Here"s a blog, with a bit of a difference.
I"ve decided to start this thread for three reasons.
1. To help motivate me to do the necessary training
2. To make people aware that I"m running to raise money for the NSPCC
3. To hopefully encourage more people to take up running for fitness and/or for the challenge to run a 10K, half-marathon or the quite frankly ridiculous 26.2 miles of a marathon.
A fourth reason is that it might stop me posting as much elsewhere on the forum, and I"m sure that"s the one that"s the most important to many on here...
So what"s it all about then?Well, on Sunday 26 April @ about 9am - I"ll be lining up alongside another 30,000 or so fellow runners (including Paula Radcliffe) to run the London Marathon. It won"t be my first time. I ran it in 2004, as it was something I"d always wanted to do. I only started running in the August of 2003, and 8 months later I was running the famous distance. Unfortunately, I picked up an injury in training and this affected me on the day - making the run more difficult and making it impossible for me to complete it in my target time. As I crossed the line I "knew" I"d do it again.
Fast-forward to now, and I now have a little over 3 months to prepare myself for the race. I"ve always done sport and been fairly fit - but I"ve never been a good long-distance runner. Over the past few years, I"ve done less and less exercise, especially during the first 9 months of 2008, when I basically did nothing. Poker isn"t really conducive to a good fitness regime. As someone who works the usual office hours and then spends evening playing poker or doing whatever, it"s difficult to drag myself out of bed at 6 o"clock in the morning to go running in the pouring rain.
I"ve been trying to get a place in the London Marathon again ever since 2004. In fact, I didn"t get a place in the 2004 marathon via a ballot place - I had to get a Golden Bond place where I promise to raise a minimum amount for a charity who then give me a guaranteed place. I ran for the British Heart Foundation in 2004. Fortunately, the way the organisers run the ballot for London is that if you don"t get a place 5 years in a row, you"re guaranteed a place on the 6th attempt (maybe something that APAT could adopt for the clickfest?). So the 2009 marathon would be my sixth attempt - and therefore I knew I"d get a place.
My plan was to start running in the summer, build up slowly and then be in good shape to start my training on the run-up (pun intended) to the marathon. The training programme for the actual marathon is usually over a 16-week period, but you need to have a decent platform already - in other words, I really wanted to be doing at least 25 miles a week come the start of the year. I haven"t been doing 25 miles a week. So I"ve missed my first target. The thing with long-distance running is that you can"t go from nothing (or very little) to putting in 15-20 miles runs. It"s all about putting in the miles, and it"s something I need to focus on doing. I hope this diary thread will help me with that.
tl;dr....? skip the rest, read this
If that doesn"t interest you, this might. I"m running for the NSPCC.
You can sponsor me with an online donation here:
http://www.justgiving.com/daniel-phillipsIt"d be much appreciated.