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This photo was taken by our daughter, Sarah Timmons, or my wife, depending on who you ask. We were in Rehoboth Beach, DE on Easter Sunday, 2011.


Several years ago, on the way home from a family vacation, I picked up a notebook and quickly recorded an incident that had occurred involving our son. Eventually, I used that story to illustrate something about my spiritual walk as a believer in Christ. Thus began a deliberate attempt to document the significance of everyday events. Almost any ordinary circumstance in daily life can become fodder for another story. This, almost by definition, lends itself to a blog.

Of course, many of the entries here are just ordinary diary style stuff... the stuff of ordinary blogs. Good grief, I don't want to be ordinary.


Saturday, June 30, 2012

Marathon Training

There must be at least one person wondering what marathon training looks like.  (I know you are out there, but are just afraid to speak up.)  The answer is:  it all depends on what your goal is.

A world class marathon runner will run at a crazy stupid pace of about 4 minutes, 50 seconds per mile.  My best 10K (6.2 miles) race ever, when I was 23 years of age, was at a pace of about 6:20/ mile.  A 4:50 pace for 26 miles is an unimaginable feat.

My primary goal in running marathons has always been to finish.  When I ran the marathon in 2003, I finished in 3 hrs 47 minutes, at a pace of 8:40/mile.  I would hope to run now at about a 9:15/mile, or maybe 9:30, more realistically.  10:00/mile would actually make me happy. 

So, this is what the training would look like, with that goal in mind:




Mon
Tues
Wed
Thu
Fri
Sat
Sun

Week  total
6/25


3

3

5
2

13
7/2


3

3

4
3

13
7/9


3

3

3
3

12
7/16


3

3

3
3

12
7/23


3

3

4
3

13
7/30


3

3

5
3

14
8/6


3

4

6
3

16
8/13


3

4

4
3

14
8/20


4

4

6
3

17
8/27


4

4

8
3

19
9/3


4

4

10

       21
9/10


4

4

8
3

19
9/17


4

4

12


20
9/24

4
4

4

10
3

25
10/1


4

4

14
3

25
10/8


5

5

10
3

23
10/15


4

5

16
3

28
10/22


4

5

12
3

24
10/29


4

5

18


27
11/5

3
5

6

12
3

29
11/12


4

6

20
3

33
11/19


4

4

12
3

23
11/26


3
2
3

8
3

17
12/3


2
2
rest
2
26.2


28






















As you can see, all it takes is time.  Each one of those miles is roughly 9 minutes.  The total amount of actual running time involved is a mere 65 hours.  Piece of cake, as long as there are no injuries.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

How rigorous!

You can do it.