Today I had a speed work session that astonished me.
Stunned. And it’s pouring behind me. |
After waking up to a gray, rainy, dreary morning, the last thing I felt like doing was running fast. I felt more like crawling back under the covers and snuggling with my dog. But a mantra stuck in my head as I drove to the 2 mile loop at the retention pond where I do a lot of training. I read a statement on Runner’s World (and for the life of me, I can’t find the link) that said something like you have to run uncomfortable to run faster. So besides training us to run faster, speed work teaches runners to push out of their comfort zone. Similar to those really tough CrossFit workouts that Becky has me do.
I thought about that a lot when I ran my mile splits this morning. I had my Garmin set on pace, and as I glanced down at my watch during my splits, I saw that 7:30 split and tried to hold back. By 3/4 mile into each split, I was breathing really hard and starting to feel pretty uncomfortable. But I had that little rest period waiting for me at the mile mark, so I pushed ahead each time. Stopped to walk for about a minute, catch my breath, and let my heart rate come back down before pushing onto the next mile.
During mile 4, it started to rain again and I heard a huge clap of thunder. Ok then! Let’s go! And I did, finishing that split at 7:36, the exact same time as mile 3. Thrilled to have negative splits, and consistent splits, I walked back to my car in the pouring rain, smiling and pumping my fist. I’m sure the people in their cars, who were waiting for the rain to pass, thought I was a complete lunatic.
Am I crazy?
I talk about the age thing a lot. I’m 52 years old. Everyone keeps saying “age is just a number”. But you just try and get your head around it. This is the fastest and the strongest that I have ever run. I keep expecting the “inevitable decline” and it’s not happening. I go to the doctor for my annual checkup and they don’t know what to do with me, except to tell me they don’t have many patients like me.
Who peaks in their 50s?
Apparently a lot of “late bloomers” like me. According to this article in Competitor magazine, Tim Noakes notes that most of the best runners after age 45 were late starters, runners who started in their late 20s and 30s. Elite runners tend not to run faster into old age, and some of this is due to cummulative high mileage. Experts recommend older runners utilize a low mileage training plan with cross training to preserve those muscles.
Ok, so I’m doing that. But how long can I keep this up? Will menopause change things for me? A few years ago, a woman came up to me after yoga and told me once I go through menopause, I won’t be able to run anymore. Waa waa, Debbie Downer, I know that’s not true–look at Kathy Martin, Joan Benoit Samuelson, Christine Kennedy, Sharon Vos, Margaret Webb…to name a few. These ladies are all still blazingly fast. And while I’m not even comparing myself to them, it’s helpful to see that there are women still out there getting it done and in impressive fashion, too!
The key to all this, I think, is to keep moving. Run 4 days/week. Strength training. Yoga. All the stuff I do.
Because what is it that Tom Petty says? “If you don’t run, you rust…” lyrics from Big Weekend
Reposted with Permission from Old Running Mom