terça-feira, 31 de março de 2015

Dicas de um maratonista campeão

In an exclusive interview with WorldRunning.com, 2014 Boston Marathon winner Meb Keflezighi talks about why easy days are just as important as rest days, the importance of strength and cross training, and how everyone can reach their potential as a runner.
Meb Keflezighi’s marathon lifetime best of 2:08:36 might be fairly modest by today’s barrier-breaking standards - but his racing record is far from that.
One of the highlights of Keflezighi’s international career, which spans more than fifteen years, was his silver medal at the 2004 Olympic Games and as a mark of his longevity, the popular American is still challenging the world’s best more than a decade later.
Drawing on his vast wealth of experience, Keflezighi ran a near-perfect race to claim the Boston Marathon title in 2014, becoming the first American man to win since 1983. He also notched up a fifth top-five career finish in the New York Marathon in November.

WorldRunning.com: What do you do in the days after the marathon to help you recover as quickly as possible?
Meb Keflezighi: Recovery is important. I have written a book called “Meb for Mortals” where I talk more about that. First of all, I try to stretch. Light stretching and light massage. Two days later – a deep tissue massage. I used to do ice baths, but I don’t do those anymore. I’m too old for that!
I used to do it [ice baths] rigorously, but now it takes too long for my body to recover. In September, it will be two years since I stopped doing that, but I used to do ice baths every day.
What about rest days during your training? What do they look like?
Rest days are just as important as hard days. But sometimes it’s tricky to handle for elite athletes. As intense as we are, we like routine. We’re “Type A” people, always “go, go, go!” It’s easy for me to give advice: “Take a day off”. But it’s hard to do it myself. I’m still struggling with that, but at the same time I still try to get the best out of myself.
On my rest days, I take care of my nutrition and hydration, do ElliptiGo sessions for recovery instead of pounding the pavement. I try to listen to my body and, if necessary, give it more time to recover, maybe an extra day.
Do you cross train consistently on your easier days?
Especially now, yes. Four to five times a week, instead of going for the second run, I’ll just do that. I’m almost forty years old, I can’t risk getting injured.
Do you do any kind of strength training and weight training at all?
I do some strength drills six days a week, core and planks – maybe, four or five times a week. As for weight training – it’s very minimal. I run on grass and uphill to strengthen my legs, once or twice a week.
What do your weeks and days look like, training wise?
Three times a week I’d go hard: long run, intervals, or tempo. It used to be every Tuesday, Friday and Sunday. But now, because of my age, I use a nine-day cycle. I run anywhere from three miles, when I’m backing up before a race, to 27 miles. It depends on where I am in a certain stage of training.
Do you have those mornings when you don’t feel like training? How do you overcome that?
That thought does cross my mind, but all it does is delay the workout. But eventually I end up doing it anyway. Putting on shoes and getting out of the door is hard. But once you get out, rain or snow, whatever, you enjoy it; you even push the pace or do more than planned.
But you have to start slow, don’t be in a rush. It’s good to have someone meeting you for a run, as well. I have a friend of mine, who is 71 years old. If it’s raining like today, he says: “I’ll meet you, I want to feel your pain.” (laughs) And he knows I’m going to show up.
What is your typical pre-race dinner and race-day breakfast?
For dinner, I usually have Italian food. Spaghetti with meatballs and salad, if I have that option. For breakfast, it would be a bagel or toast with almond butter and honey and a banana. If my mum or my wife is around, they bring me fresh homemade bread.
What does your diet look like in training?
I’m very disciplined with my diet when I’m in training, but if I’m injured I get totally out of control. It should be the other way around: when you’re running a lot you can eat anything!
I used to eat whatever I wanted when I was 26-28, but when I turned 35, it changed. My metabolism slowed down. I make sure to eat protein, especially on my hard days. Even if it’s 1-2 pm, I still like to have eggs. I may have them with toast or half a bagel in the morning and then an omelette, and some meat in the evening.
The night before a hard workout, I would have carbohydrates – pasta or rice. After hard workouts, the first thing that goes to my body is Generation UCAN, to speed up recovery.
I always eat a lot of vegetables, and snack on fruits during the day.
What was the best piece of advice you’ve ever received?
It was in 1999 from Paul Tergat. I believe, it was in Brussels. I told him: “You know, I want to be where you are, some day.” And he said: “I can give you my workouts. But where I am and where you are now – it’s different. It takes more progress to get there.”
It was the best piece of advice I’ve ever gotten. Because becoming a great athlete takes time.
So what piece of advice would you give to an up-and-coming runner?
I’d say the same. Three things: make progress, be consistent and I would emphasise that easy days are as important as hard days.
How do you mentally prepare for important races?
We all go through stages of preparation. I believe it’s 90% physical and 10% mental in training, but on the race day it switches.
Everybody is here, I look at their faces, at their legs to see what kind of shape they are in. But when the gun goes off, everything comes up to decision-making. Maybe not at the beginning, but when it counts the most. You have to assess what is goal number one, and you have to be realistic about what you are capable of doing and what you’ve been doing.
Sometimes, you want to finish in the top-three, sometimes – to set a personal best. Different things can get in your way, but you always should try to get the best of what you can do on a given day.
What would be your advice to someone that wants to take up running?
We can’t all be Olympians, New York and Boston champions. But we all can get best out of ourselves, no matter how old you are and of what gender you are. Set your goals and once you’ve set them – make progress. Nothing happens overnight. Just start running. It would be bad for the first two or three days, but it will get better.
If you set a goal to run a 5K, hopefully you will run that 5K, then a 10K and so on. Just have fun in a process, and make sure you’re training with someone, so you just don’t wake up one day and say: “Oh, I don’t want to go running!”
Interview conducted by Elena Dyachkova
Photos courtesy of Getty Images

