Running Archives | Experience Life https://experiencelife.lifetime.life/category/fitness/running/ Tue, 07 Oct 2025 12:57:47 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.2 Running the Long Race https://experiencelife.lifetime.life/podcast/running-the-long-race/ Tue, 05 Aug 2025 10:00:25 +0000 https://experiencelife.lifetime.life/?post_type=podcast&p=121248 The post Running the Long Race appeared first on Experience Life.

]]>

The post Running the Long Race appeared first on Experience Life.

]]>
Kara headshot
How Long-Distance Runner Kara Goucher Reclaimed Her Power https://experiencelife.lifetime.life/article/how-long-distance-runner-kara-goucher-reclaimed-her-power/ https://experiencelife.lifetime.life/article/how-long-distance-runner-kara-goucher-reclaimed-her-power/#view_comments Wed, 25 Jun 2025 13:01:24 +0000 https://experiencelife.lifetime.life/?post_type=article&p=118451 Olympian Kara Goucher became a crusader for the rights of women athletes and clean sport. Here's her story.

The post How Long-Distance Runner Kara Goucher Reclaimed Her Power appeared first on Experience Life.

]]>

From the outside, it seemed that American long-distance runner Kara Goucher was on top of the world. After medaling at the 2007 World Championships in Osaka, securing her place on the 2008 U.S. Olympic team, and finishing top three at the New York City Marathon, Goucher was at her career peak.

She was part of the Oregon Project, an elite, Nike-­sponsored professional training team coached by running legend Alberto ­Salazar. Her image ­appeared on billboards, in malls, and on the sides of buses all over the United States.

July/August 2025 cover of Experience Life featuring Kara GoucherBehind the scenes, though, Goucher was suffering emotional and sexual abuse at the hands of Salazar, which left her isolated and afraid. She was also witnessing the questionable if not outright illegal use of medications and other substances by certain teammates, directed by ­Salazar and other Oregon Project staff.

When she and her husband (also a former Oregon Project athlete) decided to start a family, she was assured by Nike executives that her contract would be secure during her pregnancy as long as she stayed “relevant” by participating in media interviews, photo shoots, and other events. Yet Nike suspended her pay due to what they termed her “medical condition” that kept her from competing.

It would take years for Goucher to summon the courage to speak out about her own abuse and the doping she observed. Her testimonies against Salazar and Nike between 2018 and 2021 — first to the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) and then to the U.S. Center for SafeSport, ­regarding sexual and emotional misconduct — contributed to Salazar’s lifetime ban from coaching USA Track and Field athletics. She tells her story in a 2023 memoir, The Longest Race.

Now 46, Goucher is retired from racing but serves on the board of the USADA and as a commentator for distance running for NBC Sports. She also hosts the Nobody Asked Us podcast with fellow runner Des Linden, on which the duo discuss “all things running.”

We caught up with Goucher to learn more about her journey from elite competitor to advocate for women athletes and clean sport.

Kara GoucherQ&A With Kara Goucher

Experience Life | In your book, you describe struggles with self-­confidence going back to high school — and how that left you vulnerable as a young athlete at the Oregon Project.

Kara Goucher| From a young age, I was really driven and a bit of a perfectionist, but I never was the best at anything. The term “imposter syndrome” wasn’t something we talked about then, but that was me to a T. I’d line up on the start line and think, I’m fooling everyone that I belong here.

The Oregon Project was a men’s team, and at first I thought I should just be grateful to be there. We had unlimited resources from Nike, and it was intoxicating to be part of that group, to have that exclusivity.

Because my dad died when I was very young, I was always looking for some sort of male guidance in my life, and I turned to Alberto. I also had the ability to push away things that hurt me, whether physically or emotionally. All of this set me up to be taken advantage of.

EL | Yet you overcame your fears to tell your story on a very public stage. How did you build up the courage to do this?

KG | It was a slow burn, finally deciding to testify against Alberto for USADA’s ­investigation and then for SafeSport. What drove me to write the book, though, was that there were high-profile people writing about me who spoke with authority against me but who had never met me. I was never quoted. I was never asked.

I got so frustrated that the story being told about me wasn’t real. I wanted to tell my story where nobody could cut me off. I wanted it in my own words so I could move on and have peace.

