Healthy Living

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Becoming a runner: 7 ways to get (and stay) motivated

For years, I've been an active woman who didn't dare call herself an athlete. I've chosen challenging workouts but have not ever pushed myself completely out of the comfortable little box. I've done burlesque, belly dance, and some tough strength and walking training, but I've opted out of many opportunities to do the the activity that has scared me the most -- running.

For some reason, I've decided to get over that fear and prove to myself that my body and my brain are tough enough to withstand a year of training. I'm trying my best not to worry about the possibility of injury, the impending awful winter weather, or the fact I am on my own for most of this process. I'm taking it one workout, one step at a time. And I'd love it if you'd join me as I do my best to finally become the runner I've been so afraid of becoming.

I hope you will chime in with your own experiences, advice, and stories. I promise to listen and to cheer you on. Hopefully, sharing the tough stuff -- like how tight my IT band is right now -- as well as the victories -- like how proud I am that I added two minutes to my time on the track today -- will make this whole process more fun.

First off, I want to talk about the most basic part of choosing to be active. For me, that is being motivated, not just to do something big, like tackle a big event or new way of exercising. It also means finding and holding on to the motivation to make it through each 20-minute session (or 10, or 60, or whatever it is for you). Here's some of the best advice I've culled from other runners on really getting out there/.

1. Call yourself names. I met a woman at a party who told me she hasn't worked out in years but on a whim, she signed up for a triathlon in 2010. She doesn't even own a bike or wetsuit, but still, she's set on doing it. I confided that I am am trying to become a runner. Before I could even finish my sentence, she stopped me.

"Trying?", she asked firmly. I nodded my head and she raised her eyebrows at me and continued. "If you've already been out there once, you are a runner. Claim it. Be it. Stop trying."

So there we were, just days into our training, a runner and a triathlete comparing notes on breathing exercises and water bottles. The next morning, I thought of that as I pulled myself away from my laptop to get outside to exercise. How could I be a runner if I wasn't actively running? That question and owning the title was enough to set me in motion that day.

2. Buy pretty things. Whether you believe in buying sustainable workout wear or you are happy with a cheapy pair of Spandex pants from Target, putting on new exercise gear can be enough to get you out the door. I bought a new jacket (similar to this one) that is not only adorable on, it serves a few important purposes. I can't avoid outdoor workouts now that I have the perfect-weight jacket for windy, brisk autumn runs. It has a tidy little place for my iPod, phone, and keys, so I don't have to hold on to a bunch of things while I am trying to focus on my breathing and pace. I also decided I will only wear it to walk or run, so it is a (very small but effective) reward for just getting dressed to work out. Clearly, having good shoes that fit well are critical -- and who isn't motivated by new shoes?

3. Build slowly.
I love this post by Janice at Mom On The Run, who reminds us that reintroducing (or introducing, in my case) our bodies to running takes time. But she also says it takes consistency. While we can't expect to go from zero to half-marathon in a week, keeping a slightly slower but steady pace, running at the same time every day, and adding a little time and distance to your training every week will keep you going at a manageable rate. Today, I turned that into a visualization to help me go an extra lap around the park, thinking about building a tower out of those colorful, wooden kiddie blocks, one by one.

4. Make a commitment -- financial and otherwise.
I was spending more time worrying about how to become a runner than actually trying to become a runner after a friend asked me to join a team of mom bloggers in a relay next summer. Then that same friend was inspired to sign up for a half-marathon to kick her training into gear. She and the other women she's running in that event with are blogging their progress here. That helped me jump into my own training a month earlier than I anticipated (are you following all this?). My plan is to sign up for several events along the way -- I have my eye on a stair-climbing challenge in one of my city's skyscrapers -- so I can prepare myself for and attain smaller goals on the way to the big one. Plus, paying to participate, whether it is twenty bucks or a hundred, will keep the event on my calendar and me out on the track training.

