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May 19, 2024

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Location:

Orem,UT,USA

Member Since:

Apr 03, 2006

Gender:

Male

Goal Type:

Age Division Winner

Running Accomplishments:

HS/COLLEGE:
mile: 4:56, 2 mile: 10:21 (1978)
marathon: 2:52 (St. George 1982)
OLD MAN (20+ years later):
5K: 19:53 (Nestle/Art City Days 5K 2007)
10K: 39:55 (Spectrum 10K 2008)
half marathon: 1:26 (Hobble Creek 2008)
marathon: 3:07 (St. George 2007)

Short-Term Running Goals:

Get back to a BQ marathon time (currently 3:40).

Long-Term Running Goals:

Have fun running, keep fit, and fight middle age spread. Run consistently and injury free. Maintain a healthy balance between running and other life priorities. Encourage my ever-aging running buddies to keep running so we can continue to share runs on the trail instead of rocking chairs.

Personal:

Blessed to be married to Karen for 30 years. We have six children (4 daughters/2 sons) ages 16 to 30, and one wonderful granddaughter.

Favorite Blogs:

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Miles:This week: 0.00 Month: 0.00 Year: 0.00
Altra Instinct 1.5 Lifetime Miles: 83.50
Altra Lone Peak 1.5 Lifetime Miles: 21.80
Saucony Guide 7 Blue 2 Lifetime Miles: 376.95
Saucony Fastwitch 6 Lifetime Miles: 200.05
Saucony Guide 7 Black 1 Lifetime Miles: 271.15
Easy MilesThreshold MilesMarathon Pace MilesTrack speed mileageHill mileageTotal
5.000.005.000.000.0010.00

Thanks, I needed that!

The run today was just what I needed. I've had the blahs off and on for weeks. I've just been enduring, waiting for my PF pain to go away and for winter to finally end. Last night I felt especially glum.

On Jan 18, the MLK holiday, I pushed the pace on a solo half marathon distance training run in old shoes (500+ miles) and ended up with PF pain. I felt good about my performance in the Painter's half marathon that Saturday, but it aggravated the PF. I used my Strassburg sock for weeks along with other treatments I've used successfully in the past, but even with backing off on pace and distance in my training it didn't seem to be getting better. For the last 3 weeks I've only been running every other day and at a very easy pace.

Thursday I finally made my first visit to a podiatrist. His diagnosis was, not too surprisingly, Plantar Fasciitis. He took an x-ray of my foot. He said my foot looks good, but that I have a high cupped arch that strains the fascia when it compresses. He recommended a 3/4 length sports orthotic to support my arch to prevent it from over-compressing and straining my plantar fascia. I like it when things make sense to me.

The orthotic won't be ready for 3 weeks. Meanwhile, I've decided that running on my foot hasn't made the PF worse, and not running hasn't made it better, so I might as well just go for it. This morning I cut the arch support area out of an old light-weight insert I used to run with and put it under the insole of my shoe to give my arch a little additional support. It seemed to work well.

I ran with Larry, Wayne, Kevin, and Kent this morning. I was only planning on 8 miles, but when we reached 4 miles Wayne, Kevin and I decided to go 10 instead. I just felt like I needed to push hard mentally this morning.

I just blogged my runs for the last three weeks this morning, such as they were, and my fastest average pace for a six mile run was 9:50/mi I think. This morning I ran 10 miles and averaged 8:58/mi, running the first mile in 10:06 and the last mile in 7:35. The first four or five miles were at an easy pace, which then gradually picked up to the end. The last few miles I felt pretty tired and just tried to hold on and push through it.

As I said, a good hard run was just what I needed. If I can survive the forecast snowstorm tonight and tomorrow, maybe the warm sunny weather predicted for next week will mark the turn around, and the beginning of a shiny new running season. One can hope, and hope is a powerful thing.

Saucony Guide 3 Miles: 10.00
Comments
From TBean on Mon, Mar 15, 2010 at 15:45:37 from 134.24.147.249

Good luck with the PF. I always have to be carful not to flare mine up. Before many runs I'll take a precautionary Advil.

From Kerry on Mon, Mar 15, 2010 at 16:20:08 from 97.117.96.68

Yes, as Terry suggested, be careful! You might be overdoing it if you aren't able to run consistently and then do a 10 miler on the weekend with a homemade orthotic. (Yikes!!!) How are you feeling today?

From Paul Thomas on Mon, Mar 15, 2010 at 21:30:30 from 216.49.181.254

Terry/Kerry: Thanks for the advice/concern. The PF was no worse after the harder (relatively speaking) run on Saturday with the homemade orthotic.

I'm pretty confident in my homemade orthotics. In fact, the podiatrist liked what I'd done in my left shoe for my short left leg and overpronation so well that he didn't want me to change a thing. I didn't realize my high cupped arch in my right foot was a PF risk. Now that I understand the mechanics of the problem, I'm confident enough with my homegrown solution until my custom orthotic is ready.

I read on the forum about someone who didn't run for many months in order to let his PF heal and then it came back 2 or 3 days after he started running again. I'm getting too old to waste that much time. I've backed off for long enough to see that not running is not helping. I've also noticed that running doesn't seem to be making it worse. I've decided to continue treating it but return to my normal running schedule. If it gets worse I'll back off. I guess the 10K on Saturday will be a good test.

I get too down when I can't run, and with nicer weather on the way, I can't resist taking the risk of maybe erring on the side of running too much.

From Kerry on Tue, Mar 16, 2010 at 12:04:28 from 97.117.96.68

Glad to hear things didn't get worse. That is definitely a good sign. If running isn't making it worse, you're probably OK.

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