Hello from a dreamer
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Moderators: IndoIronYanti, k9car363, alicefoeller | Reply |
2016-08-13 1:56 AM |
16 | Subject: Hello from a dreamer Hi guys, Nice to meet you all. My name is Adrien, 28yo French software engineer living in Japan, married and father (will be twice in January). My biggest flaw is that I have too many interests and cannot stay focused on anything (jack of all trades). I believe I was born with a good body (sport related), but haven't been enabled in my childhood, was too much into books and had zero confidence or self-esteem, so I completely missed out on any opportunity to do any sport seriously. Then, at around 23yo, after 5 years in complete sedentary mode, probably after reading too many mangas, I decided to start running, hurt myself, forced myself, made things worse, and probably ended with life-long sequels from it. I still ran a marathon in 2012 trying to go for sub 4:15, seriously hurt my knee at 38km, and painfully finished the race hobbling, in 4:55. In addition to running, I had also started other sports like martial arts (karate 1 year 1d, Aikido 2 years 3k), and was commuting daily by bike. Since then, I also did a year of Iyengar yoga. No need to say that in areas unrelated to sport, the same problem occurs with me never staying focused on an activity for longer than 3 months. Hence, I'm always conflicted, feeling that I lack time to do everything I want and beating myself for not accomplishing anything serious in the end. I had abandoned all sports at fall last year (being busy with work related projects, and copping with injuries from AIkido), and decided to restart running at the beginning of this year. Since February, I managed to run 100km per month. I ran a half-marathon in February (1:47'57), then another one in March (1:42'45"), and a 48km ultra with 40% trail in the mountains in 6:13' in April. Now, I'm following a training plan from Runkeeper to run a full marathon sub 3:45' in November). As said above, I accumulated injuries over time (knees, ankle, shoulder, lower back), and I can still feel them when doing weird motions (for example, I cannot sit cross legged without my left knee hurting). But somehow, since February this year, pain stopped occurring while running, so I'm very glad for it. I believe I have developed enough muscle around the damaged parts to protect them. Anyways, I'm in the process of changing myself to focus on few activities, but commit to them long term. Among all the sports that I'm interested in, I've been thinking that triathlon might be a good fit (actually 3 sports, am I cheating?). While I'm not so young anymore and way too old to start many sports, triathlon actually gives me some leeway. I believe that it will give me a chance to keep improving and becoming stronger over the next 15~20 years, which sounds awesome! Regarding my current level: I am confident in my cycling ability (although I never cycled 100km nor have a bike at the moment); I'm getting confident in my running ability; I'm very bad at swimming (can breaststroke for 1.5km, but get very tired after 200m crawl, very negatively buoyant) Therefore, my current plan is as follow:
The biggest issue to follow this plan through will be time commitment. With my family obligations and work objectives (definitely more ambitious than sport goals), adding serious sport training will be challenging and be an additional stress factor. Since I have a history of quitting things halfway and since I want to live an healthy life, I admit that this will be impossible without a coach who can follow me on a daily basis. Hopefully I can find one here (although it would be ideal to have a coach nearby my place in Osaka) and get to accomplish something great thanks to your support! Sorry for the how-to-long introduction Best regards Adrien |
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2016-08-13 7:56 AM in reply to: fandekasp |
Master 8248 Eugene, Oregon | Subject: RE: Hello from a dreamer Welcome! Greetings from a fellow dreamer.....I probably wasn't born with a good body (LOL--have always been aggravated with my lack of a body!) but have been active in running and swimming since childhood. Ran at a fairly high level in high school and college, but never quite good enough to be national class. Not for lack of training or dedication, just lack of speed, and maybe proper coaching. (My college team and coach were really focused on 800-5000m, and that's just not where my talents lie.) Kind of wish I had discovered triathlon sometime before age 41, which is what actually happened. I basically walked away from competitive sports after college; always felt disappointed I didn't make it to world class in anything..... I'm now an international school teacher living in Vietnam, took up triathlon after first getting back into running (did a half marathon) after basically 20 years of running very casually since college. I really struggled with similar low-grade injuries and running in the heat here; got into master's swimming and from there got talked into my first tri. Fast forward six years--I'll be competing in my age group at the world half-ironman championships in a few weeks. It's not the Olympics, and I don't have a snowball's chance in h.... of getting on the podium, but after being a has-been at 20, I'm pretty excited about it! Advice--(Having learned most of this the hard way) * You have to do this sport (or any sport) for the love of it. Unless you're a top pro, there's little prize money. Even most of the pros can't live on prize money--they have endorsement deals, etc. *Don't rush full Ironman. That is a huge time commitment, especially if you're working full time and have family commitments. Not saying it can't be done, but take some time to explore the sport and try different distances, build your skills, stamina, and resilience. Personally, I'm in no hurry to do a full IM. Just don't feel I have a good situation for training here. *Work on your swimming. If nothing else, find a swim coach or instructor. Swimming is awesome as recovery from running and biking; it's also important so you don't blow your race from