This is so boring…

Not running when you are perfectly able to is not fun. When you’re injured, it makes sense. It hurts. You don’t want to. But when you’re in that I’m-not-injured-but-I’ll-probably-get-injured stage, it’s super boring.

My ankle, so far, feels about the same as it did at the end of last week. I’m constantly questioning whether running will actually harm it. So, I decided to go check out my Google search history to see what happened the last time I hurt an ankle.

Google search history is a scary place.

Anyway, here is what I came up with:
– outer ankle pain running
– overuse ankle injury
– ankle strain
– tenderness above ankle
– high ankle sprain
– what does a fractured ankle feel like
– ankle not swollen but hurts
– high ankle pain no swelling
– high ankle sprain symptoms
– taping a high ankle sprain

Compare this to what I’ve been searching for this ankle:
– tender above ankle
– mild tenderness above ankle
– ankle pops and is tender
– cannot add engine to spaceship (okay, I was also playing Civilization V, and if you find this due to your own google search, it’s because the game has already ended…you’re welcome)

There is a definite theme of it being tender ABOVE the ankle itself, so it seems like it could be similar. The only difference (currently) is that I’m not in pain yet, and I don’t remember if my ankle was popping a lot last year. My search results this time around are leading me to the same high ankle sprain links.

Seems like a good, safe idea to stay off of it. Guess I’ll just be playing more Civ V.

Dear Maffetone, it’s not you, it’s me.

As I alluded to in my last post, I am having a hard time with LHR training. To the point where I don’t want to run. And if I’m not running, I’m not improving. There’s no point.

I’m going back to running normally. For now.

Maybe I can revisit it in the future. It seems like it might be a good choice if I were actually planning to run a marathon. Or if I were coming back from injury. Or just had plateaued in my improvements from other training. But none of that is true. I got a 2 minute 5k PR the day before I started this nonsense. I’m definitely not plateauing. And why fix what isn’t broke?

I don’t want to dread running. I want it to be fun (or as fun as running gets). I don’t want to spend 5-6 hours a week doing hardly any mileage. I’m just miserable doing this.

My take-away from this experiment is to slow down my easy runs even more. Run/walk intervals are okay for them, but if I want to run them straight, I need to stick to around 12:30-13 min/mi pace. (I have a tendency to speed up to half marathon pace.) I’m also going to start monitoring my heart rate during more of my runs. I would love to see what I’m doing normally. I don’t even know what my max heart rate is.

Maffetone Method, I don’t doubt that you are useful…to some people. I am just not one of them right now. I know that I didn’t stick with it long enough to even attempt to see an improvement. I just don’t think there would be any if I was hating doing it so much.

The Struggle Is Real: LHR Training Kinda Sucks

I sort of fell off the LHR wagon on Tuesday. Not entirely, but my average heart rate for the run was *gasp* 151, which is three beats higher than it should be.

So, the irony is not lost on me, but before I started this training, it was kind of a struggle to get through my runs without walking. Now all I want to do is run without my heart rate forcing me to walk. And run at a normal pace. My watch will beep telling me my HR is too high and I’ll pout and begrudgingly start walking.

Except on Tuesday.

My watch would beep and I’d keep going. And I was running faster than I should be anyway. There were times my heart rate got up to…170! The horrors! I even hit paces of 13 min/mi!

Stop the madness!

I just can’t understand how this is ever going to help me run faster, especially when I’m walking half the time (or more!). I mean, I get it in theory. But I feel like it will take YEARS. I don’t want to run like this for years. I like speed work! I miss running with other people. And, honestly, I don’t care if my body burns carbs instead of fat. I love carbs.

maffetone method

Sorry, Maffetone.


I’m really, really trying to stay committed to doing this for at least a month (to see if there’s any improvements on my next MAF test), but it’s freakishly hard. It makes me feel…trapped.

MAF Test #1: A New Definition of the Word ‘Jog’

I have mentioned a few times that I planned to start low heart rate training in the fall. I decided to start it a few weeks early, so I could get in a full 16 weeks of training.

So, the basics of Maffetone’s method is you calculate your maximum aerobic heart rate. That is the heart rate that you can run the fastest and still be in your aerobic zone. He has a formula for this, and based on it, my max should be 148. Your lower zone is 10 bpm less than that, so my runs should be done from 138-148 bpm.

From dabbling with this in the past, I know that I have to run slow to maintain this. Like 16-17 minute miles slow. Like the speed I casually walk.

The goal is that your will eventually train yourself to run faster within the same HR range. So while I may be stuck in super slow zone right now, by the end of 16 weeks or so, hopefully I can jog (albeit still slowly) without having to mix in any walking. This makes you faster overall.

No speedwork is allowed, so I won’t be doing any intervals or hills or tempo runs. The only faster-than-MAF-HR running I will be allowed are the races I’m signed up for already.