terça-feira, 24 de março de 2015

Como os esportes de endurance mudam a vida das pessoas

EXERCISE OUTDOORS



The clinical benefits of endurance sports have long been documented and include a reduced risk of heart failure, diabetes, osteoporosis and other diseases. Additionally, a new wave of research shows that participating in common endurance sports may be effective in treating depression and anxiety. Less studied, but perhaps just as important, is how involvement in endurance sports enhances day-to-day life by changing the nature of stress and nurturing what psychologists call a "growth mindset," which can be described as a general outlook on life that recognizes a natural human capacity to grow and evolve -- especially in the face of challenges.
I recently had the opportunity to discuss endurance sports, stress, and growth mindsets with world-renowned health psychologist Kelly McGonigal. Our conversation led to an article for Outside Magazine"Endurance Sports Will Make You a Better, Calmer, Person." This piece generated thoughtful discussion and a handful of notes from readers asking for more. So, rather than just give my take, I asked a few other folks that live and breath this stuff to share their thoughts.
The Question: In addition to shaping your body, how has participating in endurance sports shaped your mindset?
David Epstein: Author of The Sports Gene
When I started distance running -- or mid-distance, really -- I was pretty darn bad. Sometimes in presentations, I show a picture of a medical record from a pulmonary exam I had when I started running. It says my peak flow results are consistent with early stage emphysema. Yikes! But it never really crossed my mind that starting poorly meant that I wouldn't have a great response to training.
One of the most important things I learned in reporting for The Sports Gene was that baseline ability (i.e., pre-training) and ability to improve with training are sometimes only slightly correlated, and sometimes not correlated at all. I think I sort of intuited that a long time ago, and when I improved by leaps and bounds as a runner, it only reinforced that idea for me.
I'd come into every season in college in way worse shape than guys in my training group, even after having done the same light summer training. I'd always just tell myself to be patient, wait for intervals to start, and I'd catch up. Literally, I would say to myself: "Don't worry, speed intervals and hills work like rocket fuel for you." This really taught me to take a longer view and helped me realize that the best training plan for my peers wasn't necessarily the best one for me. I took a trial and error approach to all my training, continually homing in what I felt worked specifically for me, even if it wasn't exactly what my peers or competitors were doing.
I guess I kind of adopted that approach for my professional life, too. Geology in graduate school and then working the overnight shift at the NY Daily News happened to be good journalism training for me! But I certainly wouldn't recommend it to everyone...
While this might surprise people who bucket me as "the genetic basis for talent guy," I firmly believe that you can get vastly better at just about anything with proper training. Any other mindset seems foreign to me.
Alex Hutchinson: Runner's World blogger and author of What Comes First, Cardio or Weights? 
Running has played a big role in shaping how I respond to the world around me. It has taught me to be patient in the face of adversity: if things aren't going well right now, I know that (a) panicking won't help; (b) I can endure whatever adversity I'm currently facing and it won't kill me; and (c) there's plenty of time to fix whatever is wrong and change the outcome, and it's up to me to make that happen. Those sound like clichés, but I think that's what running teaches you.
Dr. Michael Joyner: Mayo Clinic physiologist
As a kid involved in running, I learned the standard stuff about goal setting, hard work, and pushing through adversity. I learned to take the long view, and that training is a process not an event.
By the time I hit my early 20s, I learned it was possible to both relax and push it at the same time. When this first happens to you it is sort of an unbelievable random out-of-body experience. However, if you pay attention to your training and focus on learning how to do this you can experience it more consistently and work to produce it in training and racing. This sort of relaxed but all-out effort -- what many might call "flow" -- is also a skill that can be transferred to other activities in life.
In middle age I have realized that endurance sports taught me a bit about managing the inevitable mental and physical suffering and anxiety associated with life. Don't get too attached to things, trust the process, stay relaxed, and let the outcomes take care of themselves.
Most people have no idea what their limits are.
Steve Magness: Coach and author of The Science of Running
Endurance sports allow for gains psychologically and emotionally that provide a far greater impact than the physical benefits. For one, when you train and race, you have to be comfortable in your own head. There's no easy distracting phone to play with or movies to watch, it's just you and your thoughts. In today's society we do anything possible to avoid the inner dialogue in our head, but in endurance sports, it's all we have. So learning how to be alone in your own head and process the negative and positive emotions that come from grinding out a long race transfers to any activity. You get comfortable dealing with anxiety, uncertainty, pain, and boredom all in one shot.
And the thing is, we fail way more then we succeed in endurance sports. There are only so many times when we can be on our absolute best and hit a lifetime PR, so dealing with the ups and downs of sport and learning how to stay level headed is a huge lesson to be learned. Dealing with failure is one of the most difficult life lessons you can learn, but with running, fortunately or unfortunately, we have plenty of opportunities to do so.
To me, these abilities -- to remain focused and composure during both good and bad times -- is a skill that directly transfers to so many areas of life. For example, if I'm in the middle of a long writing session and losing focus or getting nervous before a big talk, I simply tie it back to what I do in running. If I really mess up a project or 'fail' at a task, I relate back to how I'd handle a tough loss. It's these lessons, if you allow yourself to learn from them, that have the greatest impact.
Matt Fitzgerald: Author of numerous books on training and nutrition
In endurance races, I feel that I come face to face with my naked soul in a way that I never do in everyday life. The legendary triathlete Mark Allen called this experience "raw reality." Everything is stripped away; only bare consciousness remains. But it's a divided consciousness, an urgent desire to quit pitted against a tenacious will to continue. I discover myself in these moments. I don't know if I can intellectualize their benefits. All I can say -- as many others do -- is that they are somehow purifying. And I keep going back for more.
My thoughts: The only things I'd add to what Dave, Alex, Mike, Steve, and Matt said is that endurance sports have instilled within me a sense of individual agency. In today's super connected and complex world, few endeavors remain in which it's just you working for something with a tangible measure as objective as time. I've learned to trust myself, and to wholly own both my successes and failures, which I guess is how I'd define self-confidence.
I've also had the honor of meeting and growing close to so many fine people through endurance sports. It doesn't really matter that most of them are 10 times better than me! It is a sense of sharing in the common struggle to simply "get better," regardless of one's baseline, that bonds us. These friends, mentors, and coaches have helped me grow in many ways -- the most valuable of which have been off the race course.

segunda-feira, 23 de março de 2015

Treinos obrigatórios para os corredores

3 Key Workouts Runners Should Do Every Week

You may be able to race faster on three or four runs per week than you do on six or seven.
There are three key workouts that every runner should do each week. These are essential, must-do workouts. All of your other runs are optional. In fact, if you want to, you can create a training plan that includes only your three weekly key workouts and no other running.
The first run of the week is a speed session. Follow that up with a strength workout on Thursday evenings. And end the week on either Saturday or Sunday with a long run.
If you are a triathlete, this leaves lots of time to swim and bike. If you are just running, this leaves lot of time for recovery.
If you are a compulsive endurance athlete and cannot bear the thought of only running three times a week, here is your fourth workout: Do a tempo run on Wednesdays.
You might think that such an approach would make training easy. In fact, it makes it harder.
Most runners are middle-of-the-road runners. That’s why they’re middle-of-the-pack runners. They run too slowly to get faster and too fast to recover and get stronger. They tend to run everything down the middle. They don’t improve, and they don’t recover. That’s why I recommend doing only three runs a week. There’s time to recover and then run hard (again).
Those slow aerobic runs take an awful lot of time, train your mind to avoid pain, and slow you down. They keep you in your comfort zone. That’s great if you want to race in your comfort zone. But most people at least talk about running faster. You need to embrace the pain in order to get faster. Training in your comfort zone will keep you racing in your comfort zone. Of course we all start pushing beyond our comfort zone, but most of us reach a point where we decide we can’t get any faster, don’t want to work any harder, or just want to enjoy the moderate success we’ve achieved.
It’s important to warm up well for all of your key workouts. Do drills that elevate your heart and respiration rates, work your range of motion for running, and most importantly, mimic the running stride you need to use throughout the workout and during all of your runs (for example, hopping and touching one knee to the opposite elbow).

