I joined this forum 4 years ago, and with everyone's support and advice managed to complete the Couch to 5k programme. Ok, it took me 15 weeks rather than 9, but by the end of those 15 weeks, I could run for 30 minutes non stop. I moved on to Laura's stepping stones podcasts, and before too long I could run 5k, did my first park run, and haven't looked back since. The only niggle was try as I might, I couldn't get anywhere near running 5k in 30 minutes.
So 18 months ago, I decided that perhaps I needed a different goal, and signed up to take part in the Fulham 10K. I followed the advice of all the mentors here (thank you all), and increased my weekly mileage bit by bit - and then at the eleventh hour the run was cancelled because it snowed! Leap forward 8 months (and a broken foot), and I'm in training again for the re-arranged run in November 2018. Two weeks to go and I sprain my ankle whilst taking part in my local park run...grrrrr. Two weeks of complete rest (and several physio sessions) later, and I'm standing in the starting gate queue in Fulham with my daughter. We agree I have nothing to lose, that it's perfectly OK to run a K and walk a K, and pull out completely if the ankle protests. But the atmosphere gets the better of me. I run 5k. There's a water station and I grab a bottle, and walk while I drink it. The ankle is fine. I run on again. The last two kilometres are tough, but it's my hips that are beginning to hurt, not my ankle. So no reason to give up. The last kilometre feels so long but there are people hanging out of windows and standing on street corners, all cheering us on. I complete the 10k in 67 minutes. YAY!!!! OK, I walked a few minutes in the middle, but who's counting?
So, goal achieved, what next? Back to that niggling 5k in 30 minutes.....At Christmas, my daughter read an article which advised including hills in every run to improve stamina. So I find a new route for my week day runs. It starts with a fairly gentle downhill section - the uphill bits come later. As I run through January I discover an interesting thing....it seems it's not so much the running uphill that's helping improve my time for 5k - it's that week by week I find I can keep up the pace I set for myself in that first downhill section through more and more of my run.
And so today, just over 4 years since I signed up to this forum, this 64 year old Mum ran 5k in 29 minutes and 57 seconds!
So to everyone who's struggling reaching their goal - whether it's 30 minutes of running, running 5k, or 5k in 30 minutes, please don't give up, because it will come! My advice is not to be too hard on yourself when it doesn't work out; if you can't solve it in one way, try another tack, or set an different goal. And just sometimes, a solution presents itself when you are least expecting it!