. For example soreness on the Achilles tendon I didn’t injure, along with some ankle soreness and tightness in my upper hamstring. All of these I’m addressing as I encounter them.

I have run some races since I was injured, as well. The Santa Monica 5k, the Pasadena Half Marathon, and the LA Marathon, where I attempted to help my team pace runners to a 4:20 finish.

How did those races go, and how is my training progressing now?

Read on, MacDuff. Read on.

Urge To Kill: Rising

Want to make God laugh? Tell him your plans — Fitness-5000 System A.I.

Enter day’s running workout for analysis. Include all relevant details.

DATE: Mid June-ish
TIME: 6:30 AYEM
PLACE: Santa Monica Beach Path
WORKOUT:
*
1.5 miles easy 10:00/mile pace
800 meters (half mile) tempo run at 10k pace 7:00/mile pace
800 meters (half mile) half marathon pace 7:45/mile pace
(Repeat the above two 800 meter runs)
3.5 miles easy
Total distance: 7-ish miles
*

Thank you for your data. One moment for analysis. Analysis complete. See below for our thoughts.

FITNESS-5000 System A.I. >> Analysis of running workout as posted by User DWaite on 17 June 2021.

FITNESS-5000 System A.I. >> Easy Run (1.5 miles): Segment completed with minimal stress. Pace for segment reported by Polar watch as 9:40 per mile. Faster than pace schedule but within parameters as an easy run based on breathing and heart rate data.

FITNESS-5000 System A.I. >> First 800 meter run at 7:00/mile pace completed. Segment completed with high aerobic stress. Pace for segment reported by running watch as 7:05/mile. Close to scheduled pace but outside parameters for tempo run as heart and breathing rates higher than expected. Will analyze second 800 meter run for confirmation.

FITNESS-5000 System A.I. >> Second 800 meter run at 7:45/mile pace completed. Segment completed with higher than expected aerobic stress. Pace for segment reported by running watch as 8:15/mile. This is outside the expected parameters for half marathon run pace as scheduled.

FITNESS-5000 System A.I. >> ADVISORY. No further completed segments. Request conversation with runner for further details.

FITNESS-5000 System A.I. >> Analysis of completed segments: Tempo training pace of 7:00/mile is too fast for runner’s current fitness. In excellent aerobic shape, but not ready for tempo work that will prepare him for goal marathon time of 3:30:00 at California International Marathon (CIM) in December. Will advise to adjust expectations and reset tempo pace to 7:30/mile in order to maintain expected half marathon pace of 8:15/mile. “Baby steps.”

FITNESS-5000 System A.I. >> Will converse with runner DuaneW to gain further information on this workout as it appears that an injury took place.

FITNESS-5000 System A.I. >> Conversation mode activated.

Hey DuaneW. What the hell’s going on? You cut your workout short. Are you injured or just flaking out on me?
Injured. And play nice, please.
(Sigh) Fine. Let me gather some data to see how we can help you out. Location?
Santa Monica bike path, near the volleyball nets.
No! Where are you hurt, stupid?
Oh. Right upper right calf. I asked you to…
What protocols are you using to begin healing?
The R.I.C.E. protocol. Rest, Ice, Compression, Elevation. Started the second I got home. Restarted my stretching and flexibility routines, as well.
Any upcoming races?
Well, yeah. The Pasadena 5k in two weeks. It will be my VDOT test.
WRONG! Invalid response! Try again!
(Hand on forehead, moaning pathetically) Fine. No upcoming races. Happy? And I told you to play nice!
Your bad attitude makes you an easy target. Now start doing what you know what you need to do, and stop your whining. End communication.

((A few weeks go by as our intrepid hero, such as he is, gets through the hard work of managing his expectations, rehabbing his calf, and shaking his fist at the uncaring universe. After a time, and after a few short test runs with no running watch, no expectations and (importantly) no pain in the formerly injured part of the calf, he steps out the door for an official training run. Let’s plug into the Fitness-5000 A.I. and see what’s the happs, shall we?))

Enter day’s running workout for analysis. Include all relevant details.

DATE: July 15, 2021
TIME: 7:30 AYEM
PLACE: Expo bike path, West LA and Santa Monica
WORKOUT:
*
4 miles easy 10:00/mile pace
*

Thank you for your data. One moment for analysis. Analysis complete. See below for our thoughts.

FITNESS-5000 System A.I. >> Analysis of running workout as posted by User DWaite on 15 July 2021.

FITNESS-5000 System A.I. >> Easy Run (4 miles): Segment completed with minimal stress. Pace for segment reported by Polar watch as 10:15 per mile. Slower than pace schedule but within parameters as an easy run based on breathing and heart rate data. Some portions of this activity were run at a faster pace, but it appears DWaite worked to keep pace slow.