Speed Work

My approach to speed work consists of short, very intense efforts, typically not longer than 30 seconds apiece. Your shortest, fastest speed intervals can be 50-meter sprints. The longest, slowest speed session I prescribe is three by a mile at 10K pace with two surges during each 400 meters. Jog during your recovery, or better yet do butt kicks as recovery. The objective is twofold: learn to move your feet very quickly, and learn to use efficient running technique. Once every four to six weeks I have my athletes do a 3 x 1-mile time trial as a benchmark of improvement.
An entire speed workout, including warm-up, cool-down and recovery periods, takes 60 to 75 minutes.
Strength Work
Our strength work is lots of hill repeats. There is no better method of building running strength than running hills.
We do three types of hill work. The first involves running fast up a 200m hill and then run fast back down the same hill. These up-and-down intervals are done in sets of one to four. After each set, the runners do a 200-400m jog or 200-400m of butt kicks. We always keep moving and always come back to a drill that improves our technique. The complete workout comprises eight intervals with the following set counts: 1, 2, 3, 4, 4, 3, 2, 1.
The second hill session is a five-mile time trial on rolling hills. We focus on finishing faster than our average pace. It is critical not to slow down during this type of workout, so you may have to start out slower than you think you should.
The final hill workout is skipping. Skip up that 400m hill, turn around and do butt kicks on the way down. This is a very difficult workout, but it produces tremendous benefits in explosive strength and in running efficiency.
Long Runs
Our long runs always finish faster than they start and faster than the average pace we hope to run in our goal race. We break the long run into segments — two, three or four — and set a goal pace for each segment. The idea is to learn to run negative splits — that is, to finish faster than you start. We use this type of long run to build pace awareness, build mental toughness and improve fitness.
For example, a runner training to run a 1:40 half marathon might do a 15-mile long run with 5 miles at 8:00/mile, 5 miles at 7:45 per mile, and 5 miles at 7:30 per mile.
While we record pace and heart rate during these (and all runs) we avoid looking at our watches during the run. Instead we rely on our “feel” for the pace.
Tempo Runs
The term “tempo run” evokes all sorts of ideas. However, it’s really about picking a distance that is shorter than your goal race and running it faster than your goal pace. This would be your fourth run of the week. You do not need to, nor should you do a tempo run every week. Your level of recovery should determine whether you do this run. When you are well recovered on Wednesday, do a tempo run.
Finish all your workouts with a cooldown that will gradually bring your heart rate and your respiration rate back down to resting levels. This is also the time to do drills that will strengthen the muscles we rarely use during running.
Neil Cook is a coach with the Asphalt Green Tri Club in New York City.

sábado, 21 de março de 2015

3 brasileiros na corrida mais dura do mundo - BADWATER 2015

http://oglobo.globo.com/blogs/pulso/posts/2015/03/20/tres-brasileiros-encaram-os-217-quilometros-da-badwater-2015-563319.asp



Por André Sant'Anna*
Anualmente 2.800 atletas de todo o mundo se inscrevem para participar da Badwater 135 milhas, mas apenas cem são aceitos. Esse ano, os brasileiros Marialdo Rodrigues, Caxias do Sul, Rodrigo Pereira, de Brasília, e Camila Matte, São Paulo, estão entre os atletas que vão encarar o desafio de correr 217 quilômetros, na região do Vale da Morte, Califórnia.

Marialdo é um atleta experiente e apesar de ter no currículo provas duras como a BR 135 e 181, Comrades, 24 horas e Travessia Torres Tramandaí, pela primeira vez participará da Badwater. “Esse é um sonho antigo. Sei das dificuldades que encontrarei lá. Tenho muito respeito, mas não tenho medo da prova. Estou treinando bastante, tomando todos os cuidados necessários e focado na preparação. Minha expectativa é conseguir concluir abaixo de 38 horas”, afirma.


Para a paulista Camila Matte, o desafio é ainda mais inédito. “Está será minha primeira ultramaratona fora país. Tenho aliado meu trabalho com uma rotina de treinos bem puxada. Meu desejo é completar a prova abaixo de 48 horas”, declara. Porém, a atleta sabe que cada prova tem suas particularidades, especialmente quando se trata da Badwater. “Durante a corrida muita coisa pode acontecer: desidratação, calor, bolhas, assaduras. Mas em cada ultra que faço aprendo algo novo. Isso me fortalece e consigo manter o pensamento positivo para um novo e maior desafio”, completa.


A prova acontece no dia 28 de julho e contará com 28 mulheres e 72 homens. Deste total de 100 atletas, 59 já competiram em edições passadas e 41 estreiam esse ano. Na lista de 23 países representados, os Estados Unidos terá o maior número de atletas, 63. Os demais países presentes são Argentina (1), Austrália (3), Brasil (3), Canadá (3), Colômbia (1), República Checa (1), França (1), Alemanha (1), Guatemala (1), Irlanda (1), Japão (4), Jordânia (1), México (2), Holanda (1), Nova Zelândia (1), Filipinas (1), Polônia (1), Sérvia (1), Singapura (1), Espanha (2), Suécia (1), Reino Unido (5).


A Badwater é percorrida numa única etapa, podendo ser concluída em até 3 dias. A largada acontece na baía de Badwater, a 86 metros abaixo do nível do mar, na célebre região do Vale da Morte na Califórnia, e a chegada ao monte Whitney, com 4.421 metros de altitude. Estes dois locais são, respetivamente, o ponto mais baixo e mais alto do território continental dos Estados Unidos, obrigando os participantes a uma subida acumulada de mais de 4.000 metros.


Autointitulada como a “mais dura corrida do mundo”, boa parte da prova decorre no deserto do Vale da Morte, sob extremas condições climatéricas. A região detém, inclusive, o recorde como o ponto mais quente da Terra (56,7ºC), no dia 10 de Julho de 1913).



*Do blog Ultratrailbr
 

quinta-feira, 19 de março de 2015

Sete técnicas para melhorar o fôlego no treino de corrida

http://www.otreino.com.br/artigos/sete-tecnicas-para-melhorar-o-folego-no-treino-de-corrida/

Pernas fortes e coração saudável fazem a diferença na hora de correr, mas há outro fator importante que não pode ser deixado de lado: a força dos pulmões. Se a capacidade respiratória for limitada, o cansaço aparece mais cedo e a distância percorrida certamente será menor. “Apesar de a respiração ser automática, é preciso ter mais atenção quando ela fica ofegante, pois os músculos demandam mais esforço”, conta o educador físico e triatleta Paulo Pestana, do Rio de Janeiro. Ele e o técnico de atletismo Carlos Ventura contam que é possível melhorar o fôlego e aprimorar o desempenho da corrida. 

Corra regularmente A regularidade do exercício faz com que o corpo se acostume aos poucos com o esforço e consiga progredir. “Pessoas que não costumam praticar atividade física têm menos fôlego porque a sua atividade aeróbia é fraca e, por conta disso, a capacidade física é menor”, explica o técnico de atletismo Carlos Ventura, autor de livros de corrida, como Manual do Corredor (Ícone Editora). Por isso, procure estabelecer uma programação com horários certos. - Leia a mais na fonte original 

Reduza a velocidade Pode ser que você esteja correndo em um ritmo mais rápido do que o seu corpo é capaz – aí não há fôlego que aguente. Carlos Ventura conta que o ritmo ideal do treino deve ser com frequências cardíacas baixas, de modo que todas as funções do organismo entrem em equilíbrio enquanto ele corre. “A capacidade respiratória pode ser melhorada com corridas longas e lentas porque promove uma hipertrofia cardíaca adequada”, conta o técnico de atletismo. 

Intercale com caminhada Treinar em séries de corrida e caminhada intercaladas permite uma maior percepção do esforço físico e um tempo para recuperar o fôlego. “Isso ajuda a adaptar o condicionamento físico e o desempenho para uma corrida contínua”, explica o consultor esportivo Paulo Pestana. Aos poucos, é possível aumentar o tempo da corrida e diminuir o de caminhada. Um profissional de atividade física poderá ajudá-lo a acompanhar essa evolução de acordo com o seu preparo físico. 

