At the finish line last year |
I felt like I'd been hit by a bus for weeks after the race. I remember being completely delirious at mile 24 and for an hour after finishing. |
After far too much research I came across the Hanson's Marathon Method. Essentially this plan tells you to run at varied speeds to work the different muscle groups and create a level of cumulative exhaustion so that you never run feeling fresh. Mimic the last 16 miles of the race during your long training runs, not the first. Don't take days off because you are sore, push through it and get stronger. Last year, I skipped easy days, I didn't pay attention to paces and I ran without focus. The Hanson's Method doesn't work if you don't follow it very closely and I figured that out right away.
A sincere thanks Luke Humphrey and Hanson brothers. |
I became obsessive about my running routine. As the months went by, I got up earlier and earlier to fit in distance, speed work, strength and easy runs. I felt it working and I kept thinking about that moment last May when I felt unstoppable. This time would be better.
Last Sunday I crossed the finish line in 3:55, just under 30 minutes faster than my previous time. I never felt truly tired until mile 25 where I reminded myself, "Five months of hard work for a few more minutes of discomfort." I ran negative splits with my final mile at 8:26. When I crossed the finish line I expected to feel euphoric like I had a year ago, but I didn't. I never pushed through incredible pain to remind me that I am made up of pure grit. I had a blister the size of Mars under my foot that wrapped in between my toes. I felt it for 15 miles of the race and the oozing liquid spreading between my toes as it popped at mile 25, but nothing begged me to stop.
If I wasn't that tired, did I push hard enough? Could I have gone faster or would I have crashed sooner? If there was energy to spare, how do I train to go faster and feel the same sense of strength throughout the race?
There is no doubt about it, Hanson's works. Not only do they prepare your body for the beating it takes in 26.2 miles, but the method teaches you how to taper, carbo load, actively recover, and push yourself to limits that have never been tested.
What I learned was this, training for a specific pace works. I trained for a 3:56 and ended up one minute faster than goal time. That was a success. If I trained for a faster time and put in the miles at that pace, I have renewed confidence my body could handle it as I pushed faster paces throughout the training, but I need to be more aware of my body as I pick up the pace. I think I got lucky this time. I ran 60+ miles a week for a couple months and didn't incorporate strength training and weights into my regimen. Halfway through the race, my right hip flexor started to ache and reminded me that I have work to do. The second time running the same race, my head was in the game entirely. I ran mile after mile calculating splits in my mind, seeing what my finishing time would be at current paces. I did body checks continuously asking myself, "Do I need water or fuel? Is my stride good? What hurts right now, what is giving out, what is not strong enough? What can I improve for next time?" I never wanted to take off faster than my prescribed pace because I respect the distance too much.
Running marathons is humbling. It becomes addictive and the effort itself becomes more satisfying than the finishing times and results. This time I wasn't euphoric about the finale because I steadily looked ahead throughout this process. For 26.2 miles, I celebrated 1,000 miles of hard work in 5 months. The race didn't feel like the accomplishment, the training did.
~Roadburner
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