Tag Archives: 5k

Katie vs. Katie

While getting ready for this first race of the year (which is also my first 5K race ever), every Tuesday I run a timed 4 miles. I chose this distance because on race day, I know that whatever my personal best over 4miles is, I can run even faster for 3.1.

Racing against yourself is, for me at least, much harder than racing against other people. If you’re in a big race, it’s easy to pick a person in the crowd in front of you, and say “ok, push past that girl.” Or even if you’re in front and getting chased down by those behind you, you get that extra adrenaline kick that makes you push your hardest. But when you’re racing yourself, these goals aren’t tangible, and it becomes a much more mental game.

This week when I started that timed run, after 5 minutes or so I knew it’d be a slow one. I had a million excuses, too – I’m moving in like a week, I’m stressed out, I had been on my feet packing all day, I ran out of my asthma medicine, I hadn’t really eaten much, I was under hydrated, I hadn’t gone to the office so I didn’t get the warm-up that the 1.2mi walk home affords me. But instead of telling myself to pull it together and go faster, I caved, a little – I decided if it was going to be slow, okay, I’m not going to check my time.

I soon realized that this decision was the start down a slippery slope. I was getting lazy about trying to beat the stop lights, I wasn’t pushing at all, I even took a leisurely drinking fountain break. Then I thought I should just quit and walk home since the whole venture was beginning to feel like a failure. Wait, what? What the Hell was I thinking?

“Suck it up and finish it,” I growled at myself. “It might not be a personal best, but you need to finish the course. It’s not that long, and it’s really not that difficult. Just finish it so you know you can do it. Quit now and you’ll quit in a race.” And I pushed on through. I kept telling myself that all I had to do was finish and that I wasn’t going to check my monitor and see how dishearteningly slow I had been, but I couldn’t help glancing at it once I had finished. And you know what? I wasn’t any slower than I had been last week in the rain. If I hadn’t been so lazy during the first half of the run, it might have been a new personal best, and I’m kicking myself for not trying hard enough to see.

I can apply this lesson to the packing and other pre-move chores I’m in the middle of. I move in 9 days and have so, so much to do. It’s so overwhelming that I want to sit down and close my eyes and go on wishing that the clothes will magically launder themselves and the books will magically put themselves into boxes. But I can’t, because they won’t. Just like a timed work-out, preparing for this move is a race against not just the clock, but also my own will power. I have to bear down, accept that it kind of sucks, and push myself to get it done as fast as possible.

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Over The Hill

She's a steep one!

San Francisco: Natural StairMaster

In my “Shoes Wisely” post last week, I discussed how dangerously easy it is to excuse away a workout, especially when you’re about to move and have a to-do list a mile long. To avoid this trap I’ve signed up for the Boston Athletic Association’s Distance Medley race series for this spring and summer. The first race of the series is a 5K taking place on April 15, which is two weeks after I arrive in Boston (and only like a month from now, yikes!). And even though a 5K isn’t the world’s scariest proposition, I am determined to do well! Which means one thing: training.

The best way I have found to stay motivated, continue improving my fitness, and still fit in the workouts around work/packing/seeing friends is to have a workout schedule that is varied but still cyclical. So I have devised this weekly schedule for myself:

Monday: 3.5 mile course, somewhat easy, plus walking up some steep hills on the 1 mile walk home
(Time Trial) Tuesday: Racing myself and the clock over a 4mile course, followed by a 1 mile walk home
Wednesday: Hill sprints!
Thursday: Rest day
Friday: 3.5 miles @ tempo
Saturday: Riding! (Hour and a half jumping lesson – I will be posting about this soon)
Sunday: 5-6 miles eeeaasssyyy “fun run”

The variety helps my training and keeps me interested. Having the program be a weekly cycle keeps me on track and breaks the program down into bite-sized pieces. And it’s working! I’ve been slashing time off of my mile splits like a banshee.

The crux of this workout program is the Wednesday hill sprint workout, which I’ve been calling “get over the hump-day hill sprints,” because it’s fun to name things that otherwise sound painful. San Francisco, as some of you may have heard, is a rather hilly city. I plan most of my courses around this fact, and try to avoid too much up-hill work during my runs. But on Wednesday, I jog about a half-mile to a block that has a 9% grade hill, not much foot-traffic, and very few driveways, and I do this workout:

1. Sprint up the hill (all-out effort!) for the entire length of the block. Jog back down. Repeat 5 times.

2. After the 5th time sprinting up the hill, jog around the block (which includes another steep downhill).

3. Repeat steps 1 and 2, but decrease the number of sprints by 1 each time. So you’ll do 5 sprints, run around the block, then 4 sprints, run around the block, then 3 sprints, run around the block… You get it!

The whole workout takes about 40-45 minutes, and adds up to about 3.8 miles. Depending on the hill you’re running on, your mileage may vary.

Interval workouts like this one are a great way to build speed, power, and endurance – I am seeing the results myself! You may not believe me, but even though it’s a tough workout, it’s really kind of fun.

And sometimes at the top of the hill, you get lucky with a great view!

San Francisco

Sometimes the view will reward your hard work!

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