Showing Off Can Help Your Workouts

This is a point that needs to be made. I prefer to run where I can have privacy away from it all. So the farther away from the human race, the better in most cases. The solitude is what it is all about for peace and quiet and reflection. Nature is so lovely with the trees and lakes and other scenic stuff, after twenty or thirty minutes in the run, look so spectacular. Yes saying hello to a passing runner or bikers or a walker is fine. But what running is all about to many of us is a major league outlet to escape the turbulence in our lives and in the world we live in.

So when we decide that today is the day we want to run in a populated environment, there can be some major benefits that I will call the showing off factor just to get my point across. Now I am not saying we are all the same animals when it comes to wanting to run faster when others are watching which is part of my vain split personality on any given day. So if today is supposed to be a crawl run, then for sure a remote area is a must. But if everything feels good for me and I know I need to push a little, then having folks watching even if they couldn’t care less, has an effect on an up-tempo pace. I think most folks are like what I am depicting and want to look good out there. If this is your personality, then it can be a great help in your regimen to have a faster workout and one can use this method when you feel you need to run faster.

In summary of what is trying to be conveyed: We are runners and breathing hard and sweating is all part of our sport. So we can never look prefect out there like our professional heroes who are trained natural thoroughbreds. But we can use the showing off concept to go a little faster if it fits our personality, and it can be an added reward to our training.


The Running Experience Is So Personalized

Yes I believe a part of the intellect is increased by consistent running and maybe this is a result of general health or a calming that gives us an ability to think more clearly. This I hope is not taken as arrogance but a witnessed belief. Science would tell you more, but I have seen a clear increase in what I would assume would be, not the IQ we are born with, but more of acquired knowledge that comes with desire and discipline, which is part of a runner’s mentality.

Others will say that runners started off as that animal that attracted them to a loners sport so running does not increase intellect as they were the intellectual type from the start.

This I know – that the running experience is very personalized. Some run so they can eat what they want or for weight control, while others do it for the feeling of well being referred to as the endorphin high. For some it is training, for others sports or just general fitness. However, for a runner that has run consistently through their adult lives, it is a lifestyle or even more so, life itself!

This book generally states what we runners hate when we miss a scheduled day of our workouts. The trot becomes very much our lifestyle. Whether traveling for business or drinking a mixed drink at a cocktail party, it becomes who we are. We can’t help but bring up the subject and many of us expound on this passion as running has become so personalized to us. We define ourselves in part by our timeless passion. I have heard over and over again ex-runners who had to stop due to injuries, say how much they miss their favorite sport and wish they did not have to stop.

The personalized experience of us runners vary and yet we have so much common ground. We talk about our personal experiences of running in snow or rain or on the trails, up the mountains. And even though it is a personalized experience, when we talk together about our ventures in the great outdoors, usually the listeners head is bobbing up and down at what becomes a shared experience of a common bond.


Many readers will hate this article.

I say this with confidence because I am about to encourage you to incorporate a “hard” run into your regular routine. That means that in this writer’s opinion, our readers should make it a point to get out of your comfort zone–and away from the “fun” runs that we so much enjoy–and do a grueling two-mile “hard” run once or twice a week. Just get out and run–HARD!

There’s no escaping it: running hard means WORK! It also means that there is no escape from the not-so-wonderful experience of pain that comes from running hard. It hurts and it is mostly not much fun–except for the feeling of accomplishment from which your post-run pleasure is derived.

The idea here is to retard the aging process for a runner, and through my experiments, it is my belief that this can only be done by incorporating “hard” runs on a regular basis. We need to keep ourselves strong as we age, and in my opinion, it is very important to get in that fast-paced run once or twice a week.

We all have a training routine.

For those of us who do not race (or who do not race very often) it is easy to get into a pleasant routine of pure “fun” runs–which is of course one of the main reasons we run and enjoy our sport so exuberantly.

For those runners who race, I would assume that there is some kind of regimen undertaken in order to try to do one’s best on a given race day. Speed training on a track could be part of that regimen, and that would be great for those runners who enjoy it.

There are many runners, like myself, who cannot bring themselves around to the habit of so-called “interval” training on the oval. Surges on the road are better for runners like me. I am sure that we are all familiar with the term “all out runs” which some us are in the habit of implementing during the course of our regular run.

I suggest that instead of doing short “hard” runs during the course of our regular run (as in “I’m going to run full-on flat out HARD from tree A to tree B and then go back to my regular pace after that.”) during our daily runs, why not just do some good old-fashioned flat-out “hard” runs in addition to our regular runs.

The important thing to bear in mind, in this writer’s opinion, is that we need these hard runs. We need to do them, training-wise, in order to really keep fit as we age. A hard work-out or two each week has so many benefits. I know from my personal experience that “hard” runs make me feel like I have achieved pure accomplishment. They also, by-golly, make me feel young, young, and younger!

We senior runners can do “hard” runs! Afterwards, we can take tremendous satisfaction knowing that we did it! We can do it! We can amaze ourselves! Talk about a runner’s high!!!

That being said, I now have to say this: Just be careful! The goal is to preserve our bodies by doing the “hard” runs, not injure them!

Strive to keep an even pace during a “hard” run. That said, I have to comment that an even pace is not as significant as knowing–by the sound of your breathing–that you are pushing yourself very hard.

Many runners try to run at an even, comfortable pace–so they look good to passing folks (or to folks that they are passing). When doing a “hard” run, some of us prefer to stick to the two or three mile runs, but others of us, with more ambition, prefer longer “hard” runs.

When I started running “hard” two to three milers–sometimes as often as five times a week–I threw the rules of “looking good” out the window!

I grunt and I moan as I run! Pain from the exertion starts to build and I and start yelling out loud to myself as I run “THIS HURTS!”, I yell, and “I HATE MYSELF FOR DOING THIS TO MYSELF!”. It’s a little unorthodox, for sure, but yelling, for me, releases the stress of the pain and discomfort that the “hard” run generates on my body. As a matter of fact, pushing myself to my limit during a “hard” run, all yelling aside, has turned into an addiction! Running on the edge of my endurance has become a pleasure that I want to duplicate, over and over again!

Okay so down to the nitty-gritty:

• If you run at a slow pace, day after day, there will no doubt be benefits to you physically–so don’t deter one from this routine!

• If you never change your routine and only run slowly each day, in this writer’s opinion, in most cases, you can lose your mental edge.

• My belief is that you have to have some “hard” runs, even if you hate every moment of the pain involved in the process–please keep your eye on the accomplishment instead in order to reap the satisfaction!

• If you have not integrated “hard” runs into your regimen, and if you do not run in races, try adding “hard” runs to your running routine and see great results.

• I know from experience that what I am suggesting is not easy, but it is well, well, worth the price you pay in physical exertion!

Try out my suggestion, and then come up with your own personalized routine and send Senior Runner the results of your experiments and efforts. We’d love to know if, after trying it out, you would agree with this writer.

If you have a special training method you would like to share with us, please send us an email, we would love to hear from you!

As always, enjoy and best of health from Senior Runner.

Best of health,

Bruce Silverman
post-content-logo-03
https://www.seniorrunner.net/

mr-silverman-img03

Bruce Silverman
Founder Of Senior Runners


freedom-handbook-03