Category Archives: running

2000 KMs milestone crossed. 2nd Attempt at Full Marathon

 
That’s 1000 Kms in a year. Crossed 1000 Kms in April 2015
Attempting my first full marathon for the 2nd time. Sep 18th is the D Day. Last year I started training for a full marathon, but midway had to give up.[2015 Kaveri Trail Marathon]
 
Planning to run in the Kaveri Trail Marathon this year also. I use the Nike Running App ( Free on both iOS and Android ). There is a coach option, where you key in the race date and it will work out a training program. I am following it sincerely. 5 runs a week, the last one  a long run that keeps increasing till the race day. 
Excited about what lies ahead – the training days as it will get harder and harder, and finally the day of the Marathon.. Set a goal which is humanely impossible ( to me certainly it is ) –  break it down, work hard, and achieve it. 
Few days back when I was campaigning for more friends to join me in a a half or full marathon – got into a full fledged debate with a few friends in Whatzapp.
There were lot of objections. 
Not every one is born to run a marathon.
10 mins of light exercise is good for us.
Marathon is actually bad for the health.
It is all about winning the mind – a very cunning lazy creature. 
When the Mercury drops below 20 degrees, it will not let you get out of the blanket. Will trick you into continue sleeping in the warm nest.
When there is no power, it will make you heat water in gas stove to take bath. Will not let you take a cold shower. 
Will tempt you into eating junk food which is programmed to give a quick satisfaction. And turn back at a quality home cooked fare. 
Will tempt you into gulping a high calorie sugary drink that satiates the sugar craving. And will not let you sip a nourishing fruit juice or a tender coconut.
Will tempt you into watching TV for hours. And will not let you pick a deep thought provoking book. 
This is the mind we are fighting when we run. When we train. Yes we were born with this mind like everyone – and we runners try to conquer this lazy specimen. 
And unlike meditation – we cannot totally shut down the mind. We need the mind’s help – because once we be-friend this mind – it can trick the poor weak body of ours into doing inhumane things.
Like finishing a 42km run – a feat on the outset that looks impossible, but many are able to do it. 
Hi Mind. I will defeat you. Win you over. Make you my friend. And together we will complete the marathon. 

Three Running Myths Busted

I love running.

I was never an athletic person – whenever there was a race, I was the last, play any competitive physical sport with me and I assure you I would have made you triumphant. As a kid I never cared much about sports and hated PT classes. However I discovered running the last couple of years and it was just what the Doctor ordered. I set my own pace, listen to a podcast and I am content and happy.

I touched 10km a few months back and I celebrated. Then I pushed to 12km and a nagging pain started – “shin splints”. Read all about it and in the process came to know the names of other minor pains I was having. So I tweeted

venkat2 venkat kandaswamy 

dear runner friends – did any of you have shin splints.. I am touching 12 km and having this pain.. any help/pointers appreciated


got a few replies

knowsnotmuch knowsnotmuch 

@ 
@venkat2 yeah it does creep slowly. Back off a bit, increase gradually when you get back and examine how you land on your feet when you run

knowsnotmuch knowsnotmuch 

@ 
@venkat2 got it when i touched 6-7km because I pushed too quickly. It put me out of action and it took me ages to recover. Ease up a little.

khushnood khushnood 

@ 
@venkat2 have you read ‘born to run’ by Chris Mcdougall ? It could help.

A book suggestion – wow! – immediately I grabbed Born to Run and started crunching it.

The author who writes in a sports journal is also a runner and is always in pain because of his runs. He meets various podiatrists, physiotherapists and the answer is always the same – slow down on running, human body is not supposed to take so much of shock while running. 
Then on a trip to Mexico he reads an article about a runner tribe – Tarahumara – who run for days in one of their parties (tesguinado) and the winners usually are the veterans at the age of 60s, they just wear a handmade sandal and run on hostile terrain. They contradict everything we have come to know of running.

This leads him to Kabayo Blanco, an american who has is now living with the Tarahumarians and follow their simple life style. They arrange for a run where the best of ultra runners in America ( an ultra is > than a marathon – 160 KMs and even more, while a marathon is only 42Kms ) – come to the Copper Canyons and they run with the Tarahumara.

While the story progresses Chris Mcdougall keeps uncovering interesting facts about running.

Myth 1 : You need sophisticated shoes.


I love conspiracies and this one is about a $20 Billion industry started by Nike. Prior to 1970s – there were no shin splints, plantar fascilitis, over pronation, plica syndrome or the running ailments that are so common today. Then Nike was born and it made a good shoe ( Nike Pegasus ) – which had a thin sole and was great for running. Then the Capitalist greed kicked in and Nike started retiring their successful models every 10 months.

Nike gave more and more support and cushion to the feet – and the feet forgot how to run how the way the human body was supposed to run. All the nerves in our human body that starts in the brain – ends in the feet ( Some 70,000 or so ). Whenever the feet touches the ground it is taking a snapshot of the temperature, the hardness of the surface etc. – and this feedback is used to plan the next step.

a) When the feet is put in a nice comfortable soft shoe – the brain thinks that it has to put more force on the next step for stability as it feels its on soft ground and has to plant the leg firmly.

b) Also the way the shoe is designed ( thicker heel ) – the body lands on the heel – and the shock wave gets multiplied. Our foot is designed to land on the toes to dissipate the shock.

so a) makes your foot to land harder and b) makes you land the whole body on the wrong place – a) x b) has a multiplicative effect on the “wrong” way of running – and it leads to pain.

