Friday, October 12, 2012

PAIN - Breaking It Down Before You Break Down - An Ultra Endurance Athlete's Take



“Make friends with pain and you will never be alone.”
-Ken Chlouber


If you love to run, and by that I mean LOVE to run, whether it's on trails, roads, the track, as a stand-alone event or after you've swam and biked preceding that run, you have personally made friends with pain.  Either that, or you dread running hard (and racing to the peak of your ability).  So here is the chief problem: if we are completely at home with pain, and we've made our peace with it, then where should we draw the line on what's acceptable to run through?  What is the pain we're supposed to stop for?

Marathon training programs, large charity fundraising groups and now ultra distance running & popular media have clouded our perspective a little over the last decade or two.  We laud toughness. We respect gritty, gutsy efforts.  We love to watch the video of someone crawling, yes, literally c-r-a-w-l-i-n-g across the finish line...

TEENAGE RUNNER CRAWLS ACROSS X-COUNTRY FINISH
*see 1-min, 10-sec in to 2-min, 14-sec

How can we determine the appropriate line in the sand?  What should be considered "desirable mental/physical toughness" and how do we know what is "foolishly putting our future physical health at risk"?  Holland Reynolds (the girl in the video above) is photographed with her "winning team" in an ambulance after this race.  I don't even know what side of the fence I am on when it comes to foolishness vs. courage/toughness.  After all, I run 100-135 mile races.  I've made friends with pain.

I do, however, have a little mental checklist I made for myself years ago and have shared with many of my runners.  It's four parts, and I hope it can help you stay healthy the way it has helped me over the past 10 years.


THE FOUR TYPES OF PAIN
I am sure there are many more than four types, but if I break my friend pain down into these four basic sub-categories, it helps me determine if this pain is something I can run through or something I should call it a day for.

TYPE 1 - the pain of EFFORT
This one is very simple. You run fast, you fall into oxygen-debt (i.e. anaerobic state) and that discomfort reaches the pain point.  To decrease the pain of effort, simply decrease the effort/pace.

TYPE 2 - the pain of CUMULATIVE FATIGUE
This one is a touch more tricky.  Cumulative fatigue can be from running for an extended duration, can be from the swim/bike prior to the run, and it can also be the built up fatigue from a hard week/month of training and/or work/life stresses.  The bottom line is you don't feel great, you aren't in a groove and things just feel off. Maybe you're achey, maybe you feel generally horrible.  Cumulative fatigue is going to happen the longer you go, and in many long runs, longer races and big week/weekend miles it will be there.  You have to ask yourself this in training: "is running through this, now, serving a specific purpose in my training?"  If the answer is no, you need to make a judgment call to adjust the workout or shut it down.  In a race, the answer is simple: keep running.  You get to rest when it's done and cumulative fatigue is a part of the game (especially in that marathon at the end of an Ironman and 50-100+ mile trail running races).

TYPE 3A - the pain of 'Correctable' IMBALANCE
This pain can show up in many different scenarios.  It can be muscle imbalances, flexibility imbalances or something you tweak.  My rule of thumb for imbalance is: are you favoring something?  Are you compensating in your form/stride?  If this is something we can correct (stop and stretch a tight muscle, massage something out, etc.) and get our form/stride back in sync, then I keep going.

TYPE 3B - the pain of 'Non-Correctable' IMBALANCE
This pain is essentially the same as described above, the difference being when you can NOT make things right, or at the very least you can't stop favoring something.  Maybe you rolled an ankle, tweaked a hamstring or your Achilles isn't 100% on one side, but the bottom line is you are in pain and you have a hitch in your stride or are outright limping.  This is a game changer.  I personally call it a day in this scenario.  The last time this happened to me in a race was the Oil Creek 100-Miler in 2010, I pulled myself at Mile 76 flirting with a Top 3 finish.  Frankly, it was a no-brainer.  I had "Type 3A" pain early in the race and had been stopping to get stretched out all day, and was able to run hypothetically even.  But it deteriorated into "Type 3B" late in the race, somewhere after Mile 62.  I came running into the Mile 76 aid station with every intention of continuing.  Ate my calories, high fived some people, kissed my wife Kate and stood up to run out.  I couldn't run.  I couldn't even really pick up my right leg anymore.  Game over.


