Wednesday 19 February 2014

A flood of silence....


Well, that's been an interesting couple of weeks since my last post. We had a little bit of flooding in the area and I decided to be quiet for a couple of days or so. And I did some running too....


Water, Water everywhere, and not a drop to drink

I have to digress from running for a bit to talk about the recent flooding round me (I can hardly ignore it!) Around this time a week ago the water was at it's peak by us both front and back of the house, Our back garden was under around 2 feet of water - the picture below is from the day before, it was nearly at the level of the deck when it peaked

 
 
While this is front of the house with water coming up from underneath and threatening the airbricks etc (covered by sandbags)

 
 
Water was also covering the paths and half the road out front. All in all a stressful few days, but thankfully it never got inside, though it was probably within a few inches! Hopefully not to be repeated any time soon....
 
 
 
Silence is Golden
 
The other major excitement of the week was, of course, my long-awaited SPONSORED SILENCE which took place from Friday morning 8am to 10am Sunday. Well, it was HELL! Certainly one of the hardest things I've done, and one I'm not eager to repeat any time soon. Like in the next 50 years or so.
Funnily enough, actually stopping myself from talking wasn't quite as hard as I though it would be......though it took a lot of concentration to ensure I didn't inadvertently slip. The hardest bit was definitely being in a group with other people - at the pub after work on Friday, round my friends for drinks ect on Saturday. Due to my inability to actually interact and join in conversations, it felt like I was being ignored and almost invisible!
(BTW, that's not a dig at anyone, it's perfectly understandable - hard to keep someone involved when they can't talk, and even when they try and communicate via phone Notes it's usually way behind the conversation!)
 
Anyway - I went through a day at work, beers down the pub, acting as Run Director at parkrun on Saturday morning (which included having to do the run briefing in Mime and also re-arrange the finish due to flooding), group drinks round a friend's and finishing off with a guided run with my Coach Karen Weir (who I'll plug separately, but her website is www.runwithkaren.com  - she's ace). The Silence actually finished midway through the run, which encompassed Richmond Park, Ham, Kingston Bridge, Teddington Twickenham and back up Richmond Hill into the park) so if you were in the area and were startled by a loud noise at 10.00 on Saturday, then I apologise.
 
It was a lovely run though, and here's a nice picture of me and my fellow runners about 5 minutes after I started talking again - check out the massive grin!
 
 
 
 
It's all about the Money
 
The best thing about the sponsored silence though was the impact it had on my fundraising efforts. As of today I am already over my target amount of £2000 - WOO-HOO! It's fantastic to have reached this already, 8 weeks before the marathon, and I like to give huge thanks to everyone who donated.
Note that the fundraising efforts will continue, as £2000 is merely a minimum target :-)
 
 
And the running?
 
Oh yes, the running. Delighted to say that this is going really well - even though I didn't get to do my favourite half-marathon at Wokingham as it was cancelled due to - guess what? - flooding. So instead I did 15 miles in Windsor Great Park over 2 hours and 25 minutes. This is my longest ever run and I was very pleased how it felt, especially given that Windsor Great Park is a little undulating (OK, a LOT undulating). I've also thrown in a "short" 13.5 mile run (when did 13 miles become short? Strange days...) and some intervals, parkruns and my least favourite training sessions - Kenyan Hills!
 
 
Here's  to some normal days.....


Thursday 6 February 2014

The loneliness of the long distance runner....

...this, incidentally, is also a song by Iron Maiden, from the Somewhere in Time album :-)

But more seriously, it encapsulates one of the biggest issues with distance running - namely the mental aspect. Running is hard enough physically - but running on your own makes it harder. On several occasions I've been out for a longish run and early into it the voices started whispering in my head

"you're not going to complete your mileage"
"why keep going - just stop, it's easier"
"feel that twinge in your knee? Yeah - best not risk an injury, good excuse to turn around"

..and sometimes, they've won. I've suddenly stopped - quit mid run and gave up. I hate doing that, as I usually know I'm well capable of what I'm planning to do and I'm taking the easy route out....but it happens.

Things is though - it happens to everyone.  Regardless of their ability and experience, sometimes it's just not right upstairs and you're mentally not right for the run. If you can battle through that and go on running, then it feels even better!

(Note - I'm differentiating between stopping because you've talked yourself into it and stopping because you're in serious pain / overheating / the terrain is iced over and dangerous etc. Stopping then is absolutely the right thing to do)


Anyway - this is all well and good, but how do you combat the mental fatigue or self doubt? I've listed my preferred methods below.

1) Run with someone else
 Undoubtedly the best way. Chatting as you run is absolutely the best way of helping the run go faster (though running with me tends to be more of a one-way conversation!). It also helps you maintain your pace...and it's a lot harder to quit mid-run when you're with someone else!

2) Listen to music
 Not for everyone maybe, but my iPod nano is an essential running aid. I've picked out a running playlist so I don't have to worry about skipping songs I don't like etc. Just make sure that you're still aware of your surroundings - cars, other runners, cyclists etc

3) Daydream
Sounds a bit silly, but letting your mind wander into potential scenarios  - like planning out exactly how you'd spend the money if you won the Lottery - stops you obsessing over how far you've gone, and how far left to go!

4) Divide your run into smaller chunks
If I'm starting a very long run, I'll often have a contingency target in my head. "I'm supposed to do 90 minutes, but maybe I'll get to 60 and see how it goes". Once you reach your secondary target it's often easier to do another 10 mins, then another etc. This also works for interval training with lots of reps :)

5) Vary your route
Try and choose different places to do the long run, or if choice is restricted for location then change the route around, do it backwards etc. It's surprising how much difference it makes!

I'm sure others will have other methods - but it's my blog so..... ;-)

 

Marathon training update


Now midway through week 5 and training is going well! Had some "fun" doing hill sessions last week up Tithe Hill and Egham Hill. Hard uphill for a minute, jog back down then repeat for a total of 6. Rest for a minute then repeat the set of 6, twice more.
That's 18 reps up a steep hill!

Absolutely exhausting - thankfully week 4 is more of a recovery week so I had a 4 mile marathon pace run and 10.5 mile long slow run to end the week. Am just back from my week 5 marathon pace run (6 miles) and felt really good. Hopefully it'll continue with the Wokingham Half Marathon on Sunday - one of my favourite races, and where I set my 13.1 mile PB last year! And before that I have a marathon seminar on Saturday arranged by Missing People for their marathon runners- looking forward to that too.


Fundraising


Amazingly, with 2 months still to go I've already raised over £1100 pounds for Missing People. I've been overwhelmed by the support (and by the evident desire of those who know me to get me to shut up for a bit!). Thanks to all who have donated so far - you're all wonderful people.

http://www.justgiving.com/Rory-Murphy1


Cheers

Rory