This brings us to the “barefoot movement” – people are kicking their shoes off and running barefoot – as the best shoe is “nothing”.

This was an ahaa moment for me – it made complete sense. My running shoe ( which I got free for a Reebok sandals that I got 5 years back ) has a thin sole but still has a nice cushion at the heel. I started noticing that I was landing on my heel. I contemplated running bare foot – but before that I want to get the cheapest Bata canvas shoe and give it a shot. The road has got lots of dirt and sharp objects – do not want to take chances.

This book just saved me a few thousands of rupees. One of the things I was going to do was get a more fancy, cushiony Nike or Reebok shoe – thinking it will ease my pain. Myth busted.

Myth 2 : Woman cannot run.


This one is for the Wife who I am encouraging her to run with me. There are stories of 2 lady ultra marathoners – one a school teacher who has won so many ultra marathons and one a young upcoming ultra marathoner – both have no special training – but they beat the best American runners and even beat the Tarahumara tribe’s best runners. As the distance increases – women seem to beat men – as their endurance levels are much higher.

Men are wimps when it comes to pain. I keep crying all the time that my feet hurt, my shin hurts.

However a woman can experience an incredible amount of pain during child birth and can laugh about it later.

Also the human body was designed to run – as the title of this book “Born to run”. We are not supposed to walk or pump irons or pull fancy weights in gym – but run. This is the best way to exercise and can ward off diabetes, hypertension, back pain and whole lot of ailments brought to us thanks to the progressive and lazy lifestyle. The whole body reacts beautifully to running – I am no longer a coffee addict – I drink coffee when I am bored – thats all.

So ladies rethink again if you have any doubts on running – the “Men” have spread lot of mis information and taken away your right to run. Second Myth – Woman cannot run – is also busted.

Myth 3 : You need to be a carnivore if you have to run.


Another eye-opener. The best ultra marathoner ever – Scott Jurek – who has won 7 titles in his career and has won in all hostile environments – turned a vegetarian. The tarahumara are vegetarians. There are these monks in Japan who run 70 miles every day for 7 years.. ( as they reach Nirvana daily by running ) – eat just Tofu and veggies.

Animal protein is bad for the human body. It brings cancer and also gets stored as fat. Like all the studies – we were not supposed to process animal flesh. It is bad for running. There are issues with water retention and fat build up. Also when you are a vegan – your body is more supple, leaner and can run better, faster and longer – I am sold.

Other than the humanitarian and ecological aspects of turning Vegan – the running angle appeals to me a lot. Already I am cutting down on my carnivorishness – and I am now following the Veggie on auspicious days strictly ( Monday,Thursday,Friday,Saturday) – and planning to expand it to all 7 days so I can joke like my good friend Sathya [ he is a Vegetarian and will joke – oh I do not eat meat today – because its  ____day ]

Myth 3 busted – you need to be a carnivore to run.

So thats all folks – all the pre conceived notions I have about running are all over turned. Thank you Christopher McDougall, Barefoot Ted, Scott Jurek, Kabayo Blanco ( search these names on You Tube and you can see videos, TED Talks, interviews ) and Harruki Murrakami. You guys have changed me for the better.

What I talk about when I talk about Running

This is the book written by Haruki Murakami (thanks to @kgthegreat for pointing my spelling flaw) Nila mentioned to me about this book on Thursday evening, Friday morning I had to plan for a surprise one day trip to Chennai, Saturday found an audio version of this book and Sunday listened to this book on the afternoon return journey. At times it is really amazing how it looks like as if someone sat and planned the whole situation to the very last detail.

I have read only one book of his before – kafka on the shore. He is an amazing fiction writer and paints such crazy images and situations. ( http://kvrlogs.blogspot.com/2008/07/kafka-on-shore.html ). I was very curious to know what he had to talk about when he talks about running!

Pic from one of his interviews ( http://www.runnersworld.com/article/0,7120,s6-243-410–8908-0,00.html)

The book starts with him training in Kauai, Hawaii 6 days a week, 10kms a day with 1 rest day. He is putting in these miles in preparation for the New York Marathon. The story weaves in and out of of how he started running ( at the age of 33 around the same age I started running and this is where our similarity ends – I am yet to touch even 10kms, yet to write my first novel and I can’t speak Japanese – neither can he speak Tamil ).

I will list down some interesting facts I still remember.

* He does not walk when he runs in the marathon. He will take a break to stretch his legs – but he never walks as a policy. I am still in the run-walk-run routine, will try to emulate this.

* He has run the ultra marathon – 100 Kms in a day. This very thought is crazy. While a marathon with 42 kms is itself a crazy number – I just could not digest this number. He gives a vivid account on what went through his mind and body on that day when he ran this. How his body resisted and finally something inside him gave away and he could run with no pain. He reaches a meditative state. It is so beautiful to just listen to this part – imagine if you could experience it.

* He talks about how running helps his writing. Makes absolute sense – It is all about Focus, Endurance and Rhythm. This passage is brilliant how he relates his writing to running.

* Our man ran the real “Marathon” – between Athens and the small town of Marathon.

* He has run 1 marathon every year for the past 24 years.

* Best quote from the book “Pain is inevitable but suffering is optional”.

This book is like an adrenaline shot to beginner runners like me.