RUN & RECOVER SMART
We, as athletes, need to pick our battles.  Yeah we deal with pain on an almost daily basis (hopefully the pain of running effort, not chronic ailments and injuries), but that doesn't mean we should push through every type of pain.  Speaking specifically to the 100-mile trail run, we have become so conditioned to significant pain on a self-inflicted level not experienced in anything else (save childbirth, broken femurs and car crashes), that the line begins to blur as to what we should take extra rest days/weeks for and what we should push through.  Most of us push through things we shouldn't, rationalizing that the rest of our obese society refuses to push through even a simple urge to eat healthier, let alone work out.  We tell ourselves things like, "if I give in and stop then I won't be mentally tough enough later".  It's nonsense.  If you want to have a long career doing what you athletically love, it's time to implement a system of checks-and-balances or soon, we'll be on the sideline watching what we love while we go through physical therapy.  Or worse.  I know this pain all too well, as my last hiatus from running was almost a year long with quadriceps tendonitis from November 2002 through August 2003.

Train hard.  Race tough.  REST SMART.  I look forward to seeing you out on the trail, running...


Wednesday, June 13, 2012

The Yin-n-Yang of Distance Running & Life: Patience VS Passion

Patience is a virtue,
One must develop in part,
Passion is like fire,
Ignited in the heart,
Possession of one, not the other,
Is dangerous indeed,
As both of these qualities,
For high level success you'll need.

"Nothing great was ever achieved without enthusiasm."
-Ralph Waldo Emerson


passion - noun
1. ardent love or affection
3. a strong affection or enthusiasm for an object, concept, etc
4. any strongly felt emotion, such as love, hate, envy, etc
6. the object of an intense desire, ardent affection, or enthusiasm

patience - noun
1. the quality of being patient, as the bearing of provocation, annoyance, misfortune, or pain, without complaint, loss of temper, irritation, or the like.
2. an ability or willingness to suppress restlessness or annoyance when confronted with delay
3. quiet, steady perseverance; even-tempered care; diligence

If you lack passion, you'll never have the energy nor enthusiasm to accomplish anything great.  In the sport of distance running, if you lack patience, you will consistently flirt with injury & burnout and/or throw race performances away going too hard too early in long races.  So one must examine both elements of this important YIN/YANG to become the best athlete (and human) one can be.

If you are reading this, I'm going to make a simple assertion:

You are committed to being the best* you can be.
*otherwise, this topic/subject would be of no real interest to you

Here's the good news, both of these qualities can be developed, both of them shall ebb and flow over your running career and life.  By being committed to balance between them, you will find a place where you can maximize your results by being focused on quality over quantity, by establishing an economy to your training & racing, with very little excess energy wasted or thrown away.  For the record, I have not mastered either of these things.  I'm overly passionate at times, and maybe too patient, after all, it's a balance between the two that I constantly seek.

Which area do you need to develop to take your running to the next level?  If you lack passion & enthusiasm, the way to develop it is to surround yourself with people passionate about the topic you want to become more passionate about.  Watch inspiring movies on the subject, read good books, immerse yourself in your chosen subject matter.  Running was once a hobby for me, it's now a lifestyle.  If you lack patience, sometimes the balance comes from developing OTHER passions so you aren't putting your eggs all in one basket.  Setting priorities in your goals and having a short term, medium term and long term structure to what you're trying to accomplish can also help a lot.  Also, the realization that patience can be oxymoronic in nature helps. Often times by being patient, what you seek/desire comes to you more quickly.

