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Friday, September 27, 2024
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Barefoot Running

 Hey everyone – this is officially my first foray into the world of blogging (ooooh, very exciting)!   And what more exciting a topic to blog about than the world of running and shoes.   Okay, well maybe not the most exciting thing to everyone but most of us do spend a large part of each day in some sort of footwear (and most of us on this website do enjoy running).   In the next couple of weeks I will write about some common footwear mistakes, how to pick the correct shoes, how to know when it’s time for a new pair and what’s new in the world of running shoes.  I would definitely welcome any questions and will do my best to get answers up quickly!

So, in the spirit of a blog about shoes, my first blog is going to be about barefoot running!   The current issue of iRun magazine (out today)  is about picking the proper footwear for you so I thought I might add a little aside about a very popular topic in running these days – barefoot running.  I wrote this for another forum a few weeks ago and have posted it here:

I don’t think many experts will disagree with the potential benefits of moving towards a more efficient running style. However, we do have to be cautious with making these changes too quickly without the proper foundation.

We base many of the barefoot, ‘simplistic’ (although it is far from simple!) styles of running from tribes in South America and Africa that do run many barefoot miles each day with a significantly lower rate of injury, and typically at a much greater speed. This is certainly a model that we would all aspire to be like for our running. However,  most of us live very differently from those types of runners. For many of us, we sit all day at work which can cause certain muscles to shorten and tighten. As well, we may have certain strength imbalances and/or other genetic predispositions (fallen arches or high, rigid arches, leg length discrepancies, etc.) that may put us at greater risk of injury. Often the problem with immediately ditching our regular shoes and going out for a run barefoot or with a minimalist shoe is that we haven’t yet addressed some of these underlying problems.

That being said, there are many potential gains to be made from transitioning to a better running technique and getting away from overly cushioned running shoes. (It is the over cushioning that is often much more of a problem than the motion-control features of a shoe.) By improving our running efficiency, we set ourselves up to run both faster and likely with less injury. We associate swimming with technique and will spend a good portion of each workout doing drills, and yet we don’t attribute the same gains with running technique and running drills. Many runners who are able to run with minimalist shoes or barefoot either have been blessed with good genetics or more likely, have run track as a kid (or as an adult) and have done drills to ingrain proper technique.

Here are a few suggestions that I would make for those looking into improving their running technique:

(1) Find out where your weak spots are and fix them. It’s not just muscles in the foot and lower leg that cause injuries, but more likely it is the larger muscle groups in the thigh and hip. For example, if a runner is weak through the hip, especially on one side only, it can cause all kind of issues down below. Unfortunately, in most cases no amount of barefoot running will fix this. Going through a proper strength assessment with a professional and working on your weak spots is a great place to start.

(2) Flexibility, flexibility, flexibility. We do often sit a good part of the day and things get tight. We then expect our bodies to adapt to high mileage, intensity and new techniques which is often a recipe for injury. Improving flexibility through better stretching, yoga, and deep tissue work (i.e. sports massage, ART, etc.) means that our bodies will be so much more accommodating to change. Once strength imbalances are taken care of and flexibility is improved, we already have dramatically increased the odds of being successful with any kind of change in technique.

(3) Find a good running coach or go to see a professional who can help with proper technique.  One of the keys to proper technique is doing it properly. This sounds straight-forward but many people will read theory and incorporate it improperly which can cause even more problems. Adding insult to injury, if strength imbalances and flexibility issues aren’t first taken care of, many runners won’t be able to perform the technique properly anyway. Video analysis can be very beneficial for this so that you can actually see what you are doing and track changes over time.

For those willing to put the proper amount of background work in, a gradual change towards better running technique can be very rewarding for both reducing injuries and for gaining speed. For the lucky some (generally those with the right genes and the appropriate lifestyle) it may require very little background work. For the others, it can take years, if ever, to be able to run barefoot or in minimalist shoes. Regardless of whether we are able to run barefoot or with minimalist shoes or not, by improving flexibility, strengthening, and technique, we’re still much better off in the long run (no pun intended!).

Thanks for reading!

Ryan

One of those days…

Yesterday was one of those days.  Not one of those days when you step on the cat, causing yourself to jump and spill coffee on your shirt just as you tip over a chair that knocks over the plant, and just when you think it’s over you trip down the stairs.  Not one of those.  No, it was one of those days where the sun was shining brightly in February, and the temperature was dancing around the freezing mark and I just couldn’t help but go for a run. Though I did trip down the stairs.

It is too soon for one of those days, of course, because now I have spring fever far too early and will be more inclined to cry when I have to brush off my car.  But for the hour that I was out running, I sure enjoyed it.  The birds were singing, there were people out and about, and everyone was smiling.  While it was still crisp in the wind, I had my jacket unzipped in the sheltered areas, and had my gloves off after 20 minutes.  Of course, when it is like that, I can’t help but run way faster than my easy-pace, which was the scheduled workout.

You know when you see a Labrador Retriever giddily galloping through a park, tongue flapping foolishly to one side, tail wagging?  I must have looked a bit like that, only without the tail,  or the tongue flapping.  And on the way home, when I knew I didn’t have far to go, I just couldn’t help myself:  I found the biggest, baddest puddle on the sidewalk and jumped in it with both feet.

Yup, it was one of those days.

I’m the one on the left

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uZ-5mM5HVYM

The machine is no match for me

I decided to do my long run on Friday night this week so I could stay up late to watch the Olympic opening ceremonies without fretting about having to get up early on Saturday.  For a variety of reasons too boring to discuss, I opted to do it on the treadmill.  I had never done a long run on the treadmill before, so I figured it would also be good mental training in overcoming boredom.