EL | Your family wasn’t aware of the abuse until you decided to blow the whistle. As you look back, what did you learn from this experience?

KG | My family loved me before I ran, and they love me just as much now, when I don’t run [competitively]. I think I wanted to protect them from what was happening because I knew how much they just wanted me to be happy.

I’ve learned that when you’re all in on something, whether it’s your job, sport, music, or whatever, sometimes you lose track of who you are. When you’re lying on your deathbed, you’re no longer a runner or a musician — that’s just something you pursued and worked at. You’re all the moments in between with your family, all the memories with your friends who showed up for you and who you showed up for. That’s who you truly are.

EL | You have written and spoken about the role of therapy in your life. How has therapy helped you heal?

KG |It’s so important to be able to be vulnerable enough to talk about things. My husband and I have been in marriage counseling, not because we want a divorce but because so many things happened to us, and it’s helpful to talk about them with a neutral party. There’s so much power in releasing things that feel like secrets, that you’re ashamed of, that you feel embarrassed about. Releasing these in safe spaces gets rid of the power they have on you, and you start to regain your own power.

EL | In 2022, you were diagnosed with focal dystonia [a neurological movement disorder that causes involuntary muscle reactions] in your lower left leg. How are you doing?

KG | I have repetitive movement dystonia, which means my brain wires sometimes get tripped up. When I do a motion I’ve done repeatedly, like running, instead of just contracting the muscles I need to do that motion, every muscle from my knee down contracts.

It’s been hard because running has been my release. Sometimes I even have problems walking, and I have to use a cane on days when it’s really bad. I get Botox treatments four times a year, which helps. Today was a good day: I met a friend to run three miles, and we ended up running seven. When I have days that are good, I take advantage of them.

EL | Over your career, you have put yourself out there as an elite athlete, an author, a commentator, a ­podcaster, and an advocate for clean sport. How do you see yourself now?

KG | I never saw myself as a leader, but I think there is a kind of quiet leadership that comes with being comfortable with who you are, with taking risks, and with doing something outside the structure you’ve always been in. I think that’s where I am in my life now — I’m exploring things I like, and I’m not trying to be perfect. Some things have been great, and some things haven’t been. I just want to be who I am, and it’s a really nice place to be in my life.

Life Time TalksKara headshot

Running the Long Race

With Olympian Kara Goucher

Click to listen

 

This article originally appeared as “Running Strong” in the July/August 2025 issue of Experience Life. Photographer: Andy Anderson.

The post How Long-Distance Runner Kara Goucher Reclaimed Her Power appeared first on Experience Life.

]]>
https://experiencelife.lifetime.life/article/how-long-distance-runner-kara-goucher-reclaimed-her-power/feed/ 0 Kara Goucher
5 Hamstring Exercises for Runners https://experiencelife.lifetime.life/article/5-hamstring-exercises-for-runners/ Mon, 02 Jun 2025 13:00:59 +0000 https://experiencelife.lifetime.life/?post_type=article&p=119229 A certified running coach explains why hamstring strength matters for performance and injury prevention and demonstrates five exercises to add to your routine.

The post 5 Hamstring Exercises for Runners appeared first on Experience Life.

]]>

Stretching and strengthening the hamstrings often get overlooked in the pursuit of better running performance and as a means of injury prevention. Instead, many runners focus primarily on working their quads and glutes. Yet neglecting the hamstrings — and particularly knee-flexion-based exercises — can lead to imbalances that affect both stability and speed.

“Runners need strong hamstrings,” says Mike Thomson (@fastandfitmike), CSCS, Dynamic Personal Trainer, USATF certified, and run coach at Life Time in Overland Park, Kan. “The hamstring plays a huge role in your stride as it decelerates the foot before it strikes the ground. Strengthening this muscle helps position the foot properly for ground contact and enables a smooth transition as you continue to stride. If the quad muscle is more dominant than the hamstring, it can lead to injury where the hamstring gets tweaked or torn.”

Typical hamstring exercises like deadlifts or back extensions are great for strengthening this muscle group, but Thomson emphasizes that knee-flexion-based exercises are best for strengthening the knee joint and hamstrings — both of which are crucial for running performance.

