Running in the time of COVID

This has been an all-too-familiar notice over the past 9 months

This has been an all-too-familiar notice over the past 9 months

As a coach, 2020 has been completely nuts.  In the spring racing season, only two of my athletes were able to get in their races before the world ground to a halt due to the pandemic.  For the rest of my roster, it’s been quite a rollercoaster as races were cancelled, schedules adjusted, and new races targeted – only to have THOSE races cancelled a few months later.  The texts and calls I received were filled with questions – Coach, will we race in the fall? Should I take time off even though I didn’t race? Should I continue with a schedule or just run on my own?  With the introduction of so much uncertainty, many of my athletes were left wondering: now what?  

 What does good coaching and good running look like in a pandemic?  For many people around the country, it became a time to let go of a routine and be happy there was a legitimate excuse to skip the gym.  But runners are a different breed, and for many of us, there’s nothing we love more than the discipline and structure of a good training plan.  With no races to target, no one would have blamed my athletes if they opted to forgo an “official” plan and just run when they wanted.  However, we recognized that the obstacle of this pandemic actually presented us with a fascinating set of opportunities.  


We can take this time to recover 

For some of my athletes, their body has not gotten a lengthy “off season” in a while.  Sure, they’d take the required time off after each marathon or race at my insistence, but they had not had an extended (4+ weeks) period of time where they were running less (or not at all) and when they chose.  While not getting to race and having to segue directly into recovery was a challenge, it ultimately became a blessing as their bodies had enough time to repair and recover FULLY before re-entering training.  After a period of time (different for each athlete), they gradually returned to building some base mileage – feeling physically and mentally rejuvenated.  

We can attack our weaknesses

For many of us, it becomes impossible to work on weaknesses within a heavy training cycle.  Trying to fit in extra yoga classes, strength training sessions, or accessory work to improve our form inevitably gets shoved to the side as the demands of work, home, and our normal weekly mileage start to add up.   With races suddenly erased from our calendar, the sense of urgency lessens and our schedule opens up.  Suddenly we can fit in that extra 20 minutes of strength training at home since our mileage is lower and we aren’t commuting to work.  Or we can attend that hour-long online yoga class since we don’t have those after-work activities.  While the COVID restrictions may feel a bit, well, restrictive, they also open up pockets of time that we can use to make ourselves better runners.  The non-sexy work of strength training and mobility goes a long way towards allowing us to stay injury-free as we return to training. 

We can build some speed  

With the absence of a race on the calendar, some might argue that there’s no need to do any speed work. But this lack of races actually makes for a perfect opportunity to build some speed in the legs.  Having a season of shorter distance training and track work will improve running form and efficiency with faster turnover and increased power.  This translates to faster times at not only the shorter (5K, 10K distances) but the adaptations built during a season of speed makes it easier for a runner to maintain a faster pace over longer distances as well, such as when they return to racing marathons.  This technique of taking a season away from marathoning to return to the track is employed by many of the elite marathoners today.  

We can determine what we LOVE

Perhaps your running has been feeling a bit flat and uninspired for a few months, a year, or even longer.   Sub-par race times, a lack of motivation, or just a “blah” feeling every time you’d force yourself to lace up your shoes for a run.  While 2020 has thrown a wrench in everyone’s running plans, it’s actually a great time to reevaluate your relationship with running and decide what you want the future to hold.  Does taking time during this pandemic make you miss training?  Are you craving the feeling of lining up on a starting line, ready to give the race everything you have?  Do you miss having that daily run schedule and routine?  

OR….are you enjoying the non-competitive part of running in the pandemic – with no races or competitions in sight, just running as you feel?  Do you like the unstructured days, and the solo time alone in the absence of group runs? 


This forced shake up of our running world is a perfect opportunity to really sit and examine what it is you love about running, and what really lights you up and gives you motivation.  That’s different for all of us, and it’s something that can change from year to year. But it’s a great use of this time in the pandemic to determine what you LOVE about running and how you can get more of THAT in your life.  Really miss a training schedule and the satistfaction of checking a daily run or workout off a list?  Hire a coach to create a schedule for you (I can help you with that!).  Miss racing and group runs?  Look into some virtual options to help bring some of that competitive fire back to your training.  Working with a coach can help you structure your training around the things that fire you up and will naturally motivate you – bringing joy and a sense of purpose to your training.   


As we approach the end of 2020 and start to eye goals for 2021, I’d be honored to help you make the most of the remaining time in quarantine.  As much as it stinks to be in lockdown, there are no “bonus days” that we’ll get back for having survived this time during COVID-19.  The time will pass anyway – whether we use it to improve, or we spend it being miserable.  Within this forced downtime is the opportunity to become a better runner. It’s up to you - how will you use this time? 

Let’s make the most of it. 

Where's Coach Jen?

Clearly I’m overdue for an update.  2017 brought a ton of changes for my family, and just as many changes in my running.  My 13-year old stepdaughter came to live with us full-time, so we had the addition of a teenager into the house – which was a big adjustment for us all.   We started the process of building a new home in the Fall, and had to list, stage, and sell our old one.  Our family of 5 moved into an apartment for just over a month, and then last month we finally moved into our new home. 

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It’s no secret that I like feeling in control of my life – through schedules, discipline, hard work, and the comforting routine of running day in, day out.  I tend to cling to what I can control – trusting that if I put in the work, I’ll reap the rewards.  But sometimes life requires you to let go of that death grip on the reins.  When things got busy and my family life was changing, I tried desperately to hold on to my competitive running.  I got up earlier, worked harder, dug deeper – but the universe seems to know when we are trying to avoid the path we are meant to be on, and so she put a hand on my shoulder and said, “Stop. I have something else planned for you.”   So I let go. 