Certain situations in life will develop patience.  I have had a goal to acquire/earn a Sub-24-Hour Silver Buckle at the Western States 100-Miler, for example, and have only been able to run that race 1 time in the 7-years I've been going after it.  Missed my goal in 2009 by 28 minutes (running 24:28 on a day that topped out around 108-degrees).  I consider missing goals like this a blessing, because it keeps me hungry. Gives me something to work towards, to strive for, to keep the pedal down.  Just another log of inspiration for my fire.  When I didn't get into Western States on my 1st try, I signed up for the Angeles Crest 100-Miler.  No, it didn't matter that Western States often sees nearly 100 people earn a sub-24 buckle (generally 25% of the field, last year a whopping 33% earned one), and Angeles Crest is typically below 10% (you literally have to ADD every silver buckle earned at AC all the way back to 1999, 11 races, to equal the number of silvers earned at WS in 2011).  Does that mean I'd relax my goal?  Nope, a silver buckle at AC became goal #2.  It took 3 attempts (a 26:27 finish, a Mile 49-DNF, and finally squeaking under the wire in 23:51 w/barely 8-min to spare last year).  When one achieves the lofty goal, then it is time to raise the bar.  Don't even THINK of asking me what I'm shooting for at AC this year.  It's classified.

What I'd love to leave you with is this: you are part flesh and part machinery and all heart + soul.  One needs both passion coupled with patience to maximize your potential in order to achieve all you are capable of accomplishing.  What area do you need to work on?  The work will reap many benefits.  Get after it, yo.

"Ambition is the path to success. Persistence is the vehicle you arrive in."
Photo by Tyler Olson

Monday, May 14, 2012

Running It Forward away from MIWOK - RIF Day 1

"One of the saddest lines in the world is, 'Oh come now - be realistic.' The best parts of this world were not fashioned by those who were realistic. They were fashioned by those who dared to look hard at their wishes and gave them horses to ride."
-Richard Nelson Bolles



RUN IT FORWARD & BE CHANGE 60-SEC PITCH
3.5-MIN FULL PITCH HERE

My hair is on fire right now trying to pull last minute details together for this insanity of running 2,448-miles from CHICAGO to SANTA MONICA via the ROUTE 66 for education and health initiatives for under served and at-risk youth.  I can't tell you the last time I had a 3-week trip, or said in another way: 19-days away from the normal life routine.  In fact, it might be my first time ever going anywhere / doing anything for more than 2-weeks.  I am damn near a basket case right now.  While I love to be other places, I really hate the process of getting there (organizing my life, laundry, packing, pairing down what I need to a minimal amount of clothing and items, wrapping up last minute business details, etc.).  Add to this the fear of "how will my body hold up for 18-days of day-after-day long ROAD miles?"  Add to that the separation anxiety of being away from my dog and my Coyotes (save of course the 3 Coyotes I am taking with me) and I'm pretty much one big mess right now.  So any of you that think I'm fearless and have it all together, think again.  I am terrified.  Lucky for me this amazing program is attached to a worthy cause, and my desire to make a difference for these kids along the route by far outweighs my own petty and personal fears and apprehensions.

*sidetrack* I don't drink when I'm in the grip of fear (the rule, as stated in How Do You Know, by Reese Witherspoon's character Lisa is, "Don't drink to feel better. Only drink to feel even better."), but I do comfort eat.  I just broke open a box of Thin Mints and shall now tear through 1-sleeve. *end of sidetrack*


Man, those cookies soothe my trembling soul.  Back to Run It Forward!  There are so many crazy little details about this trip, coincidences that are like my little karmic reminders that I may have found my "true north". (In life's journey we are often uncertain where we stand, where we are going and what is the right path for us personally. Knowing our true north would enable us to follow the right path.) Start, for example, with my marathon running: ran my 1st marathon in 2002 in Chicago.  My last marathon: the LA Marathon, where the finish line is essentially the END of the Route 66 (Santa Monica Blvd at Ocean Ave).  The first charity I raised money for was the NCCF (National Childhood Cancer Foundation) as children's charities are very near and dear my heart.  I've worked on kids health & fitness programs for years including but not limited to: NIKE's Cinco de Mile (we went to schools and took over PE classes to prep kids for a 1-mile race in early May) and the 100-Mile Club (Kara Lubin's program to challenge school kids to run 100-miles over an entire school year, cumulatively).




Now we are so close.  Kate, Keira and I flew into Chicago (and met Dave Carder & Sim) yesterday for a half-day of relaxation (and pizza consumption, Chicago-style deep dish, YUM!), prior to hitting the road (literally) later today. Tonight is a "shot-gun" start where ALL 5 guys will run a marathon at the same time.  One of us will start at Mile ZERO, another will get dropped off 26.2 miles down the road, the next 52.4 miles down the road, and so on and so forth.  I am really terrified about this much road mileage in one day, let alone the prospect of nearly 3 weeks of pavement pounding. Okay, I need to focus on the trails for a moment...