Respire corretamente Quanto mais ofegante você fica, mais a respiração deixa de ser automática. É preciso controlar o movimento de entrada e saída do ar para que não fique acelerado demais durante a corrida. “Costumo aconselhar os alunos com dificuldade de fôlego a fazer a respiração marcada por passos, ou seja, a cada três passos inspirando, faça os mesmos três passos expirando, até que isso seja feito naturalmente”, indica o educador físico Paulo Pestana. Também pode fazer diferença evitar respirar somente com a boca, que pode aumentar a sensação de cansaço. - 

Faça outros exercícios Se a impressão é de que a corrida não é suficiente para melhorar o seu fôlego, que tal aliar o treino a outros exercícios que também melhoram a capacidade respiratória? Praticamente todos contribuem: natação, treinamento em circuito, vôlei, futebol, tênis, ciclismo, entre outros. Uma técnica que merece destaque é a yoga. Paulo Pestana indica um movimento bem simples dessa prática que potencializa o movimento da respiração e ativa toda a musculatura envolvida (diafragma e intercostais): focando o abdômen e o diafragma e sem mexer os ombros, inspire com o peito (abrindo as costelas) e expire todo o ar, até encolher a barriga. Faça esse exercício repetidas vezes e lentamente, quando estiver em repouso. -

Comece devagar e acelere aos poucos Por mais que você esteja acostumado a correr em uma velocidade mais rápida, é preciso sempre aquecer o corpo a cada início de treino. O técnico de atletismo Carlos Ventura ainda recomenda alongar e iniciar a corrida em um ritmo devagar. “Para pessoas que estão saindo do sedentarismo, também é preciso começar caminhando e só depois passar para trotes leves, dando preferência a terrenos planos e macios”, afirma. O cigarro é um dos maiores inimigo do fôlego. “O hábito de fumar diminui a capacidade respiratória porque prejudica a função dos alvéolos pulmonares de absorverem oxigênio”, explica o consultor esportivo Paulo Pestana. Respirar exclusivamente pela boca, deixar o nariz constantemente entupido e não tratar alergias respiratórias também são hábitos que podem dificultar o pleno trabalho dos pulmões.



Meia de Paris 2015 - vale conferir o vídeo

A Meia Maratona da belíssima Paris aconteceu no último dia 08/03, levando 35.000 corredores,  recorde de participantes dessa prova fantástica. 
A prova, que larga da Esplanada do Chateau de Vincennes passa por alguns belos pontos de Paris, como o Hôtel de Ville e a Place de la Bastille. Abaixo, confira o vídeo oficial  com os melhores momentos da edição 2015.


segunda-feira, 16 de março de 2015

Belo vídeo do novo relógio da POLAR


Trabalhos científicos sobre fitness x mortalidade - VALE LER

Fitness & Mortality Update

http://www.drmichaeljoyner.com/fitness-mortality-update/

Two recent scientific papers make it time for a quick update on the topic of fitness and mortality.

1.  Fitness vs. Cancer Mortality

The first paper is meta-analysis that summarizes the results of a number of studies on the relationship between fitness and cancer mortality. The results were pretty striking:

“Six prospective studies with an overall number of 71 654 individuals and 2002 cases of total cancer mortality were included. The median follow-up time in the studies was 16.4 years. Cardiorespiratory fitness showed a strong, graded, inverse association with total cancer mortality. Using low cardiorespiratory fitness as the reference group, intermediate and high levels of cardiorespiratory fitness were related to statistically significant decreased summary relative risks (RRs) of total cancer mortality of 0.80 [95% confidence interval (CI) 0.67-0.97] and 0.55 (95% CI 0.47-0.65), respectively. Studies that adjusted for adiposity yielded similar results to those that did not adjust for adiposity.”

This means that folks with high cardiorespiratory fitness have about half the risk of death from cancer as people in the low fit group.   Usually, in these types of population studies “high fit” is defined as the ability to do “10 mets” of exercise. For example a person with a 10 met exercise capacity can typically run 6 miles (10 km) per hour for few minutes at the end of a maximum exercise test.   This is also an exercise capacity that many if not most middle aged people can attain if they watch their weight and workout regularly.   So while physical activity and cardiorespiratory fitness are not the same thing, many active middle aged people can get to 10 mets. The flip side of this relationship is that most highly fit people are also pretty active and they do at least some higher intensity exercise training which makes it likely they have a 10 met exercise capacity.

2.  Fitness vs. Cardiovascular mortality

It has been known for a long time that increased fitness is associated with both lower all-cause mortality and lower cardiovascular mortality. A remaining question is whether this relationship flattens out at about 10 mets. In other words do people who can do more than 10 mets have even lower mortality? The graph below comes from a short report on this topic in almost 70,000 people (64% men) followed for about 12 years including about 38,000 with an exercise capacity of greater than 10 mets. The top panel shows that very high fitness was associated with lower mortality in all age groups. The bottom panel shows the dose response relationships between fitness for the entire study population.   So greater fitness equals lower mortality.

FITproject

Summary

Evidence for the protective effects of fitness and its close relative physical activity keeps piling up.   The cancer data is especially heartening, and that fact that things don’t flatten out for fitness vs. mortality at very high levels of fitness is perhaps another piece of objective evidence against the too much exercise “hypothesis”.
 

sexta-feira, 13 de março de 2015

Aprendendo a correr - veja o vídeo e os links





Maratona do Rio reabriu para 500 novas inscrições

Maratona e Meia Maratona do Rio de Janeiro 2013

INSCRIÇÕES 2015

Imprimi
Prepare seu coração!  A Maratona do Rio de Janeiro já tem data. Vai ser realizada no dia 26 de julho.
Fique ligado! Dia 15/03 às 7hr, 500 novas inscrições serão disponibilizadas no site!
A entrega de kits vai ser realizada na Feira Rio Run, nos dias 23, 24 e 25 de julho no centro de convenções Sul América.
http://www.maratonadorio.com.br/inscricoes/

Estamos nos hidratando em excesso?

For years, the mantra was drummed into endurance-sports competitors: hydrate, hydrate, hydrate. Swig water at most marathon or triathlon fluid stations and drain your bottles during a cycling race—whether you’re thirsty or not.
Mounting research supports far different advice. Athletes are more likely to suffer severe harm by drinking too much during competition than by drinking too little, the evidence shows. In extreme cases, people have died after drinking too much liquid during a race.
Further, new studies suggest that 3% dehydration levels during competition, which experts once warned against, don’t hurt performance and might even help it. Increasingly, experts advocate a simple rule: During competition, drink when you’re thirsty.

terça-feira, 10 de março de 2015

Leitura obrigatória para os corredores

Em 1982, Haruki Murakami decidiu vender seu bar de jazz em Tóquio para se dedicar à escrita. Nesse mesmo período, começou a correr para se manter em forma. Um ano mais tarde, ele completou, sozinho, o trajeto entre Atenas e a cidade de Maratona, na Grécia, e viu que estava no caminho certo para se tornar um corredor de longas distâncias.






Os anos se passaram, e os romances de Murakami ganharam o mundo. Traduzido em 38 idiomas, ele é um dos autores mais importantes da atualidade. É também um maratonista experimentado e um triatleta. Agora, ele reflete sobre a influência que o esporte teve em sua vida e, sobretudo, em seu texto.

