If you want to increase your endurance, strengthen and tone your mid section and meet other mom runners, think about signing up for this new mid-week conditioning class. This is an hourlong running-based program that combines speed work, endurance drills and core exercises to help you strengthen your body for any sport (including tag … Continue reading »
Tagged with distance …
Run for the hills
I grew up in a neighborhood where going to school everyday meant scaling one or two mountainous hills. I used to dread the daily trek and told everyone for a year that when I grew up I planned to live somewhere flat. Fast foward 30+ years and indeed I live on a flat street, … Continue reading »
Run, Baby, Run: Tricks for running with a child
When I’m running with my daughter, I sometimes feel like a clown pushing a shopping cart with a monkey in it. If you are a mom with a running plan you will be tracking at least some distances with your child. And since children are about as predictable as weather, you’ll find your runs similar. … Continue reading »
Run the distance
Okay, so the word I’m about to use is really funny — one of those that makes you giggle like a school girl. It’s Fartlek, Swedish for speed play. It’s the best principle I’ve found for not only increasing speed but distance. It goes something like this: Every time you run, increase your speed for set periods, then revert to your normal jog, then increase it again. Do this for a set period of time during your run and you’ll begin to notice a huge difference in your performance. For instance, a three mile run might look like this: Continue reading »
Leaping over the mental hurdle of running
n the 15 years that I’ve been a runner the first few steps of a run have always been hard. Everything in my body wants me to stop. I’ve never been one of those people who pops on their running shoes and takes off like a gazelle, making it look as effortless as watching television.
The nagging feeling to stop got worse after Adeline was born. I was disappointed in my inability to run as fast or as far as pre-baby. Inside, I was a mental mess, doubting my ability. To get through it, I had to employ some old tricks and learn some news ones. Continue reading »