Continuous calf injury: Hi all I am feeling... - Couch to 5K

Couch to 5K

132,555 members158,661 posts

Continuous calf injury

Sloggingalong profile image
6 Replies

Hi all

I am feeling very demotivated as I started C25K months and months ago and got as far as W2R2 twice and on both occasions tore my left calf muscle. I had to have complete rest for months with physio etc., I am now at the stage where I have stopped physio, not going to the gym or anything and am now, back to being a complete couch potatoe. I am not sure how to start back or if my calf will hold up.

Should I go to the gym and build up strength/muscles or should I bite the bullet and go back to W1R1. I don't understand why my muscle keeps giving in.

Any help or suggestions would be very welcome.

Written by
Sloggingalong profile image
Sloggingalong
To view profiles and participate in discussions please or .
Read more about...
6 Replies
KANdoit profile image
KANdoit

We are in the same boat injury and age wise. I think I responded to a post of yours back in July!

I still consider my self to be on the C25K journey ..although its probably going to take me years rather than months or weeks cos my body keeps on letting me down. Currently I'm on a walking "programme" to build up my leg strength and stamina:

I have a large dog which I have to take for a long walk pretty much every day ... I aim to walk 5k each time. I try to mix up which shoes I wear (trainers, walking boots or wellies) the idea being that my muscles will get a slightly different workout each time and get strengthened evenly. Some days I run/walk in short intervals (30s/2 min) some days I walk as briskly as I can. Other times I seek a hilly route. Sometimes (if there's no one around) i act like I work in the ministry of silly walks! In short I mix it up. I also try to mix up which kind of surface I walk one

I think starting with a little bit of everything is probably the best way to avoid injury.

Sloggingalong profile image
Sloggingalong

Thank you very much for your response. I will definately try the walks in different shoes etc.. sounds good. I have also got heel raises. I am starting to wonder if it is my running shoes and will try out nornal trainers when I get going again.

I will keep you posted. :)

ross10 profile image
ross10

I'm not sure if this is similar to your problems but I had shin splints in 2008. This is basically lots of small tears in the leg muscles and I couldn't do much for a while. I went to a chiropractor who beat the hell out of my legs for a few weeks. She advised me to go to a special sportswear shop who examined the way I jogged so they could give me the best kind of footwear and then she drew up a stretching and exercise plan for first running on soft ground to strengthen up my muscles. I followed all this and a few months later won a medal playing volleyball so fantastic results!

Sloggingalong profile image
Sloggingalong

Hi Ross

Thanks for your response. I have had my running style "diagnosed". I am apparently a "mild supinator" and have the appropriate trainers for this. I am really wondering if they got it wrong. I am going to try a little of everything but start slowly and build up from there. Hopefully I will get there in the end. :)

sfb350 profile image
sfb350Graduate

I think it would be worth having your gait analysis done again, it won't do any harm anyway.

Didn't your physio suggest a program for getting back into running gently and avoiding injury ? Can you go back and specifically ask for such a program ?

I think mixing up your exercise is a good idea. When I hurt my hip, I used the cross trainer when I couldn't run - it's a good workout but without the impact you get when running and should help build up some leg strength before you run. It's also worth doing some strength training and core workouts at the gym. You might also benefit from using a foam roller - they are a bit tricky to use to start with but are good for stretching your muscles pre-run and in between running days. I think yoga helps as well - good for core strength and flexible and a nice way to stretch those muscles on non-running days.

Compression socks may help too, both while running and for recovery afterwards.

Good luck !

Sloggingalong profile image
Sloggingalong

Hello there. I have e-mailed my physiotherapist and waiting to hear from her. I have "tubigrips" to put on but didn't think I could wear them when exercising. I also have heel raises. I think "little steps" and lots of variation to start!!!

Thank you all for your comments, I will keep you posted regarding my progress.

You may also like...

Calf injuries... advice please.

So my husband has started the c25k programme secretly behind me. He's just started week 3, I'm...

More calf injury woes, when to rest and when to stretch?

my first post graduate run last week and my calf started to tighten up after 10 minutes so I stopped

Calf injury/running downhill technique

of 25 minutes for Week 6, Run 3 I pulled my calf muscle. It turns out there’s a way of running...

Calf injury advice from my physio: thought I would share

minutes in my calf started to hurt again. This time I stopped immediately and walked warily back to...

Pulled calf again! (W2R3 second attempt at Couchto5k after an injury last year)

first run, my left calf pulled! 😩 (Last year my right calf sidelined me for months 😔). I...