Este é um livro bem-humorado e sensível, filosófico e revelador, tanto para os fãs deste grande e reservado escritor quanto para as inúmeras pessoas que encontram satisfação semelhante nas corridas

Novo recorde mundial dos 200m - categoria + 95. E você se achando velho pra correr...


segunda-feira, 9 de março de 2015

Rio 450 anos

Corrida Rio 450 Anos

 
O aniversário é da cidade do Rio de Janeiro, mas o presente é para todos os corredores de rua espalhados pelo município. Como parte do calendário de comemorações dos 450 anos da Cidade Maravilhosa, organizado pelo Comitê Rio450, os cariocas irão participar no dia 22 de março, da Corrida Rio 450 – Caixa. A largada será num local com um visual espetacular: a Praça General Tibúrcio, na Praia Vermelha, e a chegada, 10km depois, no Aterro do Flamengo, próximo ao Monumento Estácio de Sá.
 
Capturar
 
“Temos duas provas muito características da Cidade do Rio de Janeiro: a Corrida de São Sebastião e a Maratona do Rio, considerada a mais bonita do mundo. É uma honra para a nossa empresa ter a oportunidade de organizar um evento exclusivo para a comemoração de uma data tão especial para a Cidade Maravilhosa”, diz Carlos Sampaio, sócio-diretor da Spiridon Eventos, empresa que organiza o evento.
As inscrições para a Corrida Rio 450 – Caixa serão feitas através do site www.corridario450anos.com.br. O valor é de 80 reais até o dia 15 de março ou até as inscrições se esgotarem.
Os cinco primeiros colocados no geral masculino e no feminino vão levar um troféu para casa. As cinco equipes de academia, personal trainer, grupos de corrida, equipes de empresa e colégios com mais inscritos também vão receber troféus. Como a corrida é em comemoração aos 450 anos da Cidade do Rio de Janeiro, o primeiro carioca a completar a prova também ganhará um troféu, tanto no masculino quanto no feminino. E para completar a celebração, os 450 primeiros colocados entre os quatro mil participantes vão ganhar medalhas especiais.
A Corrida Rio 450 – Caixa é uma organização da Spiridon Eventos, com patrocínio Caixa e parceria da prefeitura da Cidade do Rio de Janeiro, Comitê Rio 450, Rio Eu Amo Eu Cuido e FARJ.

Programação Corrida Rio 450 – Caixa

Data:
22 de Março de 2015 – Domingo
Distância:
10 Km
Largada: Praça General Tiburcio – Praia Vermelha – Urca
Chegada: Aterro do Flamengo – Monumento Estácio de Sá
Dia da Prova / Programação
6h30min: Abertura das áreas
7h45min: Aquecimento
8h00min: Largada
9h00min: Início da Premiação
Mais informações: www.corridario450anos.com.br

Apple Watch - uma alternativa ao Garmin?

What Will The New Apple Watch Mean For Runners?

 
The new Apple Watch will work with third party GPS-based tracking apps such as Strava (pictured above), RunKeeper, MapMyFitness, Nike+ and others.
The highly anticipated device will be available for pre-order on April 10. 
At the company’s “Spring Forward” event in San Francisco on Monday, Apple announced that its highly anticipated Apple Watch will be available for pre-order on April 10 and in-store purchases on April 24.
The Apple Watch Sport comes in two sizes—38 and and 42 millimeters—and features a sport-style wristband with white, blue, green, pink and black color options. The 38-millimeter version will retail for $349 while the 42-millimeter version is $399.
What does this mean for runners? And does it solve an unmet need? The impact remains to be seen given the prevalence of already available GPS-enabled running watches and tracking devices that don’t require you to use an iPhone. Runners and cyclists planning to use the water-resistant Apple Watch Sport—which is equipped with WiFi, Bluetooth, a heart-rate sensor, accelerometer and gyroscope—must carry their iPhones (version 5 and above) with them to enable the GPS technology on their wrists and provide real-time data about pace, distance, heart rate and calories burned for various types of activities. The watch will work with Apple’s own Activity and Workout apps, as well as with third party fitness and tracking apps such as Strava, Nike+ and others.
“We want people to be healthier by being more active,” Apple CEO Tim Cook said in the presentation. “[Apple Watch] tracks daily movement, how long you’re exercising and even reminds you if you’ve been sitting too long. Apple Watch will also send you reminders to be more active. In fact, on a Monday, it will send you a report on previous week and help you set goals for the next week. It’s like having a coach on your wrist.”
A custom-designed anodized aluminum case comes in silver or space gray and is 60 percent stronger than standard alloy—but still light enough to be comfortable for athletic activities, Apple senior vice president of design, Johnny Ive, said during the presentation. The display is protected by strengthened ion-X glass to protect against dings and scratches.
One of the most impressive features of the new Apple Watch is its purported battery life. “It has all-day battery life across a range of activities,” Cook said. “Eighteen hours for most people.” It is unknown as of this writing how hours-long runs and frequent app usage will affect that number, but Competitor editors are hoping to put it to the test in the coming months.
Many GPS-based activity tracking companies have been working closely with Apple since the initial announcement of the watch last September to create custom apps that will work with the device. Strava has redesigned its mobile app to seamlessly integrate with Apple Watch’s technology, delivering effortless connectivity and a more personal, engaging, and real-time training experience for cyclists and runners.
“The redesigned app will extend the breadth of Strava’s product portfolio from web and mobile to the most anticipated wearable device of our time, Apple Watch,” Erik Joule, Strava’s chief marketing and commerce officer said in a press release.
Apple featured model Christy Turlington Burns, founder of Every Mother Counts and a dedicated marathoner, as the first person in the world to finish a half marathon using an Apple Watch. Turlington ran the Kilimanjaro Half Marathon on March 1 using the Apple Watch. She will also use the device—while blogging about her experiences on Apple.com—in preparation for next month’s London Marathon, where she hopes to break four hours.
“It’s motivation—not just for training but for everyday things,” Turlington said during the press event. “During the race I relied on workout app to track time, measure distance and push my pace. In my short time using it, I can already see how it will be an important part of my life. I relied on it pretty heavily [during the half marathon]. There was a lot of altitude and elevation, so I checked it quite frequently.”

Read more at http://running.competitor.com/2015/03/shoes-and-gear/what-will-the-new-apple-watch-mean-for-runners_124247#eFLpcuSagmgLFIJh.99

Treinar com alguma incerteza pode te ajudar

How Uncertainty in Workouts Can Help Your Racing

Mimic the unpredictability of competitive situations during practice.

