Yesterday and today had niggly knee and niggly asthma, so decided to keep it light. Still better than doing nothing eh?
Keeping to my really light, slow jog, concentrating on keeping my steps shorter and under my hips really worked. I actually felt I could easily have gone on all day at that pace, but in view of slight body rebellions (probably result of my mad down hill sprint last week) I thought it best to keep it reasonably short today.
So. An easy one, in light rain which was lovely. All being well, can push things on again next week.
Happy running all...
Written by
Scout37
Graduate
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I have a question about this. I keep reading that running slowly improves stamina and ultimately speed.
Can someone please explain how this works?
Whilst I have greatly improved my stamina over the C25K and beyond, I have only improved my speed on shorter runs. I am still only comfortable at about 10 minutes per kilometre. I can get this up to 8 minutes, briefly less, but only up to about 2k then I am finished.
I absolutely love running at my happy pace, but will this really improve my fitness? Yes I'm mixing it up, doing some shorter faster ones, but I'd love to understand more about how it works.
I'm never going to be quick, even in school days running for the county I didn't have a fast twitch muscle in my body, just relied on stamina and holding a decent pace start to finish.
So, I'll never be fast. But I want to keep getting fitter!
Running slowly will increase your aerobic fitness. The heart is a muscle and can be trained to become stronger. When the heart becomes stronger it can pump more efficiently as is will increase the stroke volume which is the volume of blood per beat. If you are pumping more blood you are supplying more fuel (oxygen) to your leg muscles per beat. So you ultimately can run faster or for longer at the same effort. Long term effect will show a decrease in your resting pulse as the heart does not have to beat so fast to maintain your status quo ( as it is pumping more per stroke). Hope this helps.
You will increase speed by either increasing your cadence (steps per minute) and/or increasing your stride length. Both will be helped by short fast sessions such as interval training 👍
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