Month 6.
Half way.
Happy the way to somewhere or nowhere? That what's been on my mind this month.
An MRI for the knees. A milestone I didn't anticipate before I started this running project. Happy I can get up each day and go but frustrated I can't go at full speed on anything. Unfortunately, injuries can sideline you when you least expect it. This pretty much describes my current stats: ongoing recovery.
This month marks another 5k that I was expecting to be special. Instead I did a park 5k solo and I'm opting for no races in June to work on my overall recovery plan and enjoy my travel without extra aches and pains. A personal choice. This was an easier decision after the 5k I wanted to do had a date change that conflicted with my travel and the course was going to change. All of a sudden I wasn't destined to do this race!
It was a year ago I ran the 5k. My mental game probably wasn't as strong as it is today and my body wasn't as prepared for the run a year ago. To see the comparison in time and how I feel after this race was really something I've been looking forward to. A full circle vision of hard work. Did it pay off? I wanted to know. I won't know exactly because I'm not repeating the race. I do know however my 5k time is almost 9 minutes faster thus I'll claim winner on progress for year over year.
I guess it doesn't matter that I couldn't make the race. The hills were awful. The walk to the start line in the woods is a workout in itself. One could say you're tired before you even start. This was more of a disappointment than my injuries to date. Go figure. For June I will add in hill training as a little nod to the race that wasn't in the cards this year!
Not a ton of miles for June but I didn't quit.
No stopping me now.
How will my second half differ from the first?
Will my mileage pick up volume?
The half way point of the year is here. Holy cow. Committing six months to running takes dedication, time, and a can do attitude at the very least. Now it's time to see what it takes to get to twelve months and really dial in on marathon training. We shall call this the building capacity phase.
Will my mileage double by year's end?
Will I get close to 750 miles?
Will I battle more injuries?
Will I continue?
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