“Knee flexion exercises help maintain a strong hamstring-to-quad ratio, which is critical for joint stability and injury prevention,” he says.

Here, Thomson demonstrates five knee-flexion-based hamstring exercises to help strengthen your hamstrings and improve knee joint stability — all to help enhance your running abilities. Depending on the equipment you have available, Thomson recommends adding one to two of these exercises to your routine two to three times per week.

1. Lying Hamstring Curl

  • Set the machine to a weight that feels challenging for you.
  • Lie face down on the leg curl machine, grasp the support handles on either side of you, and extend your legs fully to start. You want the roller pad to rest on your lower calves, above your heels and ankles.
  • Actively press your hips into the bench and bend your knees to draw your feet as close to your glutes as you can.
  • Pause for a moment then extend your legs and return your feet to the starting position with control.
  • Repeat for three sets of 10 to 12 reps.

2. Seated Hamstring Curl

  • Sit at a hamstring curl machine and adjust it accordingly to ensure your knees are next to the hinge point on the machine. Put your legs on top of the leg bar so the shin padding is directly behind your ankles. Bring down the lap bar so your legs do not lift during the movement.
  • Set the machine to a weight that feels challenging for you.
  • Grab the handles on the lap bar, then start the curl by pressing your heels into the leg bar until your legs form 90-degree angles.
  • Take a quick pause at the full curl, then slowly return to the starting position. Make sure to keep your glutes on the seat through the entire position.
  • Repeat for three sets of 10 to 12 reps.

3. Nordic Hamstring Curl

  • Use a Nordic curl bench (as shown in the video) or kneel on an exercise mat and have a training partner hold your heels firmly.
  • Keeping your body as straight as possible from knees to head, slowly shift your weight forward, resisting gravity with your hamstrings and glutes.
  • Lower yourself as slowly as possible, catching yourself as you get close to the floor (your finishing position will resemble the bottom of an on-the-knees pushup).
  • Push off the floor just enough to get your body moving back toward vertical. Simultaneously pull with your hamstrings and squeeze your glutes until you return to the starting position.
  • Repeat for three sets of 10 to 12 reps.

4. Single-Leg Hamstring Curl

  • Adjust the machine for your height so the pad for your working leg is resting on your quad; choose a weight that feels challenging for you.
  • Press your working leg’s foot upward by curling the heel toward your glutes.
  • Pause briefly at the top of the movement before slowly lowering the leg back to the starting position.
  • Repeat for three sets of 10 to 12 reps on each side.

5. Lying Towel, Slider, or Stability Ball Hamstring Curl

  • Lie on your back with your legs extended and feet on top of a towel, slider discs, or a stability ball.
  • Engage your core as you lift your hips up off the ground.
  • Draw your heels in toward your hips while your feet continue to rest on the towel, sliders, or stability ball.
  • Moving quickly, extend your legs back to the starting position.
  • Repeat for three sets of 10 to 12 reps.

The post 5 Hamstring Exercises for Runners appeared first on Experience Life.

]]>
Person running outdoors in sunny weather
What to Eat After a Race https://experiencelife.lifetime.life/article/how-to-fuel-your-body-after-a-race/ https://experiencelife.lifetime.life/article/how-to-fuel-your-body-after-a-race/#view_comments Thu, 10 Apr 2025 12:00:35 +0000 https://experiencelife.lifetime.life/?post_type=article&p=111432 You did it! Now it’s time to recover. Discover how to fuel your body to reduce fatigue, ease soreness, and rebuild for your next challenge.

The post What to Eat After a Race appeared first on Experience Life.

]]>

With the finish line behind you, the focus of your fueling shifts from performance to recovery. Exercise breaks down your body’s tissues, and good postworkout nutrition can repair this damage and support your body’s regenerative powers. This helps not only to minimize postevent fatigue and soreness but also to rebuild your body stronger than before so it can tackle your next endeavor.