the get-go by getting too stressed out or heart rate too high. *"Negative buoyancy" is bunk. Can't believe how many people blame their poor swimming on being skinny "runner" types, having muscular legs, etc. I look like the least buoyant person on the planet. Almost 5'8" and less than 120 pounds dripping wet. But I'm usually in the top 3 in my age group on the swim in big races. When I was in high school, I was 5'6" and 112 pounds, and swam the 1500m in 21 minutes. Not awesome for a pure swimmer, even in a competitive high school or age group meet, but plenty good for tri, had I taken it up at a younger age. It's all technique, and training. *Be patient. Figure out how to push yourself without overdoing it. It's one area where a coach can help.....sometimes. You still have to choose the right coach, and communicate clearly with them about any physical or mental issues you're having with your training. *Work on developing the resilience to handle volume and intensity in training. Depending on your injury issues and body, that might include deep tissue massage, flexibility and strength work, improving technique, making sure your equipment (shoes, bike and fit, etc.) are suited to your biomechanics, improving nutrition and recovery habits, building a base of volume before upping intensity, etc. *A coach doesn't necessarily need to be local. I work with someone who's based in the US and our communication is totally online. I do suggest you find someone locally based who's qualified to work with you on swim technique, though, if you are serious about progressing in tri. Coaches can work with you online through video analysis to some extent, but I think it's more useful to work with a qualified coach on deck, especially if you need major technique work. *Best of luck! This is a great site for information and just plain old moral support. There are very few triathletes here in Vietnam (for a while I think I was the only woman triathlete in Saigon), and this site has been a godsend! |
2016-08-14 3:48 AM in reply to: Hot Runner |
16 | Subject: RE: Hello from a dreamer Hi Hot Runner, and thank you for the awesome advises! Thank you for your introduction, you have a really impressive profile. I'd love to follow your performances during that world half-ironman championship! Got it for the tips. I'm meeting tomorrow with an amateur professional (21yo, run a marathon in 2h21, plan to become professional in 2 years), and I'll ask him about ways to train in Osaka for triathlons (I believe he'll also do a full ironman in November this year). Depending on what info I can gather, I'll make a detailed plan, but I'll follow your advice on favoring a local swim coach. I'm also glad that you think highly of this website. I'll spend some time regularly to read its content over the following months. |
2016-08-29 7:06 PM in reply to: fandekasp |
16 | Subject: RE: Hello from a dreamer 2 weeks update:
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2016-08-30 7:36 AM in reply to: fandekasp |
Master 8248 Eugene, Oregon | Subject: RE: Hello from a dreamer Sounds like you've got a good start. See if the trainer is meeting your needs; if not, you can always look for someone else. Honestly, I have never thought much about run form and not sure how important it actually is. There are probably some basics of good form that inexperienced runners might not intuitively know, but if you look at elite runners (I have spent a lot of time in my life watching them, as a spectator and being lapped by them), run form is kind of all over the place. A lot probably depends on the individual's body build and other biomechanics. But there are some common errors (like over-striding, or arms crossing the midline) that a coach could help you with. Swim clubs/teams are always humbling. Some of those people (even kids) probably train 5-6 days a week, even twice a day (well, maybe not the triathletes, but pure swimmers). Even some of the young kids could kick the a$$ of a lot of triathletes. Keep at it and you will make progress. It's really mostly a matter of work and technique. Good that you might be able to trade some English teaching! I just discovered that, as of a few months ago, there is now a Saigon Tri Club. So I guess my days of being the tri club are officially over! |
2016-08-30 6:58 PM in reply to: Hot Runner |
16 | Subject: RE: Hello from a dreamer Thank you HotRunner Awesome news for the Saigon Tri Club, you finally found a chance to train with a group of friends :D |
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2016-08-30 6:58 PM in reply to: Hot Runner |
16 | Subject: RE: Hello from a dreamer Thank you HotRunner Awesome news for the Saigon Tri Club, you finally found a chance to train with a group of friends :D |
2016-09-12 7:34 PM in reply to: fandekasp |
16 | Subject: RE: Hello from a dreamer 1 month update: Running
Body
Swimming
Well, it looks like a lot of complaints, what have I gotten myself into? But I'm in good spirits . I will do core training everyday from now on, and I might not be able to build enough stamina for November, but at least I'll be able to switch back to my old running style when I get tired, so this should be beneficial in the end. |
2016-09-18 1:06 AM in reply to: fandekasp |