As I was merrily pounding away, minding my own business, my treadmill suddenly slowed and stopped.  The display said “End”.  End?  End of what?  Not my workout, that’s for sure!  It took me a couple of seconds to realize that with the clock display only having 4 digits, it doesn’t count any higher than 99 minutes.  Of course I was annoyed, because once it stops, it won’t show you the display, so I didn’t know how far I had gone.  I would have to restart the clock, then estimate my total distance based on my time and the various speeds I had used.

But then I had a little laugh.  Here I thought I would never make it the 2+ hours I needed to finish my long run, and in the end, in some small way, I had outlasted my treadmill.

Boot Camp Update: I’m not dead yet

I think I am the least coordinated person I know.  When I attempted to learn to play tennis, I got really good at “fetch.”  Someone invited me to sub on an inner tube water polo team – once.  The rule when playing volleyball in the neighbour’s pool is the person to hit the last ball out has to go and get them all; I spend more time on the deck than in the water.

I knew this when I took up running.  Running was great – just one foot, other foot.  Thankfully the opposite-arm thing comes pretty naturally.

Then, as you know, I decided to try a Runner’s Boot Camp.

4 weeks later, I am happy to inform you that I’m not dead yet,  and I am fairly certain that they aren’t actually trying to kill us after all.  I am not nearly as sore as I was after the first workout, and I think I am actually getting better at a few of the exercises.

But the coordination thing is still haunting me.  There is this one thing that we do (well, everyone else does) where you hop on one foot, then kick out front with the other.  It looks straightforward.  Everyone else seems to be able to handle it (granted I am not paying attention to them since I am concentrating so hard).  But for the life of me, I cannot get this right.  It is so beyond me that I don’t even know what it’s called.  For 60 seconds I try, then I stop and watch again, then I hop, I try to kick, I watch some more, and I will that minute to hurry up and finish because I think I must have 3 legs or something.

The great part about that is, I have actually grown to not hate things like burpees, tuck jumps and mountain climbs so much because, trembling quads aside, at least I can do them!

New Race On The Marathon Calendar

Just a quick heads up that Ottawa’s Somersault Events, who already organize the February Winterman Marathon and October Ottawa Fall Colours Marathon, are introducing a new Evening Marathon and Half Marathon on Labour Day weekend to coincide with their Ironman distance (though not Ironman brand) triathlon.

The marathon starts at 6pm and the half marathon starts at 7pm, with both courses closing at 11pm.

The marathon course will be certified and will be a Boston qualifier.

Tom-AE-to, tom-AH-to…let’s not argue semantics

You go out for a run, and it is cold.  I mean really cold.  You warm up after while, and it’s not so bad.  Then you get home, your hat and eyelashes are completely frosted over, your skin is all pink, and you feel invigorated.  You also feel a little puffed up because despite the weather, you went out for a run, and you think, “look at me, I’m hardcore!”

Then someone does look at you, sizes up the frost, watches you stomp the snow off your shoes, and says: “You’re crazy.”

Back to the grind…

From Dictionary.com:

treadmill [tred-mil]–noun

1. an apparatus for producing rotary motion by the weight of people or animals, treading on a succession of moving steps or a belt that forms a kind of continuous path, as around the periphery of a pair of horizontal cylinders.

2. an exercise machine that allows the user to walk or run in place, usually on a continuous moving belt.

3. any monotonous, wearisome routine in which there is little or no satisfactory progress.

I’ve called it a hamster wheel and a dreadmill, and I’ve often defined it as #3 above.  But as much as I deride it, man, am I ever glad to have the option to say, “not today! I am staying in with my cup holders, my fan and my TV.”

(and for more reasons to love the grind, or tips to help you pick one out, check out this article!)

Treadmills_at_gym

Aww, man, do we have to have her? You take her!

When I was a kid, I was that kid.  The kid who got picked last for everything, except for that one time when there was a new girl and neither captain wanted to take a chance on her.  That only happened once since they discovered that she was actually pretty good, and every new kid after that got picked before me because it was apparently worth the risk.

I was the kid who didn’t get to finish the distance run in the fifth grade Canada Fitness test because the class ended before I finished, and the teacher told me to come on back, probably thinking I would be relieved, when in reality, I was crushed. playground

I was the kid who was so bad, I stopped trying.

As soon as I had that one mandatory high school credit, I stopped taking gym.

The irony here is that in grade 9, gym class wasn’t so bad.  It was an all-girls class with a teacher who rewarded consistent effort and improvement as much as talent and skill.  I actually made progress that semester, to the point where I passed the final 12-minute run by a very comfortable margin (okay so our teacher psyched us out, telling us that in order to pass we needed to run 20 laps of the gym, when in reality we only needed 16 – but clearly it worked, because had she said 16, I am sure more than a few of us would have done just that).  But by then I had been counting down to the end of mandatory gym class for so long that there was no way I would ever voluntarily sign up for another.

Just when there was finally some hope for me, I took that bit of fitness I had gained and ran as far away from gym as I could possibly get.  So that’s my dirty little secret.  Kind of sad, I know – but it goes to show you that there’s hope!

All that time I thought I hated physical activity, but it turns out I just hated gym class!

Friday Video – Nose Creek XC

Tomorrow sees the running of the next race in the Calgary RoadRunners’ winter cross-country circuit, the Twelve Mile Coulee XC. Here’s a video from their race at Nose Creek two weeks ago. What’s interesting is that two guys, one up with the leaders and one in the middle of the pack, wore helmetcams for the race and the video presents their footage side-by-side. (Apologies in advance for the Bon Jovi.)

Enjoy!

Nose_Creek_XC_2010_Dual from Nerd Williams on Vimeo.