Immediately following your event, continue to hydrate with water supplemented with electrolytes and amino acids (check out “3 Functional Water Additives to Try” for more on these supplements). You might not have an appetite at this stage, but if you can stomach a protein shake or some other digestible source of protein and carbs, it may be beneficial. (Find more tips on managing impaired hunger after exercise at “Why Am I Not Hungry After a Tough Workout?“)

An hour or two after completing your effort, aim to eat a meal of solid food that includes complex carbohydrates, nonstarchy vegetables, and at least 20 grams of protein.

Further support your recovery by engaging in light movement (stretching and foam rolling are great options), doing breathwork or meditation, and catching some z’s.

(For even more nutrition tips to boost your recovery, visit “A Simplified Guide to Pre- and Post-Workout Nutrition.”)

Endurance Fuel

Figuring out your race-day nutrition strategy is an essential element of your training. Dial in your nutrition and fueling plan to support your athletic performance with the expert advice at “How to Fuel For Your Next Big Race,” from which this article was excerpted.

The post What to Eat After a Race appeared first on Experience Life.

]]>
https://experiencelife.lifetime.life/article/how-to-fuel-your-body-after-a-race/feed/ 0 people eating
What to Eat During a Race https://experiencelife.lifetime.life/article/how-to-fuel-your-body-during-a-race/ https://experiencelife.lifetime.life/article/how-to-fuel-your-body-during-a-race/#view_comments Thu, 03 Apr 2025 12:00:48 +0000 https://experiencelife.lifetime.life/?post_type=article&p=111427 Here's how to cross the finish line with energy to spare.

The post What to Eat During a Race appeared first on Experience Life.

]]>

Your in-race strategy is to keep your tank from sputtering to zero. The two-pronged focus for most athletes is on carbohydrates and hydration.

The exact amount, form, and timing of carbs and hydration will be unique to you, and it may take a fair amount of trial and error to ascertain those details. Still, there are general guidelines to help you determine what works best. These are largely based on how long and how hard you’re working.

The exact amount, form, and timing of carbs and hydration will be unique to you, and it may take a fair amount of trial and error to ascertain those details.

“Time and intensity dictate the fuel,” says Thomson. “For example, if you and I did five minutes of extremely hard effort, we would essentially fire the same substrate. But if we ran a marathon, my time might be three hours and five minutes, and yours might be longer or shorter, impacting our [nutrition] needs.”

 

Top Off the Carbs

Nailing the right amount of energy is a Goldilocks affair. Inadequate carbohydrate intake can lead to glycogen depletion, which occurs when your body runs out of sugar to burn. Many endurance athletes are familiar with this phenomenon, often called “bonking” or “hitting the wall”: The lack of fuel causes fogginess and extreme fatigue and typically leads to compromised performance.

When you hit the wall, it’s not just your muscles that run out of fuel. Your brain, too, runs on glucose and requires a steady supply for proper functioning. Without that supply, you may experience brain fog and loss of coordination and other cognitive skills, says Myles Spar, MD, an expert in ­personalized performance medicine and national director and vice president of medical services at AndHealth.

Glycogen depletion can also lead to digestive upset and impaired recovery after an event. In rare cases, it can cause exertional rhabdomyolysis — a potentially fatal condition in which muscle fibers break down and toxic compounds enter the bloodstream.

Overfueling can also cause problems, notably digestive distress: Excess sugar stimulates the gut to release water and electrolytes, which can loosen bowel movements. Other signs that you’ve ingested too much include lethargy, stomachache, cramping, and vomiting.

The optimal carbohydrate intake ranges from 40 to 90 grams per hour, says Thomson, but this can depend on the length of the event:

  • For endurance efforts of 60 to 150 minutes, you may want to stick to the lower end of this range and ingest 40 to 60 grams of carbs per hour.
  • For longer endurance or ultra­endurance efforts lasting four to six hours or more, you may benefit from edging closer to 90 grams of carbs per hour. (It may take rigorous training to ingest more than 90 grams per hour, explains Blow, who notes that this approach isn’t necessary for most exercisers.)

Again, finding the right range and timing for you requires practice. Take advantage of your training to determine what works best for you. You might find that 80 grams per hour is your sweet spot but only when divided into 40-gram increments every half hour.

Your experiment should include liquid carbs, solid carbs, and gels. They are all good options — and you can mix and match these as desired and tolerated.