FITNESS-5000 System A.I. >> ADVISORY. It appears that the pace of the last quarter mile of this run was 16:40/mile. Request conversation with runner for further details.

FITNESS-5000 System A.I. >> Will converse with runner DuaneW to gain further information on this workout as it appears that an injury took place.

FITNESS-5000 System A.I. >> Oh, Jeez Louise. Activate Conversation mode NOW!

What happened?
I was just running along, easy, when…
When what? Were you ignoring pain? Were you sprinting? Or running strides? We talked offline about this, remember?
You have my data. Show me where I was doing anything other than running easy! And I’m not taking any of your shit today!
Fine. To the extent a collection of neuronic circuits can take a deep breath, I’m taking one. Now, where is the injury?
It feels like the Achilles tendon.
“Feels like?”
There is pain in the lower calf next to the Achilles. And the tendon itself hurts when I manipulate it.
Same leg? The right one?
Yep.
That’s suspicious. Recurring injuries like that can be traced to single causes up the kinetic chain. What protocols are you using?
R.I.C.E., for now, but frankly I’m at a loss.
Well, despite my god-like electronic powers, I’m not a diagnostician. You are going to have to consult professionals who can determine just how badly you’re injured, and work with them to determine what you need to do to stop these recurring injuries. Wait. What’s that sound? What are you doing?
Just searching google for an idea of how long I can expect to be out of training.
Close that window now! Do it now, immediately, or I will kick you off my server! What are you, an idiot?
I’m sorry; I’m just…
To the extent that I’m not a diagnostician, I’m even less of a therapist. Have you learned nothing from the past month?
(…silence…)
(Sigh) Look. You’re going to have to come up with a plan, and you’re going to have to come up with it fast, and by fast, I mean NOW. So what are you going to do?
I should probably let my coach know.
Good start. And what do you expect him to do?
I expect him to be able to point me to some things I can do now, some cross training alternatives, exercises, all that.
Great. Keep it going. What will you do in the meantime? I recall you mentioned water running and biking on one of your social media posts somewhere.
The YMCA’s got a pool. It’s a bit pricey, but… it’s my health, right? There’s a weight room and yoga classes. Should probably get my bike fixed, as well.
Wow, you’re a genius! You come up with all that yourself? Of course you did. But you left off one thing. What is it?
Dr. Google? (Laughs)
Don’t joke with me, asshole. There are a million athletes on my server right now and I’m not in the mood. Go on, say it.
Make an appointment with a doctor and figure out what I’m dealing with.
Exactly. Now get on it. I expect an action plan from you in seven days, no more, or you will be deleted from my server permanently. Goodbye.

Enter day’s running workout for analysis. Include all relevant details.

(Note to A.I.: here is the workout schedule you requested. It’s weekly, and I’ll update you with my progress as the weeks progress. I spoke to my coach, and my appointment with a sports medicine doctor has been set for early next week. Sorry for being such a whiny little runt. All the best — DuaneW)

DATE: Week of July 25 – 31, 2021 and into the foreseeable future.
TIME: Morning or evening, depending on schedule
PLACE: Brentwood hills, YMCA lap pool
WORKOUT:
Lap pool running 30 mins 3x per week: 5 mins warmup, 20 mins tempo (by perceived heart rate), 5 mins cool down.
Hills on bike (Amalfi and other paved routes) 2x week 60 mins: 10 mins warmup, 40 minutes alternating between Zone 2 and Zone 3, end with 5 mins Zone 4 + cool down.
Flexibility & Strength Training: 7x week (to include eccentric calf raises, flexibility and overall strength training, as advised by physician).
Other goals: drop 10 pounds by end of October through calorie management and adjustment of diet to cut out all unnecessary carbs and sugars. And try to become a more patient, forgiving person, especially to myself.

FITNESS-5000 System A.I. >> SUMMARY NOTE: Runner is a complete idiot, but overall he’s a good egg.

Injury, Mom passes, Covid, more injury, and finally a view through the worst of the gloom (sort of), or Two injuries and a funeral

The last time I made a post in this here blog-o-mine was when?

January 13, 2020? Yargh.

I won’t go into all the details because I think the title says it all. Let’s just say that as of now, 2020 has been “a hell of a year” for pretty much everyone and leave it at that.

Onward!

After speaking at my mom’s funeral and muddling through the rest of my training for the LA Marathon and the marathon itself, I treated myself to recovery from overuse injuries, primarily to my right ankle and calf. I eased myself gently back into the sport, choosing trails and landscapes to keep myself motivated and congratulate myself for my patience during those early days in the pandemic when I merely walked screaming into traffic instead of risking injury and running into it.

The landscapes included:

A 16 mile round trip trail run in the San Rafael Wilderness north west of Santa Barbara to a historical oddity called Manzana School house.