        January 25, 2015
Uncertainty in Wokrouts Illustration
When we prepare for a workout on a track, we typically know the details, down to how many intervals we are going to run, how fast they will be and how much recovery we will take between each one. Even with a coach, we have some say over these variables if the workout starts to go awry. Our control of the entire situation is high.
When we show up at a race, however, all that we know is how far it will be and that we have to finish. We don't know what our competitors will do, how they will impact our pacing strategy, what the conditions will feel like or what we will do if we feel subpar. We have less control and experience a higher degree of uncertainty.
And while we are really good at preparing for the physical demands of competition–and even some of the psychological demands, such as dealing with pain or fatigue–we are often really bad at preparing for the stress of a race situation.
A February 2014 paper in Sports Medicine that focuses on the decision-making process in self-paced endurance competitions says it is during periods of uncertainty that we are most susceptible to giving in to pain and slowing down. When our bodies face an unknown, they are more likely to err on the side of caution. If you are running at a steady pace, your brain can have a decent understanding of how the fatigue is going to build up. When you suddenly have to throw in a strong surge to stay with the pack, your brain goes through a period of uncertainty and has to re-evaluate your ability to continue.
We can train to handle periods of anxiety in order to be better prepared for race situations. One way is to implement workouts with incomplete information to create a strategy that mimics race ambiguity.
How to add uncertainty to a workout:
1. The simplest method is for coaches not to tell their athletes the complete workout; instead, they disclose what runners need to do as the session progresses. The athletes are unsure of how many intervals they will perform, how fast they'll have to run them and what recovery they'll get. They can't hold back or pace themselves. It creates just enough psychological tension to disrupt the athletes and requires them to adopt a "do my best now" mentality that is useful in a racing situation.
Example: Instead of telling athletes they have 4 × 800m in 2:45 and 4 × 400 in 1:20, relay only the information for the next repeat or the next set.
2. In a group setting, you can create uncertainty by surging. If you and a few training partners are doing a workout together, give each person the opportunity to throw in a surge at any time with the understanding that everyone in the group has to cover the increase in pace. This imitates a racing situation, when you have to cover moves without knowing how long the person will continue the surge.
Example: If you have a group of five people doing a 4-mile tempo run, give each person one unplanned surge between 30 seconds and 3 minutes in length.
3. If you run alone, it's harder to trick yourself in the workout. One way to get around this is by manipulating when you look at your watch for splits. Instead of looking at your time every 200m on the track, delay when you first check your splits.
Example: During a 4 × 1-mile workout, run the first repeat at pace while looking at splits. Then, during the second repeat, do not look at your watch until 800m. The third repeat, don't look until 1200m, and then try not to look at your time at all during the final repeat. The goal is to maintain pace as close as possible, even as you lose the feedback of knowing your splits.
4. A final method is to schedule uncertainty days. In these, you have a range of intervals and paces to choose from, but no set order. In a group, a different person can choose the next interval. Alone (or with a group), you can roll dice to decide which interval to do next. Not knowing what is coming keeps you giving your best in the moment, rather than metering your effort over the length of a known workout.
***
About the author: Steve Magness coaches professional runners and the cross country team at the University of Houston, where he is pursuing a doctorate in exercise science.

http://www.runnersworld.com/race-training/how-uncertainty-in-workouts-can-help-your-racing

domingo, 8 de março de 2015

Kathrine Switzer, uma grande mulher

Kathrine Switzer, nascida em 05 de janeiro de 1947, entrou pra história do esporte em 1967 quando tornou-se a primeira mulher a correr a tradicional Maratona de Boston. Ela conseguiu esse feito apesar do diretor da corrida ter tentado, sem sucesso,  removê-la da prova. Sete anos depois, Kathrine ganhou a Maratona de Nova Iorque e no ano seguinte atingiu a sua melhor marca em maratonas, chegando em segundo lugar na Maratona de Boston, com 2h51 min.



Ao longo da sua vida, Kathrine, além de uma grande atleta, tornou-se uma ativista da corrida, tendo inclusive lutado para que a Maratona feminina virasse um esporte olímpico, o que só foi acontecer em 1984.

Em 2017, quando o seu  feito histórico completar 50 anos, ela  planeja, aos 70 anos de idade,  voltar a correr  a Maratona de Boston.

São mulheres como Kathrine - persistentes, batalhadoras e cheias de energia - que tornam a nossa vida mais leve e nos inspiram permanentemente.





sábado, 7 de março de 2015

12 hábitos para corredores - mude a sua rotina!

12 Habits of Highly Motivated Runners 

Everyday tips for a fitter, healthier, and happier 2015.
Three runners running down a city sidewalk
 
Runners dream big. Tackling a new distance, posting a personal best, losing 20 pounds–we embrace grand challenges. But what happens after you accomplish your goal, or if your resolve weakens before you succeed? You risk stalling–unless you’ve changed your routines to those of a stronger, healthier runner. “Runners who are consistent with good habits have the most success,” says Tom Holland, an exercise physiologist, sports nutritionist, coach, and author of The Marathon Method.
This year, consider resolutions based on process instead of outcome. That way, you can sustain momentum by celebrating small, frequent victories. And you’ll avoid the all-or-nothing thinking that triggers massive disappointment if factors beyond your control interfere along the way–for instance, if you wake up to a sweltering race day.
The benefits of healthy habits spill over into a better life beyond running, too. Here are 12 healthy habits to embrace in 2015, with expert advice on how to make them your own.

HABIT: BECOME A MORNING RUNNER
You meant to log those five miles today, but between family, work, and social obligations, it just didn’t happen. Or you find your digestive system rebelling–or your sleep disrupted–courtesy of evening runs. The solution: Put running first on your agenda. “People who start to run early in the morning get hooked on that feeling of having accomplished so much before others are even awake, as well as the extra energy they get from that morning rush of endorphins,” says Lisa Reichmann, a Maryland-based running coach.
Make It Routine
Test the waters: Start with one or two days per week. Knowing you have the other five mornings to snooze makes getting up early less painful. And make sure you can get to bed on time the night before a crack-of-dawn call, or you risk skimping on sleep, Reichmann says.
Lay it out: Set out your clothes, shoes, water bottle, and reflective gear the night before to eliminate excuses and get out the door quickly. Set your coffeemaker on automatic so your brew is ready when you wake. And put your alarm across the room–jumping out of bed to turn it off makes it harder to hit the snooze button, Reichmann says.
Make a date: Nothing keeps you from going back to bed like knowing someone’s waiting for you. “Good conversation with running friends almost makes you forget that you are running at zero dark thirty on a cold morning,” says Julie Sapper, who coaches with Reichmann at Run Farther & Faster in Montgomery County, Maryland.
Give it time: All habits feel awkward at first. Since it requires resetting your body clock, morning running may require a little longer than most–at least three or four weeks–to sink in. Consider trying this habit in the spring, when weather and darkness are less likely to interfere. (And morning runs aren’t right for everyone, so re-evaluate after a month or two, Sapper says.)

HABIT: STRENGTH-TRAIN REGULARLY
Building muscle improves your health, reduces injury risk, and, according to a review in the journal Sports Medicine, improves your running performance. Across 26 studies of endurance athletes, strength-training programs (either plyometrics or heavy weights) boosted fitness, increased efficiency, and reduced runners’ times in 3K and 5K races. Design your own program by picking six exercises: two for each of your major muscle groups (upper body, core, and lower body), with one working the front side (say, planks) and one the back side (bridges), says Rebekah Mayer, national training manager at Minneapolis-based Life Time Run. Do them two or three days per week. And remember that intense strength-training DVDs or classes don’t always pair well with a running routine, says Sapper–if you do them, leave rest days between hard efforts. For an equipment-free at-home workout, see Nike's Strength Workout.
Make It Routine
Build it in: Runners that Reichmann and Sapper coach had an easier time incorporating strength moves when they penned them into their training plans. Now, their schedules might say: Run three miles, then do three sets of 15 one-legged squats, mountain climbers, planks, and push-ups. For best results, strength-train later in the same day as your more intense or longer running workouts, allowing a full day of recovery in between hard sessions, Mayer says.
Break it up: Try “exercise snacks”–planks when you get up in the morning, push-ups before you leave for work, lunges on coffee breaks.
Take a class: Don’t want to DIY? Choose a runner-friendly strengthening class that sounds fun, like Pilates, a barre class, or BodyPump. It might cost money, but spending can increase the odds you’ll follow through, Holland says.
Change it up: In about a month, your body will adjust to the routine. “Make it harder–whether it means doing more repetitions, more weight, or different exercises–or you’ll stop seeing results,” Mayer says.