Master 8248 Eugene, Oregon | Subject: RE: Hello from a dreamer Hi Adrien, Hate to say this but I would seriously question the qualifications of the trainer/coach. Something just doesn't sound right about what you describe. Proper form should be easier, not harder on your body. You should NOT be landing flat-footed, either for distance running or sprinting. That sounds really inefficient. There is controversy about heel-striking, but some top distance runners do it, and it seems efficient enough for them. Others run more on the balls of their feet. I tend to do the latter unless super-tired. My bad habit is getting up on my toes to go uphill, which tends to make me cramp in triathlon runs. That is one aspect of form I've kind of had to unlearn. I can usually get away with it in a run race, but not after biking 40-90 km. Forward motion should come mainly from the push off on the back leg, not from over-striding with the leg that is going forward. Honestly, I would just run the way that feels right, and stop obsessing about it. I have been running since age 10, and been told many times my form's not ideal, but I am still here and still running, and never had any serious overuse injuries. If you're feeling sore, find some softer surfaces to run on. Different coaches have different ideas about the "best" way to run, but everyone's body is different. I think we tend to evolve toward the form that is most efficient for us. If it worked for you before and you were healthy, I would not go making major form changes, but focus on building endurance and (later) speed. Definitely--doing core work and strengthening glutes can help improve run form and stamina (also for bike and swim), but I think again, the improved form should come naturally as those areas get stronger. Massage--not sure. There are different kinds. Deep tissue work can be very painful if it is breaking up scar tissue or areas that are chronically tight. But that is almost like a workout in its own right--you should not be going into the session really sore or fatigued from a hard workout or race, and you need to take a day or two of very easy activity after to clear out the waste products from the heavy-duty massage (plus drink lots of water to flush them out). Massage during a heavy training cycle, in my mind, shouldn't be that aggressive. Swimming....It does take a lot of work! I'm really glad I learned when I was young. But I also have some bad habits I need to work on. It is extra important for someone who's small and lean like me because there's not a lot of natural strength/power to give me speed--my form has to be really efficient. Keep plugging away at it. It helps to focus on just one aspect of form at a time--like say for this 50m I will just focus on good rotation. |
2016-10-12 3:59 AM in reply to: fandekasp |
16 | Subject: RE: Hello from a dreamer 2 months update: Running:
Body
Swimming
Business:
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2017-02-28 1:35 AM in reply to: fandekasp |
16 | Subject: RE: Hello from a dreamer 6 months update: Note: Sorry for the long absence, beginnertriathlete had blocked all asia ip addresses and I had to request the whitening of my ip range. Running:
Body:
Cycling:
Swimming:
Races
Hopefully I'll be able to stop injuring myself in the future, really frustrating and demotivating ^^' |
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2017-03-01 5:58 PM in reply to: fandekasp |
Master 8248 Eugene, Oregon | Subject: RE: Hello from a dreamer Not time now to give much feedback but sorry to hear about the injuries. I have missed most of February myself with illness (cold, flu, bronchitis) and just now trying to build back up. One of the hazards of teaching--I'm exposed to a lot of germs. Plus had some travel in there too. Swimming--Keep up the good work. It will come. Biking: That bike needs to be on a trainer (like a stand where you can ride it indoors), not on the wall, and you need to be putting in some serious time on it, if it does not aggravate your achilles. No, it's not always "fun". Videos, structured workouts, music can make it more bearable. That allows you to train at home anytime, regardless of weather. I do 95% of my bike training in Vietnam on the trainer. If not, I would still be back of the pack on the bike, and middle of the pack in my races. It's not my favorite part of triathlon training, but it's reality for me and a lot of other people due to our locations or schedules. (Bad traffic, cold weather, parents of young kids, long work hours, etc.) Running: Take it gradually, and have modest goals. Instead of racing a marathon, just aim to complete the run leg of your goal race (21 km). I wouldn't try to aggressively change form or do speed work. Just run consistently (when your body allows you to) and gradually build the long runs. It's just too easy to get injured with running, especially when you might not be getting sufficient rest. Not worth the risk, unless/until you are competing at a pretty high level. Your run will benefit more from extra work on the bike (so you are starting it less fatigued) than a lot of tempo or speed work. |
2017-03-01 6:34 PM in reply to: Hot Runner |
16 | Subject: RE: Hello from a dreamer Thank you for always commenting Hot Runner Very sorry to hear about your illnesses as well, that's tough You're right about the trainer... I've pushed back this shopping item because I'd like some expensive atn+ compatible roller stuff, and I can't really afford it at the moment. But maybe I should just buy a cheap old-school trainer for starter (just worried that it will deteriorate my back wheel). +1 for running goals, I was trying too many things at the same time (road running, trail running, fast short distances, ultra long distances). Guess I should stop running for running, but instead running to achieve my triathlon objectives. |
2017-03-02 2:41 AM in reply to: 0 |
Master 8248 Eugene, Oregon | Subject: RE: Hello from a dreamer No need for fancy trainers. Your wheel will be fine (that being said, would not run race wheels on the trainer). Just use an old road tire. There are also special super-tough "trainer tires" that some people use, but I've never seen them here. Just any old tire, and remember to switch it out to something less worn before racing! You can do plenty of structured workouts using heart rate or effort. Jorge's winter cycling program (search training programs on this site) is totally free; there are others that you can buy online; some might use power or virtual power, though. Personally I really like my power meter for training and, to a lesser extent, racing, because it takes a lot of guesswork out of it, but that is a pretty big investment. (I think I paid about $600 or $700 for the PM plus bike Garmin.) Again, t's more important that you just put in the time on the bike, some of it hard, than you have exhaustive and precise data about what you are doing. That can wait until you are further along in the sport and have more money to throw at it. Edited by Hot Runner 2017-03-02 2:43 AM |
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