10 Tips for Injury-Free Running
1.
Track your shoes' mileage. Worn out shoes can often contribute to and/or
exacerbate pain in the ankles, knees, and hips. Like the shelf-life of the loaf
bread in your pantry, your shoes have a "road-life." Instead of time,
shoes are best checked for "freshness" by the miles put on them. A
good rule of thumb is to buy new shoes every 300 to 500 miles. This will vary
from person to person. A small person with a neutral gate may get closer to the
500 miles while a heavier/taller runner may breakdown his/her shoes more
quickly and only get 300 miles.
2.
Have more than one pair of running shoes. To extend the life of your shoes,
having two pair is a great idea. Alternate your runs between the two pairs. Or,
you could also have one pair suitable for longer runs and a lightweight pair
for your faster speed workouts. Having two pairs is also helpful when you've
had a rainy or muddy run. While one pair is drying, you can run in the
alternate pair.
3.
Only run in your running shoes. Wearing your running shoes to work or for
your daily routine, can quickly break them down. After my running shoes are
past their running prime, they become my knock-about-shoes. Then when they're too
worn out for that, they become my yard work shoes.
4.
Have a gait analysis done. Make sure you're wearing the right
pair of shoes for
your foot strike. Many running shoe stores and running coaches offer running
gait analysis as a service. They'll have you run on a treadmill and/or outside
and analyze how your foot lands when you run. Whether you roll inward, outward,
or have very little or no roll will help them determine if you need a neutral,
stability, or motion control shoe.
5.
Stretch, Stretch, Stretch! Pre- and post-run stretching is very important
in helping prevent injury. Dynamic stretching such as walking, an easy jog,
butt kicks, side shuffles, walking lunges, and high knee are all examples of dynamic
stretching. If
you still feel tight after the dynamic stretches, then you can do some of the
more traditional static (stretch-n-hold) stretches. After your run, static
stretches for the quads, glutes, calves, hamstrings, and hip flexors are
appropriate. If you've been sitting at a desk all day or driving hours in the
car, you can become very tight. It's important to loosen up those muscles
before taking them for a run.
6.
Drink up! Proper hydration is vital in helping to prevent muscle cramps. If
you're dehydrated before you begin your run or if you become dehydrated during
your run, you increase the risk of depleted electrolytes. Potassium (an
electrolyte) is needed in order for your muscles to relax after they've
contracted. If you begin your run with depleted potassium levels or you deplete
them while sweating on the run and don't rehydrate while running, you increase
your chances for cramping of the calves, quads and/or hamstrings.
7.
Rein it in! Avoid overstriding. Work on a foot landing that's more
underneath your torso. This allows your body (ankles, knees, and hips) to work
more like a shock absorber. This also allows more of a mid-foot (flat-foot) or forefoot
landing which allows you to work with the pavement not against it. Having more
of a mid-foot or forefoot landing allows you to push off the ground instead of
pulling-then-pushing which happens when you strike the ground with your heel
out in front of the body. This heel-striking causes a breaking effect instead
of allowing your body to work like a shock absorber. This breaking effect can
jar the knees and hips.
8.
Lean baby, lean! Increase your pace by leaning forward from the ankle (not
the hips). The subtle forward lean will increase your pace without widening
your stride. Don't believe me? Try it. You'll be amazed. Adding the lean not
only will help increase your pace, but it will do it with less muscle
activation, which means less energy used, which means fatigue takes longer to
set in.
9.
Do more than run. Adding full-body (lower-body, core, and upper-body)
muscular endurance circuit training will help you build muscles that will
endure and support you on your runs, particularly your long runs. Running
really is about 50 percent lower-body and 50 percent upper body. The stronger
(muscular endurance-wise) your core and upper-body are the longer you'll offset
fatigue. Think lighter weights, more reps (12 to 15) and less rest between
sets. Remember you're shooting for the Ryan Hall and Josh Cox look, not Arnold
Schwarzenegger.
10.
Sort it! Plagued by nagging aches and pains but can't seem to pin point the
cause? Then track your runs on a spreadsheet. Create columns for each type of
run you do (trail, road), weather conditions, your various shoes, time of day
(morning, midday, afternoon). Next, add columns for other factors such as if
you fueled pre- and post-run, stretched pre- and post-run. Then add
columns for aches and pains (sore knees, sore ankles, sore hips, etc.) Finally
add columns that rate the run (Great, Mediocre, Horrible, etc.). For each
run, put a check mark in each column that applies to that run. Do this for
about four weeks. Then sort the data by the aches-n-pains columns. For example,
do a sort by "Sore Knees" Then look at all the runs that caused your
knees to be sore. What other common factors pop up? Did you wear an old pair of
running shoes for each run? Was each run on a route with a lot of concrete? Did
you forget to stretch before each of the "sore knee" runs? This will
quickly help you see patterns in your running that you can avoid or try to
repeat.
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