No Category selected I lived!

    I lived!

    SHARE

    My legs are like jelly, but I made it.  Tonight was week 8 of Runner’s Boot Camp.

    According to my physiotherapist, I have more symmetry and have developed greater hip stability since starting the class.  She also thinks I’ve lost weight, gained more lean tissue (I am hoping she means muscle!) and gained some strength.  She says I can maintain these gains by adding 15-20 minutes of the exercises we were doing in boot camp twice a week after my shorter runs.

    I hadn’t really noticed any differences myself; that is, until I came face-to-face with “The Scotland Street Hill.”  The hill that, no matter how fresh my legs were, no matter how well I had eaten, slept and warmed up, I just could not make it all the way up without walking.  The kind of hill that is so steep that you can actually walk it faster than running it, because running feels more like bouncing straight up and down on the spot than actually moving forward.  Well, folks, by now you’ve probably guessed:  I conquered the Hill.  I ran up to it, and just like that, I ran up it.  Don’t get me wrong, it was hard. But like He-Man, I had the power!  And it really wasn’t so bad.

    So do I recommend boot camp?  Well, it’s not running.  But I think it was worth it.

    SHARE
    Previous articleIAAF Indoor Championships This Weekend
    Next articleIAAF WIC Update – Canada’s Leaping Ladies Advance
    A runner for just over four years, Karen has already completed a marathon, two half marathons and a variety of 5k and 10k races. She describes her first marathon - the Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront Marathon last September - as "a nightmare." However, she met a very interesting person in the process - a man named Sydney who was running his 152nd marathon! Although the race didn't go as well as planned for Karen or Sydney, he showed her that no matter how experienced a runner you are, you can still have a bad day. "Does that mean we shouldn't bother to prepare, or maybe just shouldn't bother at all? Of course not!" says Karen. "In the end, it is what we make it." We like her optimism!

    1 COMMENT

    Comments are closed.