Thursday, June 01, 2006

Week 1

Welcome to Abe's Army! We're extremely excited that over 500 "recruits" decided to take the enrollment challenge and train for Abe's Amble. The leaders--your 2nd Lieutenants in Abe's Army--are honored that you want to work with us on one of your important goals. For many of you, you've already learned to love running and how setting goals makes you disciplined and gives you a sense of success. Some of you are using running as a fitness goal to improve your endurance and get in better shape. For some, this is about stretching yourself and finding out if you are capable of things you never thought you could do. Regardless of your reason for starting with the group, you will be able to find a path to success. We encourage you to write your goals in your training log (more will be available for individuals who just joined this week when we meet next Tuesday) and really think about what you are setting out to achieve. Every runner in our club has a personal story to share about how running has contributed to their life and brought them a lot of confidence in the value of practice, training and working toward goals. But more than that, we've found the value of teamwork and how encouraging and supporting each other makes it easier to work hard and celebrate the successes. You'll find at least one person, or if my own experience stands true, many persons, in this club who will inspire you, that you can learn from, and you will call friend.

When you are setting your goals, keep them clearly stated, measurable, and REALISTIC. If you've been a coach potato this past winter, don't expect to run like the wind this summer. Remember that any accomplished athlete trains months and years to reach high performance goals. If you are struggling with inactivity, overweight, high triglycerides or other health problems, it takes as much time to undo that pattern as it took for the problem to develop. You will not become healthy and high performing overnight! But by working incrementally on your goal, you can make incredible improvements. The most common reasons that runners drop out from the sport is setting unrealistic goals, expecting too much in their performance, and overtraining for their ability and falling prone to injuries. The training program in your logs is realistic, proven in many past runnning programs, and will produce the results you need to meet your goal to run Abe's Amble.

The training program is designed for you to run, run/walk or walk three times a week. This is very important as you are building muscle strength and endurance in these runs. At the beginning of training, speed is not as important to new runners and walkers. Once you have learned to develop your form, leg action, and comfort in movement, the pace can be increased.
Cross training days help build endurance and make daily exercise a habit. Walking is sufficient for cross training but you will get extra value from selecting other aerobic exercises and weight resistance workouts as part of your cross training. We'll give you more information about this in the coming weeks. The most important part of your training is the rest day! Your muscles need recovery time as much as they need exercise. Plan at least one day per week for a break from exercise to give your muscles time to rebuild. This is actually an important part of the program since during this recovery phase, muscle cells rebuild stronger than they were before!

Weekly, we'll be posting the training plan found in your log along with a weekly training topic. Look for the training program now and come back in a few days to see our training information on safety!

Smile when you run!

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