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Running
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Transcript of Running
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Fitango EducationHealth Topics
Running
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Overview
Running is defined as the following action:
“To move swiftly on foot so
that both feet leave the ground during each stride.”
Running is also
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Overview
one of the most popular mass-participation sports in the world with large
running events –such as the New York and London marathons – drawing a wide
number of competitors from around the world. It was reported that in 2002 as
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Top resources
Runner’s World
www.runnersworld.com
New York Road Runners
http://www.nyrr.org/
Cool Running
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Top resources
http://www.coolrunning.com/
Running & Jogging
http://running.about.com/
Map My Run
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Why I run
Taken from the moteevate blog.
I was 27-years-old when my metabolism
finally gave in. Until then I could eat whatever I wanted to eat, drink as much
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Why I run
as I wanted to drink and park myself on the couch for as long as I liked. It
didn’t matter what I did, my body just wouldn’t accumulate any fat. I was a
rake, stick-thin, able to wriggle into any pair of pants with ease.
But that all suddenly stopped when I hit my
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Why I run
late twenties. I began to notice a dune of fat forming around my midriff, an
overspill of flesh poured over my waistband, and my bottom began to look like
it didn’t belong in skinny jeans.
Don’t get me wrong, I didn’t put on a huge
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Why I run
amount of weight, but it was enough to notice or make people wonder if I was
smuggling something under my shirt.
That was my motivation to start running
again. I say again because, back in high school, I was a keen cross country
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Why I run
runner. In those halcyon days I would zip through half a mile in a little over
two minutes. Training was intense – I ran across endless sand dunes that
stretched out across the Scottish coastline, veered inland and sped through
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Why I run
scarp, vale and stubble fields, and thought nothing of rushing up hills and
barreling down the other side. But then off I went to university and suddenly
hill reps and weekend races didn’t seem like such a good idea. Within a couple
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Why I run
of months I would only ever run to catch a bus.
You might think that my previous athletic
experience would be a help when I laced up my running shoes after all those
years. Quite the opposite in fact – when I started running again my inability
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Why I run
to trundle through a mile without feeling like my lungs had been napalmed made
for a cruel reminder of how unkind I’d been to my body. I thought that it would
be easy to get back into shape, that I’d shed pounds and smash my personal
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Why I run
bests in no time. I mean, I’m an adult now, surely the late twenties me can run
faster than the 15-year-old version? Well, it turns out that me 2.0 isn’t even
quick enough to taste the dust of my teenage self. The culmination of too many
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Why I run
late nights, too much beer and a knee mangled in a bizarre dry ski slope
accident (but that’s another blog post entirely).
But still I kept on running. Don’t get me
wrong, those first few training sessions were tough. There was the physical
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Why I run
pain of dragging leaden legs through two miles of continuous running; then
there was the wounded pride when I realized that my body couldn’t handle what
my mind expected it to do. But I didn’t give up because I knew that, even if I
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Why I run
was trundling rather than running, I was starting to get healthy again. Soon
enough I saw changes in my body. I could return to store changing rooms and try
on skinny fit jeans without fear of getting stuck and having to be removed from
them by the “Jaws of Life”.
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Why I run
After that I still didn’t stop running. I
kept on going because, when the fear of going into cardiac arrest had cooled, I
realized that, actually, I really enjoy it. There’s a real pleasure in doing
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Why I run
something so primal, something as fundamental as putting one foot in front of
the other. Increasingly we are cooped up in offices and stuck behind desks all
day; it’s liberating to use your body for something other than tapping away on
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Why I run
a keyboard. I also found that running makes me feel great. There is
nothing more therapeutic than pounding all of your worries out on the tarmac.
Your job, your relationship, your mortgage, your team’s chances of making the
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Why I run
playoffs – none of that stuff matters when you’re three miles into a session
and towing your butt up a massive hill.
So, I guess, the reason I’ve kept on
running is because my mind has paired it with positives – I find it therapeutic
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Why I run
and it makes me feel good. This, it seems, is a crucial factor in maintaining
the motivation to keep lacing up your running shoes and hitting the road. While
panning for internet gold to post on the moteevate twitter feed
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Why I run
I came across this Huffington Post article. In it Christy Matta –
trainer, consultant, writer and general all-round motivational guru – said: “If
exercising more often is paired in your mind with missing relaxing time in
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Why I run
front of the TV, you’ll likely lose your enthusiasm for exercising. On the
other hand, if exercising means you get a much-needed break and some time with
a friend, you’re much more likely to stick with it.”
So, if you’re struggling to heave yourself
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Why I run
off the couch, pause for a second and try to re-classify the role of exercise
in your life. It shouldn’t be a chore, and if it is you will pass it up
whenever you get the chance. Instead, pair it with positives – the buzz you get
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Why I run
after completing a workout, the way exercise clears your mind or, if this works
for you, the opportunity it gives you to wear spandex.
I’ve found my positives, and since then
I’ve never looked back – except to admire my once-again-svelte rear end.