jimmysnyder said:
I am interested in running in the Marine Corps Marathon in October. I want to be a completer, not a competer. I looked at some web sites that have training schedules for beginners, but I am so out of shape that I can't even do the first week schedule. I figure I need about 2 months of training before I can get to the beginner stage. My current goal is to run 1 mile without muscle pain in my legs. My best run/walk was 1 mile in 13 minutes, 17 seconds, with moderate pain. I have been stretching before starting and it seems the more I stretch, the less pain I experience. Although I am serioius about this, I have to consider the possibility that I will not participate until the 2007 race.
Do you have interesting experiences, or helpful hints for me?
I do 10k to half-marathon races nowadays, 'still' quick enough to do the shorter distances. I think Russ summed it similarly to my own experiences on the basis of what have read from running related coaching books.
Starter programmes have seen usually contain exercises 3-4 / week. Say you've 4 exercises / week. Typically, 2-3 out of these are running and one is a long walk (1-2 hrs)(or a run were you occationally run for some minutes, then walk etc.). The exercises done running are 20-40 mins long (distance at this point is totally meaningless). When starting, the point is to build aerobic endurance and overall make your body get used to the somewhat excruciating experience. During these runs it is very common, and actually recommendable, to walk in between ... you may for example run for a few minutes, the walk for a few etc. ... whatever works. The point is to not over-exert yourself but start building from bottom up slowly, but surely & consistently. Slowly the length of continuous running will increase, and you are able to increase length, speed, etc., but those are all irrelevant at first.
Alternate forms of exercising are recommendable, like biking, especially in the beginning (if you feel like it, have some pains or otherwise just bored with running). Just so you don't break anything like develop back problems or something related which can be truly troublesome. Occationally heading to the gym and pushing your legs and midriff a bit will do wonders to your running. When beginning your run, walk for a while at first, some stretching helps to get going (and especially after!). I for example usually run for 10-15 mins slowly (warm-up), and then stretch for about 3-4 mins after am ready to start doing the actual exercise. Most runners stretch about 15 minutes daily, and a one longer session / week (stretching is a pretty personal experience, experimentation is a good thing, but it is in any case a necessity).
One important aspect is to 'control' your heart rate. If you've a HR monitor that's easy, if you don't, you should try to keep your speed at a level where you're still able to carry on a conversation (usual rule of thumb). This makes 'sure' you stay in the aerobic range and the runs don't become too consuming. Men in particular, when starting running, tend to do their exercises near the anaerobic threshold ... and following they never recover & the experience overall is a killer ... a classic rookie mistake. Better go slow at first, there is plenty of time to try to "kill yourself" later.
Also, it is really difficult at first, but having some control over your running technique would be good. It develops with time, but especially if you're starting to have pains "beyond average" (running is a pain always no matter how much you work on it ... part of the appeal

). Good hints are to get a decent pair of shoes and when running, make sure the length of your step is such that your foot lands behind your knee (this way you're not striding, one good way to break places like knees, heels, back, etc. when fresh).
The schedule should change in about 2-3 months, or in that time I'd believe you're fit enough to change it a step more demanding. Many people run the marathon after 6-7 months of training, some wackos even after 3, personally I think about a 1-1.5 years gives a good foundation to finish it with "honours".