MIWOK 100k+ RACE RECAP
9 days ago (Sat, May 5th) was my 4th consecutive year running the Miwok 100k in the Marin Headlands.  It's been an interesting 4-year engagement (I have only run 2 races of some 250+ events in my life 4 consecutive years in a row, the other is the XTERRA Boney Mountain Half Marathon, also 2009-2012).  A look at the interesting changes in course and weather, and my times:

MIWOK 2009 - 10:13:18, 21st overall of 260 finishers
*renamed MUD-walk as it came down in buckets w/brutal cross winds
MIWOK 2010 - 10:19:04, 37th overall of 269 finishers
*opposite of 2009 with heat in the 80-90 degree range 
MIWOK 2011 - 9:45:13, 24th overall of 287 finishers
*some course changes moved ascent from 10k to 11k ups
MIWOK 2012 - 11:18:35, 24th overall of 264 finishers
*significant course changes moved ascent from 11k to 13k ups
So you KNOW that I finished, and how it held up.  Interesting to note that I was 1-hour, 33-minutes slower than the previous year (93-min, or 1-min, 30-sec PER MILE slower!) and I finished in the exact same place, 24th overall.  Now for what REALLY happened...

Wednesday seemed a normal day.  An office day with a few odds and ends crammed in.  Mike and Cassidy stopped by to get in a sauna session and easy spin out run around the Brentwood Country Club.  After a rather abysmal couple months of training where I got literally 1-run in over 3-hours / 16+ miles (and it was the LA Marathon, a semi-flat road race), I knew I wasn't in peak 100k shape.  Especially for a 100k that was boasting climbs into and out of Stinson Beach multiple times.  We were going to climb UP that Dipsea Trail after 26.2 hard trail miles, then we were going to descend it's suicidal single-track steps, roots and mud again post Mile 59.  A masochist's delight!  During that fateful 5-mile run, I got distracted by my beautiful pup Spirit and RAN chest first into a parking post.  I have a left collarbone made of iron, as it took the brunt of the impact (broke the skin) yet didn't fracture/break.  It was hilarious, in the moment. About 90-min later, I was in the fetal position on the floor of my apartment, back engaged in full spasms.  When I stood up, it was like someone twisting a knife in my low right back, I couldn't breathe.  Small problem: I had to coach at DISNEY that night and had MIWOK 3 days later.  Mentally, I was panicking.  I took some ibuprofen for the 3rd time in the last 2 years (I seldom take pills of any kind) and that got the back to stop spasming (if that's even a word), coached at DISNEY and set up an emergency sports chiro appointment for THU am.  Woke up... NO pain?  Led the THU Coyote run, even hiked, then ran a little... no pain???  Went to the chiro who says, "destabilized pelvis" and "not that big a deal" in the same sentence.  He adjusts me, gives me a pelvic / SI compression belt and says, "if ever running 100k over mountains is a good thing, you're good to give it a shot."  GAME ON.

I'd love to recap the race, step-by-step, but for now, I won't.  I'll say this: I was in about 50th position at the 26-mile mark (Stinson visit 2 of 3), and I spent the whole last 36-miles passing people.  I ran a slightly faster 2nd half after a very cautious and conservative 1st half.  It was by far my slowest MIWOK, yet of the 4, the one I'm most proud of.  I hurt (muscle fatigue) most of the race, yet was as mentally rock solid as I've ever been.  I was smiling and goofing off at every aid station no matter how bad I felt.  I hope I'm able to maintain that attitude and perspective throughout the next 18 days.

RUN IT FORWARD begins now.  If you haven't 'HIGH-$5'd' us yet, take a couple minutes and do that now.  Even a single $5 donation makes a tangible difference.  If you can donate more, please do.  Just reading this blog, I'm deeply appreciative that you're here, that you're sharing this information, and supporting this cause.  We need more people LIKE YOU in this world...


DONATE HERE:
http://www.grouprev.com/jimmydean