Cindy picked up this book for me. (How nice is that??) She shared her preferred marathon training schedule two months ago, and so I'm well into my training now. It's a very gradual program, taking six whole months to get to the marathon. I LOVE IT. It's working so well for me. The premise is each week has 2 short runs, 1 speed/xtrain, and 1 long run.
I'm using the run-walk method, which means that I'm enjoying running from beginning to end. No more suffering -- physically or motivationally. Or, at all, actually. I'm very gradually increasing my run-to-walk intervals, and since I started off easier than I could do, I'm always feeling strong. I'm never hitting the wall, even though I'm gradually increasing my mileage every week. I feel strong every day and I also look forward to my runs every time. This is simply sensational. I've never trained like this before.
The run-walk method does work in a spectacular way. No matter what level of fitness you are coming from, you can literally have an enjoyable run from the beginning of your training to the end, every single day. Just start it gradually enough. (Like, if you're anti-running, start by: walk 5 minutes, run 1 minute.) My training summary: Two months ago, I started with 2 minute walking, 1 minute running. Every week I add 5 seconds to running and subtract 5 seconds from walking. It's been perhaps too slow. This week is an easy mileage week so I'm going to drastically change it up and run 8 mins, walk 1 min.
As a fan of the run-walk method, I knew I had to read a Jeff Galloway book, since he made the method famous. This edition is from 2001. I respect the guy and I found the first half of the book helpful. I definitely marked the book up! But, I skimmed a few sections, where he obviously doesn't have the qualifications (nutrition, dieting) or scientific studies (he leaned more on individual stories to back up his claims). He belabored the point, so an editor would have been helpful. (And of course he included absolutely zero information about women-specific running issues, like: through the menstrual cycle, or while pregnant or breastfeeding. Nor included women-specific gear like: sports-bra firmness, or diva cups, or safety devices, because THOSE BE WOMENS PROBLEMS.) But in spite of the flaws, it still had a lot of valuable, solid information, and it *will* make my running better. So, three stars.
My running goals:
My big goal is to run a marathon, which I should hit this coming April/May.
My fun goal is to do the Taylor Swift Eras Tour run, as outlined in her Times Person of the Year interview. She ran and sang her setlist aloud, running fast for fast songs, running slowly or walking for slow songs. How fun and crazy is that??? I love how people everywhere are trying it out and I love doing it too. Running and singing make me so damn thirsty though, so I bought a hip belt with a water bottle attachment. Happy me!
My speed goal is to have my comfortable mileage pace be 10-minute miles. I'm currently running between 12-15 minute miles.