Coming back

July 28, 2017 § Leave a comment

After I ran a half marathon in April of 216, I kind of did give up on running.

I did not give up on fitness, though. And on June 29, 2017, I passed my personal trainer certification exam.

What I hope to accomplish with this is to work with people who are hesitant to join a gym or start a workout program because they don’t feel a connection with most personal trainers.

I want to work with people who are ready to increase their activity levels but don’t know how or where to begin. I want to work with people who want to workout, but they think they should lose weight first. I want to show people that they can start where they are, just the way they are.

If this sounds like you, let’s talk. I am working to get  Body Positive Fitness Alliance certification, which I hope to complete in the next few days. I want you to have a fun, positive experience with your fitness, no matter what your goal may be.

I am just at the very beginning of all of this, and I am considering any and all options. Skype, webinars – who knows? Let’s talk about it. What kind of services would you like?

 

Four-mile training run

January 10, 2016 § Leave a comment

The week went pretty well. Earlier in half training, I’d had a lot of trouble with my left foot going numb while I was running. So I got some new grandpa shoes and started wearing compression support under my socks and I haven’t had any problems at all. The girl at the running store modified the laces on my new shoes, too, and it has made a lot of difference. Good thing I got over feeling like I needed to look cute while I’m running — yes, I got over that a long time ago.

I made but one resolution for the new year, and I actually made it late last year: Don’t pay to lose weight. I knew that wouldn’t include the nutritional supplements and amino acids that I love and use every day. I was thinking more along the lines of Weight Watchers and Dietbet. And then I joined a month-long Dietbet. So, good job Meghan!

I spent a lot of time trying to figure out how much I should eat. I use MyFitnessPal and it defaults to 1200 calories. But that’s not enough for me. And when I started adding mileage to my running, I put on a lot of weight in a short amount of time. I had my daily calories set at 1500, plus I ate back whatever my heart-rate monitor said I burned off running. And a person who weighs as much as I do can burn some calories running three miles. So I started to wonder if maybe that wasn’t such a terrific idea.

If you ever want to know what to do, ask the Internet. And the Internet will be firmly divided on ANY issue you’re dealing with. So I spent the past week trying out the TDEE -20% method.

TDEE is your daily total energy expenditure, a number determined by your age, height, weight, and activity level. When figuring my TDEE, I chose one level lower than my actual activity level. I sit at a desk all day and run during my lunch hour every day and have a long run on Saturdays. So I’m getting a good workout every day, but I also just sit around and breathe most of the time.

I calculated my TDEE on a website called IIFYM.com. My TDEE ended up being 2,053 calories and I subtracted 20 percent for an aggressive weight loss. That gave me 1,643 calories. I ended up eating about 1,700 calories a day all week and that seemed like enough.

But then Friday I woke up feeling off. Just kind of loopy and my stomach felt touchy. I felt like I was hungry, but I also felt like eating much would make me sick. Luckily, I get off at noon on Fridays, so I stopped by the store and picked up a few things for dinner and went home to rest. I had planned to do my run that afternoon, but I just never felt well enough to do it. And I didn’t want to feel worse on Saturday and have to miss the group run. So I ended up taking the day off on Friday.

Justin and I went to bed early so I could rest and just watch TV. He was eating a snack, so I got up and got one, too. A big old fattening snack. And I immediately felt better. Like a million percent better. My head cleared, my stomach unclenched and I felt so good I drifted off to sleep by 9 o’clock. I wasn’t sick! I was hungry! Wow!

I got up early on Saturday and had two pieces of toast with butter and honey before I left for the run. It was raining, but it was supposed to snow, too. I hesitated at the door — the weather was just miserable and the house was so cozy.

We had four miles on the schedule. By the time Coach finished his discussion on form, the room (packed with 300 people) was hot and I was sweating in my carefully chosen layers. It was raining when we took off, but before long it was snowing big, fat snowflakes.

I was running intervals (half-mile run, then a brief walk to check my heart rate) with Bridget and Alisha. Then another woman caught up to us and said she had been way, way behind us but didn’t want to be alone. Her name is Ruby and she’s never run before. She stayed with us the rest of the time and I know it was kind of difficult for her.

I was keeping an eye on our mileage with my watch and trying to make sure Ruby was feeling OK. Every so often I would tell everyone where we were. And at 2.9 miles, I told Ruby if she could just run a little bit further, she will have run a 5K. And she was in. After we hit 3.1, she still felt good and we kept running.

And this is why I love being part of a training group. It’s not just about me. Ruby said she wouldn’t have been able to do it on her own. I know she could have, but I also know the mental block. I could tell she was so proud.

She did end up walking some more while I ran ahead with a super sweet volunteer named Amelia. When we finished, Amelia went inside and got three cups of water while I waited for Ruby to come in. Then we had a big celebration in the snow on the parking lot at the Downtown Activity Center.

It was one of those days where the more I ran, the more I felt like I could keep running. I had started out telling Alisha that I would never be one of these people who ran negative splits. And then I ran negative splits!

Tomorrow night I’m going to my first speed session. Coach said you could skip the regular workout on the schedule on days you came to speed workouts. I got really excited. And then really scared about what kind of torture he’s going to put me through.

Half-marathon official

December 5, 2015 § Leave a comment

Well. I was gone for a while. But I was running a lot and wishing for the time to sit down and write. I finished the second round of the 5k group training, which was fun and rewarding and amazing, just like I knew it would be. I met new people, reconnected with people I already knew and got to push myself a little bit, too.

When the limited-space half-marathon training group opened on Labor Day, I signed right on up.

And then I was like, “Why’d I do that?”

Then I gained 8 pounds, kept running, did a trail run (never again), took it easy for a while and then got frustrated with myself. I went looking for motivation and inspiration — Thank GOD for the Internet — and found it by the boat load.

I spent last week getting my eating reined in and starting my half marathon training. It officially started on Wednesday and the first couple of weeks is easy, so I’m making it not easy for me. The first three days were half-mile runs. So I ran those half miles until I thought I would die. And then I didn’t die and I was like, “Huh. I didn’t die. How about that.”

Because there’s always a race series 5k the first weekend of December, which is after half training starts, our first official group run is a week from today.

I had one mile on today’s training schedule. Done. Plus 2.1.megrun

I went back to counting calories with MyFitnessPal on Monday. I ran Monday, Wednesday, and Thursday.

My starting weight on Monday was 210. I weighed in this morning at 208.5. Then I ran a 5k and ate a cheeseburger for lunch. Winning.

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