Every four weeks or so, I am to perform a MAF (Maximum Aerobic Fitness) test. You warm up for 15 minutes until the lower end of your zone. Then you run five miles maintaining staying in that zone. Because of cardiac drift (your heart rate will increase over time even when effort stays the same), the first mile should be the fastest and the last mile should be the slowest.

I initially decided that to keep conditions similar (so you can make sure you are comparing apples to apples), my tests would all be done on a treadmill. However, when I actually tried this, my footpod wouldn’t register my correct speed, and at the end of 2 miles, my watch was only reporting 1.5. That won’t do. No treadmills during LHR training!

Instead, I picked one of my favorite running paths, which is a relatively flat two mile loop. I did three loops around it, with the first mile counting as my warmup.

So, I present to you my first MAF test results!

  July
Mile 1 18:14 / 144
Mile 2 20:18 / 145
Mile 3 18:47 / 146
Mile 4 19:28 / 147
Mile 5 18:46 / 147
Mile 6 17:44 / 147
Final 0.2 3:21 / 148
Total Time 1:56:40
Average Pace 18:51
Average HR 146

See? It’s slooooow. I was almost too embarrassed to post this. Am I that aerobically unfit? But that just means there’s lots of room for improvement, right? Right?

Notice that my times did not increase like they are supposed to. This confused me for awhile, but then I figured out that cardiac drift WAS happening, and I can tell that by how much I had to walk. But since I was walking faster than I was running (I know, that’s hilarious), it made my overall time for each mile go down. Hopefully this will all work itself out as my running speed increases at this heart rate.

Compare the cadence of my first and last miles. I was hardly having to stop and walk at all in the beginning, but by the end, I was hardly jogging.

jogging cadence

The first mile…


jogging cadence

…and the last mile.

Yes, it is entirely possible to jog at a 20 min/mi pace. Now you know.

My watch enjoyed mocking me throughout the run by auto pausing every so often. Because it thought I wasn’t moving. Thanks, Garmin.

Tempo Hill Intervals: Now with Bonus Interval!

On Thursday, I had another round of hills. No, I didn’t skip up them this time.

My training plan (which has changed dramatically since I got injured) called for 3x hills. That didn’t sound so bad.

I had read an article about tempo hill intervals, a variation of short hill intervals that didn’t allow as much recovery. I don’t know why I decided to torture myself, as if just hills aren’t bad enough, but I thought this was a good idea.

The article says to run up a hill just faster than 10k pace for about 50 seconds. Then jog back down, only taking about 5 seconds longer. Repeat 12 times. Um, yeah, maybe on a less steep hill.

If you recall, my goal 10k pace is 10:26. However, that’s probably not my current 10k pace. I have no idea really what that is. So I just aimed for 10:30 pace.

I went to that awful hill I hate. This hill has what I can only describe as runaway bike decks all along the side of it. Like those runaway truck ramps on the side of the interstate on long downhill sections? Except these are wooden and look like small decks and it would probably really suck for you if your breaks went out and you had to use one of them. Anyway, that will probably give you some indication of how steep the hill is. It needs runaway bike decks.

I placed my water bottle at the first one towards the bottom of the hill, so I would know where I was aiming on my way down. I had done about a half mile warmup and forgot to check my watch to time my 50 seconds before I took off on my first interval. So I just basically had to guess when 50 seconds was up. I stopped at the next to last deck thing (which also has a pole with a big orange ring painted around it to make it easy to aim for). My watch said 56 seconds (probably a little less, since I didn’t have my button pressing down to a science yet), 10:28 pace. Okay, not bad.

I jogged back down the hill in 1:04, a little slower than I was supposed to. I also maybe took a quick standing-around-panting break and drank some water at the bottom, even though that defeats the purpose of the tempo intervals, but it wasn’t a long break.

Back up the hill! This one was slower. Much slower. It took 1:02 this time, which is about an 11:23 pace. That won’t do. Back down the hill in 1:05, another quick break.

I told myself for the third one that it was the last one I HAD to do (though I thought I probably had enough for two more in me). 55 seconds, 10:42 pace. A little slower than I wanted, but not bad. I wanted to do one more to prove that I could do a 10:30 pace, even being as exhausted as I was. So back down and a short break.

The fourth interval was done in 54 seconds, 10:31 pace. Close enough! Down the hill, where I grabbed my water bottle for a sip.

Then I decided, what the heck. Bonus interval time! I wanted to go all the way to the top for an extra dose of mental fortitude. I took off from the bottom, but I was so worn out by the middle, I felt like I was just barely running. I wanted to stop so many times. So many times. I finally made it to the top, after what felt like an eternity, but was actually only 1:26. I kinda wished I was wearing my HR monitor because I thought I was going to die at the top; I had to have hit max HR. I managed to average a 10:46 pace over the entire length. Not too shabby!

Then I had a nice half mile cooldown to bring my mileage to an even two miles. So I was supposed to do three intervals, and ended up doing five, with the last one being longer. Feel the burn!

post-running selfie

So happy to be done with hill intervals!