NYNY Plank
 
HABIT: CROSS-TRAIN REGULARLY
If you’re struggling to squeeze three or four runs per week into your schedule, you shouldn’t worry about adding in other aerobic activities. But once you have a steady running habit, workouts like swimming, cycling, or rowing can boost your fitness without the impact stress of running. And by engaging different muscle groups, you can correct muscle imbalances and net a stronger, more well-rounded body. “This can increase your longevity as a runner,” Mayer says. If you do get hurt, you’ll also have a familiar option for maintaining fitness.
Make It Routine
Stay consistent: Sticking to a regular class at the gym is an easy way to automate cross-training. Even if you go solo, set up a regular date and location, such as cycling in your neighborhood on Monday mornings–context cues help habits to form.
Be realistic: Don’t set yourself up for failure by choosing a class you’ll have to rush to attend. Search for an option that meshes with your schedule.
Choose wisely: Gunning for a PR? Go with a type of cross-training that mimics running, such as cross-country skiing or pool running. If, however, your goal is overall fitness, select an activity that’s very different, like swimming or cycling, Mayer says.
Keep it easy: Treat cross-training like an aerobic recovery day; schedule it after hard running days and keep your effort level low enough to carry on a conversation, Mayer says. (However, if you’re injured and can’t run, you can cross-train harder.) And keep in mind that boot camp or fitness classes that involve treadmill running or road sprints don’t count as cross-training–that’s a running workout.

HABIT: EAT MORE VEGETABLES
Low-calorie and packed with nutrients, veggies should be a staple in every runner’s diet. Their high-quality carbohydrates power your workouts, and their antioxidants help you recover. “Vegetables also keep you regular, and we all know runners don’t need any ‘surprises’ while on a long run,” says Conni Brownell, who serves as the Brooks Running Beastro Chef (cooking for employees at the shoe company). The benefits last long after your cooldown: Each daily serving of produce (up to five) reduces your risk of early death by about five percent, according to a new study.
Make It Routine
Indulge in your favorites: Don’t choke down kale if you hate it. Pick up produce you actually want to eat, even if it’s more costly or less of a “superfood.”
Add them to your menu: When you buy a new veggie, know when you’ll consume it, says Jennifer Plotnek, lead behavior coach at weight-loss company Retrofit. Will you cook that spinach into your omelet, blend it into your postworkout smoothie, or make a big dinner salad?
Start on the side: Dive into the veggies first to avoid filling up before you get to them, says sports nutritionist and exercise physiologist Felicia Stoler, D.C.N., R.D. No sides (or only French fries)? Ask to swap or add vegetable soup or a salad and eat it first–you might consume fewer calories overall, according to Penn State University research.
Snack smarter: Trade chips or candy for a produce/protein pair–carrots and hummus or tuna on cucumber slices, for example–to improve between-meals eats.


HABIT: WARM UP BEFORE A RUN; STRETCH AND FOAM-ROLL AFTER
The repetitive motion of running tightens muscles, increasing your injury risk. Dynamic stretches before a run prep your body for more intense activities, says Gary Ditsch, lead exercise physiologist for weight-loss company Retrofit. Afterward, static stretching can return your muscles to their prerun length, even if you don’t actually gain flexibility, Mayer says. And foam rolling–either immediately postrun or later in the day–loosens tissue in ways that stretching alone can’t.
Ditsch advises a 10- to 15-minute warmup routine: Start with leg swings (first front to back, then side to side), then walk, march, and skip before you finally run. Postrun, stretch your hip flexors and hamstrings (which tighten during running and sitting), calves (to prevent Achilles tendinitis and plantar fasciitis), and your chest and shoulders. “We don’t think about using our arms during our run, but they can also get very tight,” Mayer says. Foam-roll any area that still feels tight, holding for a few seconds on tender points to help release them.
Make It Routine
Start small: Don’t kick things off with a 30-minute full-body elongation session. Start with 10 to 15 seconds of a single stretch after a run, then celebrate–the feeling of declaring victory each time you incorporate a habit strengthens it over time, Plotnek says.
Pair it up: Create a bond between an activity you’re doing daily anyway–say, watching The Daily Show–and foam rolling.
Keep it in sight: Buy your own foam roller instead of relying on your gym or training buddy. Keep it in a visible spot near where you’ll use it, and have a massage stick in your office, Sapper says.
Factor in the time: If you have a 45-minute run on your training plan and exactly 45 minutes to do it, chances are you’ll rush into it without the dynamic stretches. Adjust your schedule so you have a full hour for your workout, or consider decreasing the mileage to accommodate the warmup.
HABIT: UNPLUG ON THE RUN ONCE A WEEK
For data-obsessed runners, occasionally ditching the GPS reconnects you with your natural pacing and rhythms. “You’ll learn what conversational pace feels like and what your breathing should sound like at different intensity levels,” Mayer says. And while no one doubts the motivating power of music, removing your earbuds sometimes offers other advantages. For one, you’ll stay safer in unfamiliar territory; plus, you’ll notice and appreciate your surroundings more without auditory distractions, Mayer says. And if you’re planning a race that forbids tunes, you’ll line up prepared.
Make It Routine
Time it right: Easy runs, trail runs, and periods when you’re coming back from an injury or recovering from a race are prime times to go gadget-free. “Without the pressure of seeing your pace, it can be easier to take it easy while you’re ramping up again,” Mayer says.
Remind yourself: This habit is tricky because you’re shifting your routine on just one day of the week. You lace up, slap on your watch, and grab your phone–and you’re out the door with all the gear you meant to leave behind. So choose a consistent day–say, a tech-free Tuesday–and set a recurring phone alert for before you head out, Plotnek says.
Go by time: Measuring some runs by time instead of distance lets you at least downgrade from a GPS unit to an analog watch. If you feel the need to note your pace and mileage at the end, choose a go-to route–you’ll at least avoid continually checking your pace, Reichmann says.
Reset your motivation: On gadget-free runs, focus on contemplation, prayer, or disconnecting from the stress of the day. You might experience your runs in a new way and embrace being unreachable,
Plotnek says.



HABIT: COOK AT HOME MORE OFTEN
Extra calories, fat, sugar, and sodium lurk in restaurant dishes, so dining out adds extra pounds that weigh down your running performance and your health. One study in the journal Public Health Nutrition found that two or more restaurant meals per week added up to an extra quarter-pound of bulk per year on average. Research suggests that carrying just two excess pounds can add 12.4 seconds to your 5K time and one minute, 45 seconds to your marathon finish. You don’t have to transform into a top chef, but mastering kitchen basics has perks beyond weight control. “Preparing your own food teaches you what works for your fuel needs and what doesn’t,” says Brownell. “You’re in control of the food choices and also the cost.”
Make It Routine
Get a jumpstart: Sign up for a cooking class. Whole Foods offers courses at their stores; you can also seek out local options or check out instructional Quick Bites videos.
Clean up your kitchen: Ditch or stow gear you never use to clear real estate for daily tools like a chef’s knife, a cutting board, a pot, and a grill pan, along with common ingredients like olive oil, salt, and pepper.
Re-create your cravings: Have a restaurant fave? Google it–you may find the recipe or something similar. Experiment at home to replicate the flavors while controlling the ingredients.
Plan for flavor: Take 30 minutes to an hour each week to find recipes and go to the grocery store. Don’t forget fresh herbs, which “keep meals interesting, and if you are interested, you are more likely to eat at home,” Brownell says.
HABIT: ADD A WEEKLY LONG RUN
Efforts of an hour or longer build endurance, grow capillaries that carry nourishing blood to your muscles, strengthen bones and ligaments, and prepare you for races of any distance. Newer or low-mileage runners first need to focus on running regularly three or four times per week, then building up to an hour on one of those runs, says Ditsch. Designate one day a week as your long day, even if that means 20 minutes of run/walk instead of your usual 15. Then add 10 percent to your longest run per week, but never any more than a half-mile to two miles at a time, Ditsch says.
Make It Routine
Plan it out: Write out your long-run progression for the next month or two in advance, then sit down each Sunday night or Monday morning and plug your long run (and the others) into your schedule. Be flexible–if you need to reserve weekends for family activities, try early Friday mornings for long runs.
Turn in early: “If you’re going longer on Saturday, Friday night should be a little more mellow. Eat and drink appropriately for what’s coming up,” says Mayer.
Try a new scene: Drive to a nearby trail or forest preserve. Varying your surroundings will make the hours or miles pass more quickly.
Find some buddies: A support system helps any new habit take root. But groups provide added benefits as the miles add up–safety, distraction, and an opportunity to develop bonds.



