My plan for this year was to get back into running. the woofer likes it, I like being outside and I find it easy-ish to want to do.
Couch to 5 km seemed pretty doable although I've had people say it steps up a bit enthusiastically from week to week. I pretty much ignored the 3 times per week schedule and just ran when I could.
I started in January but the house moving and flying to Melbourne was very distracting so I started again from Week 1 day 1 on the 19th. I got in a solid four runs before life intervened and I took a week off to sell my house and start back at uni. These runs were very easy, short bursts with lots of interspersed walking.

February took me from
I lost a week when my grandmother died, between that and one of those periods where I'm almost willing to believe in a vengeful god, a week of rest was essential.
I also saw a physiotherapist on the 27th who got me to walk and run a lot and gave me corrections to my posture and technique. I'm getting a lot of hip pain on the left which is a very old injury and it's floating just below 'injured,' in the 'stressed' zone. I'm hoping changing my walking and running technique along with strengthening exercises means the pain will eventually cease although at this point I'd take 'decrease a bit' and be grateful.

March was

Things that worked for me:
Couch to 5 km seemed pretty doable although I've had people say it steps up a bit enthusiastically from week to week. I pretty much ignored the 3 times per week schedule and just ran when I could.
I started in January but the house moving and flying to Melbourne was very distracting so I started again from Week 1 day 1 on the 19th. I got in a solid four runs before life intervened and I took a week off to sell my house and start back at uni. These runs were very easy, short bursts with lots of interspersed walking.

February took me from
- Week 2 Day 2 (run 1.5 mins, walk 2 mins, repeat for 20 mins) to
- Week 6 Day 2 (run 10 mins, walk 3 mins, run 10 mins)
I lost a week when my grandmother died, between that and one of those periods where I'm almost willing to believe in a vengeful god, a week of rest was essential.
I also saw a physiotherapist on the 27th who got me to walk and run a lot and gave me corrections to my posture and technique. I'm getting a lot of hip pain on the left which is a very old injury and it's floating just below 'injured,' in the 'stressed' zone. I'm hoping changing my walking and running technique along with strengthening exercises means the pain will eventually cease although at this point I'd take 'decrease a bit' and be grateful.

March was
- Week 6 Day 3 (run 25 mins) to
- Week 8 Day 3 (run 30 mins)

Things that worked for me:
- Being outside with the woofer - he thought every trip was AWESOME
- 'urgent' music in the background
- the c25k application - I didn't have to plan, just follow instructions
- technique over speed
chaosmanor pointing out how to weave the headphone cord through my clothes for less flapping- arm holster thingo for device - so much nicer than using a pocket plus I glow in the dark!
- my local park; it has a wide variety of people and woofers in it who smile and make eye contact (or sniff Kenobi) and I feel comfortable and safe running there
- vast amounts of support from my father (I texted him my run results a lot and got wonderful encouragement back)
- vast amounts of support from the collective who listened to me debrief and stretch each evening
- life events, that life, it just keeps on happening
- running too fast early in the run and wearing myself out
- woofer limped badly after one of the early March runs - he hasn't since but I worry
- periods; it's very hard to run when I'm bleeding (lethargy, pain, nausea, cramps etc.) so realistically I'm going to lose a week every month
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I like reading this sort of thing.
:)
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I've found the best possible solution for me is painkillers + anti-inflamatories + hot bath + good chocolate. Usually that means nurofen, a heatpack and lindt milk balls.
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My best running advice is to go much more slowly than you think you should at first (and don't run so often that you don't give your body time to recover in between). I always find it pleasantly surprising how easy it feels when I go really slowly!
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For the next leg (5km - 10km) the reading I've been doing says do one long run a week, one set of speed intervals and one sort of medium-ish set alternating medium speed with recovery speed legs... any advice?
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Enjoy!
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