Although many people begin running as a practical path
to weight loss or fitness, for many it becomes a love affair as the miles
increase. Tom Holland, running coach and author of "The Marathon
Method," tells his clients that running for 3 miles was horrible for him
too, but farther down the road things changed. "It happens for different
people at different times and different distances: that runner's high," he
said in an interview.
Runner ascends steps at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington (Kevin Lamarque Reuters, REUTERS /October 18, 2012)
Holland calls it a cardiovascular turning point where
the run becomes exponentially easier. "There's a point where the run
becomes enjoyable," he said. "Whether this happens at 8 or 10 or 12
miles down the road, it will happen," he said. A veteran of 60 marathons,
Holland was set to run his ninth New York City Marathon earlier this month,
until the 26.2-mile (42.2-kilometer) race was canceled in the wake of
Superstorm Sandy. "Over 100,000 people apply to the New York City Marathon
each year," he said. "There must be something there that people
want."
Gregory Chertok, a sports psychologist with the
American College of Sports Medicine, said many people are drawn to running
because it's an uncomplicated activity. "Put one foot in front of the
other and when you work hard, you improve," Chertok said. "Not
everything in life is so simple. You could spend 10 years in a ballet studio
and not become a ballerina."
Few runners enter a marathon to win it, he said. "It's
so rare in sporting culture for those who aren't physically or aerobically
gifted to feel included in something that's competitive but not
exclusive." While it's tough to categorize athletes, Chertok said,
long-distance running seems to be appreciated by those who enjoy solitude - or
periods of solitude - and are OK with monotony. Chertok differentiates external
from internal motivation and said studies show that people who set goals based
on intrinsic motivation are more successful. "People run with the initial
goal of losing weight or getting fit, which are external goals, but during
training they realize they love running, so they end up running for internal
reasons," he said.
Qualitative evidence for the runner's high suggests
that for those prone to its euphoria, it probably contributes to running's
addictive quality. "Those that have it swear by it," he said. Most
sports medicine practitioners would agree that people are born to be mobile, he
said, but not necessarily to run long distances. "Physicians will deter
people from running marathon distances, but it's such a powerful allure that it
becomes greater than risk of hamstring injury," he said.
Richard Finn, spokesman for New York Road Runners,
organizers of the New York City Marathon, agrees that long distances do not
suit everyone. "Running 26.2 miles is a big, bold brash undertaking,"
he said. "You've got to put heart, soul, mind, body in it for months. It's
like climbing Mount Everest. Not everybody should be doing it." He said a
runner is a runner whether you're doing a marathon or a five0kilometer
(3.1-mile) race. "We do running 365 days a year, since 1959," Finn
said of the New York Road Runners. "Get those sneakers on and run, even on
a treadmill. We're not elitist. We think running is good for you."
Holland believes running also exposes our weakest link
so he urges novices to start slow. "Running is an amazing cheap thing that
can make us feel great about ourselves," he said. "But the secret to
running is balance. We're born to run but we're not born to run six days a week
at the start."
Source: Chicago Tribune
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