国产吃瓜黑料

GET MORE WITH OUTSIDE+

Enjoy 35% off GOES, your essential outdoor guide

UPGRADE TODAY

Kara Goucher came back from her pregnancy to set a new PR at the Boston Marathon.
Kara Goucher came back from her pregnancy to set a new PR at the Boston Marathon. (Photo: Courtesy Oiselle)
In Stride

Getting Back into Running, According to the Pros

Four of the sport's best on what they've learned from taking time off and coming back

Published: 
Image
(Photo: Courtesy Oiselle)

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

Every athlete knows that comebacks aren鈥檛 easy. (Just ask .) Regardless of whether you鈥檙e returning from an injury or a voluntary hiatus, regaining your previous form can pose a challenge that鈥檚 as much mental as it is physical. Your body may be slow to relearn movements that once came with fluid ease, just as your mind wonders why the hell it鈥檚 taking so long.

The process can be particularly daunting for runners. In an age when we have an oppressive abundance of activity trackers and GPS devices, there鈥檚 no place to hide when your fitness isn鈥檛 up to snuff. Your Garmin becomes a brutal reminder of how much faster you used to be.

At some point, however, all runners have to grapple with the challenge of regaining their lost form. (Unless you鈥檙e this guy.) To prove that even the most formidable practitioners of the sport are not immune to the trials of the comeback trail, we asked four top-level runners to reflect on the experience of starting up again. While their approaches differed, a common theme emerged: even for the most accomplished of elites, what mattered most was simply being able to run again.

We hear that.


Lauren Fleshman

Lauren Fleshman navigated the rocky path of returning to running.
Lauren Fleshman navigated the rocky path of returning to running. (Courtesy Oiselle)

When she was pregnant in 2013, two-time 5,000-meter national champion technically took only 12 weeks off from running. But as far as serious training goes, she says a good year was compromised, as she didn鈥檛 have the smoothest of pregnancies.聽For Fleshman, coming back meant 鈥渟tarting from scratch鈥 and contending with an eerie sense of not having total control of her own body.

鈥淚 feel like there鈥檚 a point of no return when you finally have to let go of any fitness you previously had and just accept that you鈥檙e going to be starting over. When your break [from running] exceeds that point of no return, it鈥檚 actually kind of pleasurable to come back because your expectations are that you鈥檙e starting from zero. For me, I just missed the feeling of running. [When I start running again], even though I felt like I was breathing like a freight train and everything hurt, somehow it didn鈥檛 bother me. The joy of moving and getting started overwhelms the negativity. But it definitely helped me to understand what it feels like for people who are just getting started [as runners]. The first minute or two was bliss. Like I was free to finally do it. But then the reality of the challenge set in. My legs were thundering. My body was jiggling. I felt floppy through my core. I wasn鈥檛 this fined-tuned efficiency machine anymore. I just felt a little bit out of control of my body, and that was disorienting. So, first it was emotional, and then it was just a body-awareness thing, how I was just moving differently through space.鈥

Postscript: Fleshman in 2016. She now runs the energy bar company . She still runs every day.


Michael Wardian

Wardian was one of 30 competitors in the World Marathon Challenge, in which one race took place in Antarctica.
Wardian was one of 30 competitors in the World Marathon Challenge, in which one race took place in Antarctica. (Courtesy Martin M酶ls忙ter)

, perhaps the world鈥檚 most prolific semipro marathoner, had to take four months off in 2012 when he came down with five pelvic stress fractures and five hernias. Though he was able to stay reasonably fit by biking and aqua-jogging, it was the most substantial 鈥渂reak鈥 he had ever taken since he started running seriously. Wardian vividly recalls his first longer run outside after the injury鈥攁n eight-mile route from the U.S. Marine Corps War Memorial in Arlington鈥攁nd the way it spurred a simultaneous sense of gratitude and relief.

When I was injured, I had every emotion鈥攆rom thinking my career was over to that I鈥檇 never be able to run again. I was put back together with mesh after my hernia surgery, and I was really worried that I was going to tear the mesh or that I was going to tear my muscle. And I was nervous about how I would deal with it mentally if I wasn鈥檛 the same runner and athlete I used to be鈥攇oing from being one of the top athletes in the world to being someone who just finishes. And at that point, I was content to just be someone that finishes. I love winning, and I love being competitive and challenging myself, but I love running more than that. [For my first run back] I called my friends, and we did an eight-mile loop. Even though I still had good fitness from the aqua-jogging and the cycling, I remember being so nervous about the run. My legs were fatigued like crazy from just taking impact鈥攊t felt like I ran 20 miles鈥攂ut I remember finishing the run and being absolutely ecstatic when I didn鈥檛 have any pain. I just remember feeling so grateful. I keep that feeling of gratitude to this day.

Postscript: In January of this year, Wardian ran seven marathons on seven continents in seven days. His average race time was 2:45:56.