5. Center on yourself. This is not easy to do.  But when Bob Harper said that the only REAL reason to exercise is to be good to your body and honor your own well-being, it made me realize how often I set those things aside. I've only been on this journey for a few weeks now, but I see the difference in how I feel when I remind myself of how running is fueling my physical and spiritual selves. I've already noticed that my stress level has dropped because I am pounding out many of my frustrations on the pavement rather than keeping them locked in my head. In the last laps of my workout, it has also helped me to really zone in on how much stronger my legs and lungs feel than the first day I huffed and puffed around the park. Just telling myself, "Damn, girl, your ass is going to look amazing in those jeans after this run" works. It's cheesy and superficial, but it does work.

Finally, as one of my best friends who is a long-time runner and has completed marathons all over the world told me, "No one and nothing messes with the time I take to run. Some days, that is 15 minutes and some days, that is 2 hours. But that is my time and I protect it fiercely." I have to tell you, saying that over and over and claiming that block of time for myself has been as empowering as checking out my slamming tush in the mirror.

6. Center on others.
A woman who I am friends with on Facebook has a high-pressure profession as an attorney and two small children and makes time for running to stay in shape and keep a cap on stress. After a long day at work, she gets motivated by dedicating her workouts to people in need, friends who inspire her, or whatever can help propel her forward. It seems to me that this makes her workout like a prayer and that she is using her mental and physical energy to put a great intention out into the universe as well as keep herself going. I've seen other runners dedicate their training sessions or events to women undergoing breast cancer treatment, a struggling single mom, their own mothers, and politicians. I love the idea that focusing on those people can do such good things for us as well as them. And when I am having trouble making the time and expending the energy for myself, I am sure there are four or a thousand women out there who I can think of to give my all for during just one workout.

7. Find the small stretch of joy. I gathered a lot of advice from runners before I ever laced up my shoes. One of my favorite bits of wisdom came from a former colleague who has made her way all over the city during training runs. She told me, "You don't have to love your whole route. Just find one little stretch that you can't wait to get to each time." For now, I am running around and around a park near my house. It is fun to see kids on the playground and serene to watch the leaves fall across the sidewalk, but it isn't necessarily a gorgeous view. There is, however, a small stretch that I love. It's a path that goes slightly downhill and where I can pick up my pace just a bit on each lap. It's lined by big oak trees and a minute of quiet before I round the bend to a busy street where cars are honking and commuters are walking home. I push myself to get to this part of my route. It's one small stretch that keeps me going, so it counts for a lot.

Share your own running wisdom: What motivates you?


[photo credit: Getty Images]
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From the Community…

Comments 1-10 of 139
  • Liz's Avatar
    Posted by Liz Thu Nov 12, 2009 12:58pm PST

    So glad I found your blog today. I'm two weeks into my new running schedule. I was an athlete in high school and worked out religiously in college, but my fitness took a back seat to grad school. Now that I have more time I've started to get back into the groove of things. My brother has done numerous triathlons and he gave me the following advice about a running schedule: 1) Spend two weeks running 1.5 miles at any pace. Run 3 times each week, take two days off, and for the other two days do some other form of cardio; 2) for the two following weeks, increase the distance to 3 miles with the same weekly schedule; 3) after those two weeks reduce back down to 1.5 miles with the same weekly schedule; 4) return to the 3 mile runs and become comfortable with those for 2-3 weeks before increasing the mileage to 4-5 mile runs. This makes a lot of sense to me. As someone who has had a hard time sticking to a schedule, I realized it was because I was pushing myself too hard by starting with 2-3 mile runs and increasing to 6 miles within a month. Good luck!!

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  • Chicagirl's Avatar
    Posted by Chicagirl Thu Nov 12, 2009 12:59pm PST

    This was great. I am going to post on my fridge.

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  • RachelR's Avatar
    Posted by RachelR Thu Nov 12, 2009 1:14pm PST

    I run to my favorite music and that is MY hour! I love it and look forward to it every week.