HABIT: GET ENOUGH SLEEP
Few habits have as much of an impact on your running and your health. “Everything is so much worse when you don’t have enough sleep; it not only permeates your running, it affects your work life, your family, your relationships,” Sapper says. While you snooze, your body and mind recharge, repairing the damage done from hard training, releasing human growth hormone to build muscles, and strengthening connections between nerves and muscles. Regularly shorting on shut-eye has been linked to everything from limits on your muscle glycogen storage to injury risk and moodiness, weight gain, diabetes, and heart disease. Most people need six to nine hours per night; if you regularly feel like you might nod off during meetings or if you conk out immediately when you hit the sack, you’re probably not sleeping enough.
Make It Routine
Declare bedtime sacred: Start with a month-long commitment to add between a half-hour and an hour more to your regular sleeping time. Clear that block of time plus an hour beforehand to wind down. Ask your friends and family to nix late-night calls and texts, says Shelby Harris, Psy.D., director of the Behavioral Sleep Medicine Program at Montefiore Medical Center.
Unplug: During that final hour, shut down all your screens, including phones, TVs, tablets, and computers. The blue light they emit dims production of the sleep hormone melatonin. Designate an old running-shoe box for electronics–at the appointed time, plunk your devices inside and shut the lid until morning. Do something relaxing, like reading a book or completing a crossword, instead.
Watch the caffeine: Rethink that late-afternoon latte. A caffeine jolt as long as six hours before bedtime can disrupt your slumber, decreasing the restfulness of your sleep without you even realizing it, according to a study in the Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine.
Choose sleep over miles: If you’re an early morning runner but can’t seem to hit the sack early the night before, cut your run a few miles short rather than setting your alarm earlier, Sapper says.
HABIT: APPLY SUNSCREEN BEFORE EVERY RUN
An estimated one in five Americans will develop skin cancer–and with long hours on the roads or trails, runners face a particularly high risk. In fact, an Austrian study found distance runners had more irregular moles and other cancer risk factors than nonathletes. Ultraviolet light also causes wrinkles, brown spots, and other cosmetic damage, says marathoner and Boston dermatologist Robin Travers, M.D. Fortunately, sunscreen protects you from all these consequences, provided you use it properly. While visible sunlight dims on cloudy or winter days and at dawn or dusk, cancer-causing UVA rays still shine through–so unless your entire run will be completed with the aid of a headlamp, you need to slather up, she says.
Make It Routine
Go up an SPF: A sun protection factor of 15 adequately protects you from skin cancer, but only if you use the recommended ounce to cover your body–and most people, even dermatologists, don’t, Travers says. “I can’t tell you how often I’ve been on the Boston Marathon bus in the morning and I see people applying these teeny tiny dabs of sunscreen to their faces,” she says. If you move up to 45 or higher, you’re more likely to get the protection you need even if you skimp.
Make it last: Most sunscreens contain active ingredients that, paradoxically, break down after two to three hours in ultraviolet light. Look for ingredients that say they’re photo-stabilized, meaning they’ll last four to five hours with one application. And make sure the bottle says “water resistant for 80 minutes”–while recent labeling changes mean no sunscreen can claim to be sweatproof, these formulas resist moisture the longest, says American Academy of Dermatology spokesman Darrell Rigel, M.D.
Stick it in your shoe: Store the sunscreen in your trainers, so you literally can’t go for a run without noticing it, Travers says.
Avoid the sting: If burning eyes are holding you back from sunscreen application, try Travers’s trick: Apply sunscreen only from the eyes down, then protect your eyes with sunglasses and your forehead with a running cap.


HABIT: EAT BREAKFAST EVERY DAY
Your muscles can store only about six to seven hours’ worth of glycogen for energy, so each morning you wake up depleted, says Stoler. A morning meal offers you a chance to replenish them and also sets the tone for the rest of your day. Studies of people who’ve lost weight and kept it off show 78 percent of them eat breakfast on a regular basis.
Make It Routine
Choose something over nothing: Your stomach may need to adjust to eating first thing. Even a piece of fruit can get you started, Plotnek says.
Balance it out: Add on until you’re eating a meal that’s about 300 to 400 calories, featuring half produce, one-quarter whole grains, and one-quarter lean protein. If you eat it after your run, aim for a 4:1 ratio of carbohydrates to protein to satisfy you and begin to repair the muscles you damaged during your workout. Expand your definition. You don’t have to stick with traditional breakfast food if you’re not a fan, says Stoler. Leftovers, sandwiches, salad–anything is fair game.
Pregame it: Spend Sundays prepping a week’s worth of breakfasts–dole out cooked oatmeal into single-serving containers or boil eggs. If you’re a smoothie fan, clean, chop, and store the fresh ingredients when you get home from the store.
HABIT: SIT LESS
Even runners spend an average of 10 hours and 45 minutes per day with their butts parked in chairs. As you rest, your hip flexors and hamstrings tighten and your posture slumps, boosting injury risk, Ditsch says. And the research on the health harms of sedentary behavior has grown so alarming that many experts call the problem “sitting disease.” An exercise habit alone won’t save you from consequences like weight gain and heart disease, but research also shows that standing or walking breaks can make a big difference.
Make it Routine
Track it: Log your sitting time or strap on an activity monitor - manufacturers like Polar and Garmin now make models that double as GPS devices. Then consider this: Six to seven hours of total daily sitting time harms your fitness about as much as an hour of running helps it, according to a study in the Mayo Clinic Proceedings.
Set mini-goals: Use that tracker to look beyond your total daily step count, which is skewed by your runs. Most devices tally the hours you spend sedentary; aim never to log more than two in a row where you’re getting fewer than 1,000 steps.
Remind yourself: Set two alarms on your phone, computer, or fitness tracker midmorning and two midafternoon to tell yourself to move.
Demand to stand: Make rules for your workday: Rise each time someone comes into your office, pace on every call, hover in the back of the room during meetings. Anchor it to what you’re already doing and you’ll find it easier to remember, and over time, the first behavior will become a trigger for the new habit.

http://m.runnersworld.com/running-tips/12-habits-of-highly-motivated-runners?cid=socTP_20150307_41590976&adbid=574087141220724736&adbpl=tw&adbpr=14882900