Categories: Fitness

Post-Race Thoughts

After a big race, there is a lot that goes through my brain.

Usually first is, when can I eat?

This comment from Emily is 100% accurate. When I thought that something was going to stand in between me and eating post race, I nearly freaked the hell out. (And I’m generally a pretty low-key person. Until you get in between me and my food.)

The Next Race / ALL THE RACES

After I get some food in me, I start to turn my thoughts to The Next Race.

As we sat at Churchkey and Emily and Laura tried to talk me into the Vermont City Marathon, I pulled out my phone and pulled up the McMillan Running Calculator. I felt much more confident about sub-4:00 (you know, whenever I do actually decide on my next marathon) after hitting 1:50, but I was curious to see what the calculator would say.

WELL, OKAY!

The marathon at an 8:52 pace sounds really scary. 26.2 miles under a 9-minute pace? I don’t know about that… but the 49:29 10K and 1:22 10-miler sound more doable.

And all of a sudden, I want to race a 10K and a 10-miler soon. And/or top off my half training with some marathon training.

I most definitely want to find another half soon. My next half is Brooklyn in May and then Zooma June 1, but I need this sooner.

How did I do it?

I’d say my training was about 80% where I wanted it to be. I have a much harder time devoting myself to half training than to full training, because I know that I will die if I am undertrained for 26.2; 13.1 I know I can generally pull off. There’s been some stuff going on that I haven’t blogged about, but honestly, I had a hard time completely devoting myself to my training.

But the training I got in? My speedwork was damn spot-on, and I channeled that uncomfortable feeling during the last mile or so of the race. I finally got really into yoga (for me.) I’ve been going to Uplift for strength. I think all of that really helped.

But could I have done better?

Yes, sure. I ran my heart out, and I am truly happy with my time (hi, 5 minute PR), but I also know that I was so damn close to sub-1:50 and there must have been a few spots where I could have dug deeper and gone sub-1:50.

But do I want to keep training?

I’m always so split about this after a big race. Part of me really wants to just do whatever workouts I want to, but another part of me wants to have a training plan to keep me on track. I also have a tri coming up in June, so I’ll need to turn my training to that soon.

Am I alone? Do you have a million thoughts like this after a big goal race? Do you usually want to keep training hard or are you excited to back down and focus on other exercise?

Theodora Blanchfield

View Comments

  • Yes!!! I feel like after every race my thoughts are "Whew, glad that's over"..."I'm hungry. where's the food"...and then "What's next??"

    R&R DC was my first race with an actual time goal in mind, so now I keep thinking about how far I can push myself now that I know what I am actually capable of. Running is such an addicting drug.

  • Normally I am ready to keep going with training after a race. I am looking forward to this first marathon so I can hopefully drop back just a little and add in a lot more strength work. I really need to tone this bod but can't seem to devote the time when I'm running this much. Of course, if I miss my goal I'll probably have to keep going because I have a goal to reach. My brain basically never stops with the obsessions.

  • I almost always want to train again right after a race. After the dust settles a bit I come back to my senses and run without a plan for a while and I usually am happy about that decision! Then other times I jump into another goal race training plan :)

  • I made the mistake of taking a "break" from running (2 months and counting) and now I'm scared to be starting all over again. I need to find a half, or at least a 10k, to register for to get my mojo back.

    Re: the food thing, after my (first?) half, they only had Domino's pizza at the finish. I ate a piece out of desperation and decided that finish-line food choices would be a deciding factor in which races to enter from now on.

  • I'm basing this on the one half marathon that I've completed (but the couple dozen other races) so take this with a grain of salt. I like having a week or two off to do whatever work outs I want. If I feel tired a shorter run is good but if I'm feeling good and my legs are loose then why not hit 5-6 miles? The more important part is to run happy. I don't want to immediately go back into a training plan without having at least a little bit of downtime for fear of burning out. However, I know that if I'm without a training plan for too long then I feel a little lost. I've lost 211 pounds over the last ~2 years so it's important to keep active, even during the down time... sometimes that's when I find time to catch up on the things I've missed (like those 20+ mile bike rides) while I was focused on the long weekend runs or recovering from the long weekend runs!

    Congratulations, again, on your PR! You are such an inspiration.

  • I have been super click happy about races since Saturday. I'm running Vermont, but I've also been deliberating about Zooma, about trying to find a 10k, looking for another half marathong, and debating about 4 other marathons. Obviously, I need to calm the hell down, but I just want to race, dammit!

  • I usually need some down time but then get fired up again and want to set a new PR or try a new distance. It's funny because I'm not super competitive (I don't think?) but races stoke a fire in me. I actually just wrote today about how I'm revamping my training post-NYC Half!

  • I get very race happy after a big goal race also. I ran the NYC Half this weekend and missed sub-2 by a 8 seconds - it's killing me! I have the Cherry Blossom 10 miler in 2.5 weeks and the More/Fitness women's half in 3 weeks, though, so I have other opportunities to race. Did you definitely decide against the Vermont marathon? Sounds tempting!

  • I have learned from experience that even if I am fired up right after a race, my body def needs downtime and a break from training between events. I don't mind planning future stuff in my head, but never pull the trigger cause i know I will regret it later!
    And as far as food, I love to have a special splurge after a race, but esp after a long, hard effort I usually have zero appetite - so much so that I usually have to force calories down. Generally I get super hungry the next day, so I have started saving my splurge foods for that day so I can actually enjoy them! The only exception I had to this was when I did my 50 miler, I was hungry about 2 hours later (very unusual for me after that many miles!) and stayed famished for the next 36 hours! I have never eaten that much food without a stomachache, it was amazing!

  • I usually want to rush out and race again as soon as I cross the finish line. It takes that first post race run, which is usually a disaster, to convince me that I need to give myself a break. And eat! Post race I definitely want to eat all the food.

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