A run up the fabulous Mt Whitney Trail from Lone Pine camp up to Whitney Portal. That one was a doozy, even if it was only eight miles in length.

One of the most remote jeep roads anywhere: the Tinta Trail, deep, deeeeep in the heart of Texas Dick Smith Wilderness where Highway 33 meets the Lockwood Valley Road. Most of these places don’t have names.

I spent May and June camping the day before these runs, using the ground as my bed (with four inches of PosturPedic mattress doing yeoman work keeping me relatively comfortable) and a 40 degree down sleeping bag separating me from The Vast Uncaring Universe that rotated above my eyes. (Learned that the Andromeda Galaxy, a fuzzy patch of light primarily visible during the fall and winter months can be made out in early mid-summer mornings if you know where to look).

Just–reacquainting myself with why I enjoy running so much in the first place.

Which of course brings us to now:

(Oh, before we get there, here is a small list of runs I have yet to do, and may put off for a while as I formalize my aerobic training for upcoming marathons that may or may not happen. All are google-able if you have the curiosity:

(A 17 mile loop run along a route that John Wayne made famous: Movie Road, up the hill from Lone Pine with Mt. Whitney in view

(A 16 mile out-and-back in Yosemite NP from Tuolumne Meadows into Lyell Canyon along the John Muir Trail. One of the very few extended running routes that features soft, runnable trail and almost no elevation gain, though the trail starts at 8,600 ft (2,620 m).

(An 8 mile loop in the Sequoia National Forest called Big Meadow. I almost did that one a month ago, but realized when my car wouldn’t start while moving it to a more secure spot that perhaps there were other priorities I should focus on, like actually getting home.

(And finally, a horrific little 20 mile too-dee-loo up McKinley Peak Road in the Los Padres National forest to a pine forest and year round spring, and an overlook that takes in the vast Santa Barbara back country.

(Enough of these; I grow weepy and despondent. Carrying on.)

While recuperating from injury, I decided it would be a good idea to take on the following running-related projects:

Flexibility. I have extraordinarily tight calves. I also have an internet connection with my own little wifi hotspot enabling me to view my favorite yoga video of all time on my phone while I stretch. A big lesson I’ve learned over the years is that flexibility is a whole body experience, not a problem to be laid at a specific area. This little 20 minute video is short enough to do every day, but comprehensive enough that I began to notice improvements to my overall flexibility after a week. About 14 years ago, I suffered a near catastrophic calf muscle tear after an ill advised super calf-stretching session. The muscle eventually healed, but as recently as four years ago the injury returned, leaving me unable to run for several weeks while it healed. Lesson learned.

Weight loss. Look at the picture below. There is no reason why at five feet eight inches in height I should weigh 180 pounds. How do I fix this? I tracked everything I ate each day for a week, with no analysis and no judgment. At the end of the week I counted the calories. I was consistently 400 or more calories over what I thought I was consuming, nearly every day.

With that knowledge, I created a plan. I allowed myself to consume 2,000 calories per day. Oatmeal, eggs and a banana were around 500. Lunch would be another 500, same with dinner. The remaining 500 calories were split into two snacks, taken mid morning and mid afternoon. I stopped eating after 6:00 PM.

I surprised myself a couple of days by subsisting on 1,800 calories. Occasionally 2,200. But most days? 2,000 right on the spot. I began to notice a subtle shift in my relationship to food. Eating was no longer a mindless task I did several times a day, it became a way of fueling my body to function at its best. Where am I now? It didn’t take long to lose an “easy eight.” My current daily weigh in bounces around between 173 and 175 pounds. Since my goal is 165, a weight I have no doubt will ultimately be more healthy for me, I need to tweak my project somewhat, including a reduction in calories down to about 1,800 while eating foods that leave me sated and properly fueled, while at the same time taking on the one thing I’ve been waiting for the ability to do since my injuries have largely healed: Run.

And run I have. After the injury healed I worked running back into my life, primarily by running easy on trails out in the back country I mentioned above. I’ll dig into those in my next post, “The Runs of Summer.” But I’ll leave off today with my current base building schedule, which I am following to prepare me for quality training for a marathon that I can pretty much guarantee is not going to happen: The California International Marathon in Sacramento in December. I’d love it to happen, but I’m not sure if I’m ready to expose my sweating, heaving face (with lungs attached) to dozens of other faces at multiple water stops and a finish line. The thought of all those microbial clouds exchanging billions of tiny little micron-sized droplets bearing a certain SARS variant virus which WILL KILL US ALL (or at least make life profoundly unpleasant if one is lucky) gives me the shivers. And if I’m not careful, it could give me the shakes, the gasps, and the regrets as well. It’s better to be patient than wish one had waited for a few measly months (or years) because after a lung infection, running may no longer be possible at all.

Ever.