Single Mom Running
Single Mom Running

When you set out to train for a race, it can be a huge time commitment. Depending on your base and your distance goal, a good training plan can potentially be 4-6 months and require running or cross training 3-5 days a week. Some days might also require you to be gone on your run for long hours at a time. It can take you away from your family, and when you do get home, you’re exhausted for the rest of the day. What is the impact this commitment can have on a significant other and your children? What if you are a single parent? How do you do it?

I am that parent. I am a single mom of two kids. I work full time (and then some) and I am currently working on getting my masters degree. Add to that training for long distance races and it’s a miracle I survive each week. It is not easy by any means, but I have the drive it takes to make it work. I carefully plan ahead with my school assignments so I am not scrambling at the last minute. I do get the occasional kid free weekend, but sometimes I am stuck on the treadmill at the gym. Many times I need to find a babysitter in order to get my miles in. I am also very fortunate to have my parents nearby to help me. I know not everyone has that, but I am thankful for it.

I cannot slack at my job or my school, since my livelihood depends on it. Does my sleep suffer? Yes, sometimes. Does my social life suffer? Yes, but most of my friends are runners too, so running together is our fun. Does my ability to have a dating life suffer? Yes, but who cares. Do my children suffer? I hope not, only because I do my best to meet their needs and they are fully aware that mom needs to run. With an insanely full plate in front of me every day, it is not easy. However, this is my life. Even when it is hard, I love it and I hope that my children can see their mom overcoming challenges and sticking to her goals. Perhaps my determination will rub off on them. If I can do it, so can you.

Happy Trails!

 
 
Seen a lot of slim chicks posting their

workouts on here so I thought I'd join 

the fun
Warning : I will bully every one of you

into daily stretches, plyo drills, crazy 

intervals, lifting heavy weights and 

epic long runs
104 °F.....  As my Grandma says, 

"Marathon training ain't for p*ssies."



Crazy old lady is right.

New Featured eBibs

we ain't gotta argue baby,  let's run it out
1 grader: I'm short but my dad is high teacher: it's tall, not high  the dad:
California runner in 40F:  “it's so fuuuuucking cold" Canadian runner in 16F:  “Bitch please... I’m still  in shorts, eh”
Does anyone remember that time when  ur body just worked? Like, just on its  own? No pills, no scheduled exercise,  no caffeine, no planned hydration,  no stretching, no specific  diet –you just woke up  and boom, that sh!t  was good to...
*IT band sore af*  Stretching: Rest: Ice: Motrin:  KT tape: i got you babe
Ultramarathon basics • left foot • right foot • left foot • right foot Repeat for 3 to 72 hrs
I deleted all the perfect runners yesterday.  Good morning train wrecks!  Y'all need coffee or what?   –Chaos Coordinator
One thing I know... them morning miles work
My morning run makes me feel like  I've got life figured out.  I don't.  But it feels that way
Doc: I recommend six to eight  weeks  of rest and rehab My inner-voice: "double down on Motrin  and buy an extra knee brace"
Smile when you pass runners who went out too hard!!!
Name something more upsetting  than the AirPods' low-battery warning 5 min into your long run, I'll wait
Taper is just me asking myself "am I injured?" and my mind being like "maybe ;)"
My race results aren't that bad for  someone who has the urge to DNF every 5 minutes
The Coronavirus is my Boston qualifying time because that way I'll never get it
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