Stephanie Howe

Letting go and being active without forcing training helped Howe come back from an injury.
Letting go and being active without forcing training helped Howe come back from an injury. (Courtesy Stephanie Howe)

In December 2015, following a long period of nagging pain, elite ultrarunner underwent Achilles surgery on her left foot. Howe, whose accolades include , says her recovery was hampered by an ill-fated attempt to be ready in time for last summer鈥檚 Western States. A stress fracture in Howe鈥檚 hip (from biking!) served as a wake-up call that you shouldn鈥檛 rush the recovery process.

When all is said and done, I spent over a year away from the sport I love. [Before surgery] my days revolved around running or rehabbing from running鈥攖aking care of my body with yoga or bodywork stuff. The summer before I had surgery, I did the Western States 100 and UTMB, which is also a 100-mile race, so I was racing at a high level and really trying to train and perform.

[After surgery] I really wanted to run Western States again in June 2016. So I cross-trained really hard through the winter. When I got the okay to start running, I had overdone it and ended up injured again. I learned a huge lesson that when you鈥檙e injured, you should let everything go and just heal. So I didn鈥檛 put anything on the calendar. No races. Every athlete is different, but [when coming back from injury] I think it鈥檚 important to not have a race on the schedule, because otherwise you force yourself to push limits too quickly, rather than doing it when you鈥檙e ready. I think it鈥檚 helpful to not have any expectations and be totally honest with yourself about how your body is doing, because it鈥檚 easy to talk yourself into thinking you鈥檝e progressed further than you really have.

After I blew it that summer, I let go of trying to cross-train. I just reframed my thoughts. I鈥檝e always been an athlete, but I try to stay well-rounded and keep other things going on, just in case something like that happens. It was good, because I actually had a great summer despite not running a step or really cross-training. I just kind of enjoyed life. I cross-trained a little bit, but it was more like, 鈥淥h, I鈥檓 going to go for a swim today because it鈥檚 sunny and I want to get a tan.鈥 Or 鈥淚鈥檓 going to go camping with my dog and go for a bit of a hike.鈥 I didn鈥檛 force that stuff, and because I wasn鈥檛 thinking about how I had to get myself back into shape, it just happened鈥攁nd it was so much easier. In September, when it came time to start trying to run again, I felt good and was able to slowly progress because I had no expectations. By that point, I was kind of like, 鈥淚f I can鈥檛 race again, that鈥檚 okay. I just want to be able to run again. I miss this so much.鈥

Postscript: In January, Howe won the Bandera 100K, thus ensuring entry into this summer鈥檚 Western States. She was the overall race winner. 鈥淚 beat all the boys,鈥 she says.


Kara Goucher

Getting comfortable pushing the limit was Goucher's biggest hurdle.
Getting comfortable pushing the limit was Goucher's biggest hurdle. (Courtesy Oiselle)

When you鈥檙e a pro athlete, 鈥渢ime off鈥 from running carries a different meaning than it does for the lumbering masses. , the 2007 10,000-meter聽World Championships silver medalist, for instance, ran throughout her 2010 pregnancy but, in her own assessment, 鈥渄idn鈥檛 do anything hard.鈥 Goucher had committed to racing the Boston Marathon six months after giving birth and found that the most difficult readjustment was willing herself to cross the pain threshold.

My son was born at the end of September. I was back at practice within a month of having him because I had made the commitment [to race Boston], but it still took a while before I felt comfortable to push myself. I was just so scared, and there was just this barrier. Because when you鈥檙e pregnant, the whole time, it鈥檚 like, 鈥淛ust don鈥檛 breath too hard!鈥 and 鈥淒on鈥檛 get your heart-rate up too high!鈥 You kind of accept just being a turtle, and you kind of enjoy it. But when you鈥檙e an elite athlete, you can鈥檛 do that鈥攜ou have to be willing to ride that discomfort line, so that was really hard for me to get back into.

I remember the day where my coach got mad at me. We were doing 200s on the track, and he said, 鈥淛ust run all out. On this one, I don鈥檛 want you to look at a watch. I want it to hurt. I want it to be scary. There鈥檚 going to come a point where you have to make a decision. Are you going to come back or not? I just want you to run all out.鈥 And I did. My body didn鈥檛 fall apart. I breathed really hard, but my breathing came back into control quickly. I started to feel tired halfway through that 200, but I was able to keep going. It was the day where I finally decided, 鈥淥kay I鈥檓 going to hurt.鈥 And I survived it. And then the next time I went out to do a harder session, I was a little bit more brave, a little bit more willing to risk, and it all started coming back together. It just turned things around for me and helped me remember that it鈥檚 okay to run hard.

Postscript: In April 2011, Goucher finished fifth in the Boston Marathon and ran 2:24:52. It remains her career PR.

Lead Photo: Courtesy Oiselle

Popular on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online