12345

Do you think running is painful? (Read 1059 times)

PADRunner


    Running for me is painful. I've got circulation problems in my legs and I get cramps quickly. Its' a catch 22 it hurts to run but running will help improve circulation and hurt less. So I just keep going till I can't stand it anymore. I've ran 5 miles at 14 mm but still can't finish a 5k without walking at 11mm.


    SheCan

      Wow, PAD, you make me feel lucky to not have those same struggles.  You put another twist on your life depends on running.  

      Cherie

              All young people feel boxed in, but what you do with the wiggle room that you have, will define who you become.  


      Old School

        I don't find training or racing to be painful in any way.

         

        Someone said that if racing doesn't hurt you're not really racing. I'll have to think about this. I am not a very experienced racer.

         

         

        I am apparently unable, or unwilling, to race hard enough to cause myself pain. I don't feel pain when I race - physical discomfort, yes, and I do suffer greatly from mental anxiety over fear of failure, and that is a huge emotional pain, but physical pain? Nope. And I routinely race hard enough to collapse and even pass out at the finish line, and I usually finish first or second  in my A/G. Pain is when you break something, tear something, get a huge muscle cramp, or have an injury that is telling you that you should not be running. Pain is what I felt in my feet and ankles and legs last summer when my arches had collapsed over time, and every running step became somewhat painful to everything from my hips down. I gave up running for a while when that happened, because running should not be painful.  I don't equate voluntary extreme physical exertion to pain. Pain, to me, is involuntary. 

          I am apparently unable, or unwilling, to race hard enough to cause myself pain. I don't feel pain when I race - physical discomfort, yes, and I do suffer greatly from mental anxiety over fear of failure, and that is a huge emotional pain, but physical pain? Nope. And I routinely race hard enough to collapse and even pass out at the finish line, and I usually finish first or second  in my A/G. Pain is when you break something, tear something, get a huge muscle cramp, or have an injury that is telling you that you should not be running. Pain is what I felt in my feet and ankles and legs last summer when my arches had collapsed over time, and every running step became somewhat painful to everything from my hips down. I gave up running for a while when that happened, because running should not be painful.  I don't equate voluntary extreme physical exertion to pain. Pain, to me, is involuntary. 

           

          This about sums it up for me too.  Running is never painful to me unless I have an injury and then I should not be running anyway.


          Wandering Wally

            In the last mIle or so of a half, it hurts. Within an hour or so I feel good again. That's racing though. I' m pushing for my best time. In training runs sometimes various things act up that make me sore but I think that's more to do with getting older and working a desk job than anything else. For the most part running does not cause me pain and if it did I would stop.

            Run!  Just Run!

             

            Trail Runner Nation Podcast


            Eye of Sauron

              I just ran my fastest of my 5 Honolulu marathons. Negative split and beat last year's time by about 15 minutes. Yes, I was sick last year but Im a little bleh this year too. It hurt like hell.

              And once again Mr. Wizard (aka: Stevie Ray) explains the internet.

                Not every run is painful to me, but every race at some point is if I really race.  Sometimes it's because I'm not trained well, but even in the best shape, I think if you push to the edge of your limits, you will feel pain.

                 

                Chris McCormack (Professional Triathlete, and two time Ironman World Champion including a 2:42 marathon) said this:

                 

                "You have to be honest with yourself about suffering: It’s going to come, it’s part of the wholeness of being a triathlete, and it’s totally real. It’s you versus you. If you can be at peace in your mind and accept the pain, then you can see it as part of the whole amazing experience. But if you’re dreading the suffering because you approach it from a negative frame of mind, when it finally comes you’re going to check out.”


                Bad Ass

                  I am apparently unable, or unwilling, to race hard enough to cause myself pain. I don't feel pain when I race - physical discomfort, yes, and I do suffer greatly from mental anxiety over fear of failure, and that is a huge emotional pain, but physical pain? Nope. And I routinely race hard enough to collapse and even pass out at the finish line, and I usually finish first or second  in my A/G. Pain is when you break something, tear something, get a huge muscle cramp, or have an injury that is telling you that you should not be running. Pain is what I felt in my feet and ankles and legs last summer when my arches had collapsed over time, and every running step became somewhat painful to everything from my hips down. I gave up running for a while when that happened, because running should not be painful.  I don't equate voluntary extreme physical exertion to pain. Pain, to me, is involuntary. 

                   

                  ^^This.

                  Damaris
                  Marathon Maniac, Ultra Runner

                  PRs: 24:57 (5K); 51:25 (10K); 42:46 (5 Miles); 2:04:31 (HM); 4:34:09 (Marathon); 8:00 (Trail 50K)

                   

                  Next:  San Francisco Marathon * Chicago Marathon * MCM * Ft. Myers Beach Marathon * Philadelphia Marathon * Space Coast Marathon * WPB Marathon

                   

                  Damaris Runs with Asthma


                  Dad of a real runner

                    Absolute PRs

                    5K - 16:53, 10K - 35:15, 15K - 54:25, HM - 1:20:59, M - 3:01:31

                    Phat Old Man PR's

                    5K - 21:33, 10K - 45:11, HM - 1:46:13, M - 3:47:30

                     Up Next

                    Legacy Run 15K - April 27  1:10:36 

                    Cradle to Grave 30K Trail  May 16  3:43:47    The Bear - July 11

                     

                      Yup. Like a lot of other topics, this one is almost always a discussion of semantics.


                      That's me in the back.

                        I just ran my fastest of my 5 Honolulu marathons. Negative split and beat last year's time by about 15 minutes. Yes, I was sick last year but Im a little bleh this year too. It hurt like hell.

                         

                        Nice Job srlopez!

                        Cancer F'in Sucks

                          I'd like to take this opportunity to agree with Jeff, who agrees with Mikeymike.

                          PineGroveDave


                          Express it.

                            Yesterday's race was painful for me in the last few miles. At first I ignored it and kept going but there came a point where I had to succumb to the pain and back off. I finished, but I was definitely hurting. Lesson learned...train harder, longer, and more often. I am determined to finish a half in under 2 hours...and pain free at that.

                            We can let the circumstances of our lives harden us so that we become increasingly resentful and afraid, or we can let them soften us, and make us kinder.
                            We always have the choice.

                              I'd like to agree with TonyP, who agrees with Jeff, who agrees with mikeymike.

                              "When a person trains once, nothing happens. When a person forces himself to do a thing a hundred or a thousand times, then he certainly has developed in more ways than physical. Is it raining? That doesn't matter. Am I tired? That doesn't matter, either. Then willpower will be no problem." 
                              Emil Zatopek


                              HobbyJogger & HobbyRacer

                                So if we simply define the feeling you get when you're running and it hurts as being labeled one of two different labels, subject to the following rules:

                                 - pain if you shouldn't be running

                                 - just discomfort if you should be running

                                 

                                I'm pretty confident that we can conclude that you will only feel the feeling we define by "pain" if you shouldn't be running.

                                 

                                 

                                Circular reasoning to the rescue!

                                It's a 5k. It hurt like hell...then I tried to pick it up. The end.

                                12345