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  • Erin's Avatar
    Posted by Erin Thu Nov 12, 2009 2:10pm PST

    Thank you so much for this post! I've been a pretty slow, short distance runner for about a year, and I still need a lot to get me inspired to do it some days ( ...like today). A few things have helped me renew my sometimes lagging motivation:

    1) I'll upload a podcast I've really been looking forward to on my iPod: it's better for distracting me than music most of the time.

    2) I keep a free running log on the Runner's World website: it's awesome to see my mileage progress and it's a good motivator when I look at my workout calendar & think, "Sheesh--I haven't run since last Tuesday! Time to get out there!!" (Plus you can put in all of your other workouts, too.)

    3) Lastly, I do the commitment thing, too: I signed up for a Halloween 5K, and am looking forward to signing up for a Turkey Trot. I was excited about the registration freebies and seeing how I well I'd compete on race day. It was great fun & exactly what I needed to motivate me in the few weeks before the race!

    Good luck & keep going, Runners!

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  • PATTY's Avatar
    Posted by PATTY Thu Nov 12, 2009 2:54pm PST

    i started walking 3 weeks ago. im trying to get it into the jog mode, but am working slowly at it 20 min a day, 4 days a week. i am 100 lbs over weight and am starting to get into it. i use to run 5 mi a day about 30 years ago, so im basically starting over. dont go too fast, let me catch up, ok?

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  • Cheyenne's Avatar
    Posted by Cheyenne Thu Nov 12, 2009 3:30pm PST

    Once you lace up those shoes and hit the pavement, you're a runner :-D! Welcome to the club

    Making a commitment to a race is what used to me my biggest motivation to keep training.

    However, being in my last few semesters of college coupled with an injury from pushing too hard, wedding planning and work, I've fallen off of that wagon.

    I just started to go out again for runs and I realized something:

    I need it. Not because it builds muscle. Not because I can eat a cupcake here and there. Not because I know that if I work really hard, maybe I'll be able to hit a PR.

    No.

    I do it because all of the stress in life leaves me feeling like a shell. Running satisfies my need to feel my blood pump and my muscles work. It reminds me how to live instead of just being alive trudging through everything.

    I hope that you find something that keeps you going! Good luck!!

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  • Jackie D's Avatar
    Posted by Jackie D Thu Nov 12, 2009 4:26pm PST

    So much about running is totally mental. It's terrifying to run because your brain thinks you can't do it for an extended period of time. Your brain is saying "Oh crap... this is going to hurt... don't do it!" But once you get out there and prove to your brain that you CAN do it, that's half the battle. I remember the first mile I ran it was a huge victory. I couldn't even imagine running more than a mile and didn't really believe I could even run THAT amount until I got out and forced myself to do it. Once you get over that hurdle, it's just a matter of pushing yourself a little further each week until your brain realizes... "Wow, I can run 5, 6, 7, 10, 20 miles and live to tell the tale!" Keep plugging away and your brain will catch up to what your body if physically capable of doing -- which is ALOT. Your body can withstand the pain, it's your brain that's being protective. Keep on truckin'! I'm out there with you!

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  • Margaret's Avatar
    Posted by Margaret Thu Nov 12, 2009 5:43pm PST

    I want to run i walk alot.Im allways so tired ive never ran.Do you have

    to brethe a certain way? I need energy and motivation i want to loose

    weight to.

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  • Dana's Avatar
    Posted by Dana Thu Nov 12, 2009 5:49pm PST

    I am 58 & started running when I was 52. I've was inspired by our two sons who both ran track & cross country in high school. My husband has been a runner for over 30 years. I've only run one 5K, but I still like to lace up my shoes & get out there. I feel so much better about myself after I take the time to run.

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  • Jennifer's Avatar
    Posted by Jennifer Thu Nov 12, 2009 6:05pm PST

    You are supposed to breathe in through your nose and out through your mouth but if you push yourself enough to go harder every week, sometimes it will end up in a pant! I heard you are supposed to run at a pace slow enough to be able to talk to the person next to you. I have yet to be able to get out more than 5 quick words without needing a breath. If you're not marathon training, go slow. You'll be surprised how much farther you can go at a slow pace, than the distance you can run at a pace that is too fast for you.

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