 

The next year was filled with lots of soul searching, which sounds super cheesy, but that's probably the best way to describe it.  If I wasn’t Jen, the competitive runner, who was I?  I still ran, but my life wouldn’t allow me to run in the same way I had – so I did something different.  I started coaching more runners, and I started CrossFit. 

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In pursuing both, I gained a happiness that I thought I’d lost – the ability to just RUN, and truly enjoy it.  No matter the pace, no matter the distance.  Without beating myself up about what I “should” be running, or being frustrated that I couldn’t hit the paces I used to run with ease.   I was just grateful to be out there running. 
 

Stepping back has been a huge shift, but it’s been what I’ve needed at this time and place in my life.  I’ve had the privilege of working with more athletes and being able to give them more of my time and energy to help them achieve their goals.  And their successes have made me happier than I’d ever expected. 
 

Though my own fitness journey has shifted more to the strength training side, I’m still running.  I jumped into a local 7.4K on the 4th of July and was pleasantly surprised to take 3rd female.  And though the time was far from my personal best, I ran to remind myself what it felt like to push hard in a race – to suffer, but to ultimately defeat those voices in your head that tell you to stop, that this is too hard, or that you are too slow, too old, not good enough.   I ran to help me be a better coach to my athletes, to re-learn some of those racing lessons (run the tangents, pass with authority, take things a mile at a time).  And I ran just because I could.  I’ve been injured enough to know that running is a gift, and I’m more grateful for that now than ever. 

With my parents and aunt at the Brandermill 7.4K - 4th of July  

With my parents and aunt at the Brandermill 7.4K - 4th of July 

 

I plan to continue to run as I feel, coach others, and enjoy developing my strength.  I’m currently studying to receive my nutrition certification and if all goes well, I’ll soon be joining the team at Fit Factory Nutrition to help support my athletes and others in aligning their nutrition with their fitness and body composition goals.  

 

I hope this post finds all of you happy and healthy, and enjoying your own running.  We’re all at different places in our life with careers, families, and our own running journey.  I’d love to help you reach your goals with a consult, custom schedule, or 1:1 personal coaching.  If I can help, don’t hesitate to reach out – shoot me an email at coachjen@runlikeafox.net and we’ll chat. 

 

Enjoy the summer weather and know that the work you are doing now in the sweltering heat and humidity is laying the groundwork for a fantastic fall racing season!

 

Run happy –

Coach Jen 

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Clawing your way back

The talented Amanda Sandlin (http://www.amandasandlin.com) made this #atwildwoman portrait for me - I love it.  

The talented Amanda Sandlin (http://www.amandasandlin.com) made this #atwildwoman portrait for me - I love it.  

Clawing your way back

After athletes suffer a significant injury there’s usually a period where we mourn – for races we won’t get to run and lost entry fees, for runs with friends that are often the highlight of our weekend.  We watch our hard earned fitness slowly slip away while clothes begin feeling tighter than we would like.  But at some point along our slide into the abyss, our feet hit solid ground.  And it is time to cautiously stand and take stock:  given my injury, what can I do NOW with my current limitations, to improve my fitness?  To begin again?  

As we climb and fight our way back up the mountain there will be footholds.  The first time our injury is healed enough to pool run.  The first time we get to take off our aircast or ankle brace.  That amazingly awesome first “run” back where we get to take fledgling running steps amidst lots of walking.  We may occasionally take a wrong step, push too hard and find ourselves sliding back down the side of the mountain – or holding on to a rock for dear life.  But even with the setbacks we focus our gaze on the peak and keep pressing forward. 

There’s strength to be found in the journey.  We know that we will emerge from the process as a stronger, wiser athlete than before.  And so we begin to fan the flames of that tiny spark of athletic fire still burning inside of us, and we embrace the long, arduous process of clawing our way back to the top. 

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I wrote the above about 4 months ago.  In April I was playing with my kids at a local park when I leapt off a platform to catch my youngest child who was about to fall.  I landed badly and immediately crumpled to the ground.  (Youngest child had not a scratch though!!) After driving myself to urgent care, I learned that I had fractured (completely) my 4th metatarsal.   I spent several weeks on crutches, and three months in a boot before finally graduating to a running shoe with titanium inserts to prevent my foot from flexing while walking around.   Surgery was discussed, fretted about, cried about, and ultimately dismissed in favor of a “wait and see” approach to determine if the slightly displaced fracture would heal enough on its own.  Another two months of no running and I was finally given the green light to begin the long, slow process of rebuilding my running base.  But oh - those first few steps of freedom were glorious. 

If nothing else, the long layoff showed me that running is truly embedded somewhere deep in my soul.  When you are injured it’s natural to question your place in the sport.  I’d find myself wondering: WHY do I keep doing this to myself?  Is it worth another injury and layoff?  Why not just exercise a few times a week like most people and call it good?  But when you see runners in the pouring rain and feel an intense, burning jealousy that you can’t be out there suffering with them, or when you drive past the lonely stretch of road where you do speed work and lung-searing tempos and feel a physical yearning to be out there pushing your limits – that’s the universe speaking loud and clear that YOU AREN’T DONE YET.  Don’t give up, you are meant to be back out there.
 

It was all I needed to hear.    
 

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I ran my first race post-fracture this past Sunday.  The cold, blustery day couldn’t dampen my spirits as I celebrated the fact that I was standing at a starting line of a RACE.  About to run a 5K on a foot that (several months ago) had been in pieces.  The body is a miraculous thing.  Watchless (thanks to a busted Garmin), I had the simple goal of just to go out and give it a good effort.  When I crossed the line in 20:05 I couldn’t stop the smile that appeared on my face.  I’m not there yet, but I’m heading in the right direction.  I’m climbing back up the mountain – and I’ve got my eyes fixed on the top.