A small banana, for instance, contains about 23 grams of carbs — about the same as a serving of many sports gels and chews. Sports-drink mixes can support hydration and replenish energy stores; super-high-carb mixes can provide as much as 100 grams of easy-to-digest carbohydrates.

In general, Spar recommends trying to avoid carb sources containing high-fructose corn syrup and artificial flavors, preservatives, and dyes.

 

Maintain Fluid Intake

Hydration is about much more than water intake,” McKinney says. Your needs will depend on numerous factors. These include temperature, humidity, and altitude; your stress levels; and how well hydrated you were when you woke up on the day of your event, among others.

If you sufficiently hydrate prior to your event and anticipate a lower-­intensity effort or one lasting less than 90 minutes, you might only need to sip small amounts of an electrolyte drink. Blow notes that elite athletes competing in high-intensity aerobic events have benefited from rinsing their mouths with a carb-containing electrolyte drink and spitting it out. You can experiment with these methods during training.

Sweat loss can become more significant between 90 minutes and two hours into a race, making it important to rehydrate. As a general target, McKinney recommends drinking about 16 ounces of water with electrolytes per hour of physical activity. This helps replenish the minerals lost through sweating. Some elite athletes choose to measure their sweat rate and adjust their intake to account for sweat loss, she says. (Blow has instructions for testing this here.)

Drinking too much water is less common than drinking too little, but the consequences of extreme overhydration can be as dangerous as those associated with dehydration. Overhydration can dilute sodium levels in the blood, which can cause hyponatremia (an electrolyte imbalance) and water intoxication (a rare phenomenon that occurs when water intake exceeds the amount of ­water excreted by the kidneys).

For athletes who exercise for hours or even days on end, maintaining a precise blood chemistry can be extremely important. Look for ­electrolyte products containing sodium, potassium, phosphorous, calcium, and magnesium to make the most of every sip. (Learn more about the importance of electrolytes on page “How Electrolytes Can Boost Your Athletic Performance” and at “Everything You Need to Know About Hydration.”)

 

Consider Proteins and Fats

By the time you start your event, protein and fat will likely take a back seat to carbs — at least until the race is over. That’s because fat and protein take longer to digest, says Koff. They offer less potential as a quick fuel source and they may cause digestive distress.

But that doesn’t mean you should completely avoid either macronutrient. Test out what works best for your body several times before the actual race or event day.

Protein can help minimize potential muscle damage, a normal consequence of prolonged, intense activity. The International Society of Sports Nutrition recommends consuming about 0.25 grams of protein per kilogram of body weight — about 0.11 grams per pound — per hour of intense endurance exercise when taken along with carbohydrates. For a 160-pound individual, that’s almost 18 grams of protein, roughly equivalent to three large eggs or ¾ cup of Greek yogurt.

For more convenient options, look for — or make your own — bars, gels, or chews that contain protein. (Steer clear of additives, like sugar alcohols, to ensure digestibility.) Plant-based athletes can find options containing protein sources such as chia seeds, nuts, and pea protein. (For more on fuel for plant-based athletes, see “The Plant-Powered Athlete.”)

If you carry a hydration pack, you can mix in protein or amino-acid powders, which offer the muscle-­protective properties of protein alongside water, electrolytes, and carbs. Clear protein powders are a good option if a thick shake is unappetizing or difficult to transport.

Unlike protein, fat doesn’t offer much benefit during an endurance event. “Fat doesn’t turn over into fuel well in the middle of a workout, and, ultimately, it may slow digestion and could cause GI issues,” Thomson says.

Think of fat as an incidental part of fuel, and pick something that you tolerate well. This might include relatively small amounts of fat in, say, dates stuffed with a bit of nut butter or a pat of butter on some sweet potato. Again, spread with a light hand and practice ingesting it during training.

Practice Makes Perfect

It can’t be overemphasized: Make intra-event fueling part of your training. “It’s important to train like you race and race like you train,” Thomson insists.

The number of training sessions needed to ensure a successful approach varies. One study on endurance runners, published in Applied Physiology, Nutrition, and Metabolism, found that two weeks of gut training resulted in improved gastrointestinal symptoms.

Other studies and experts say a gut-training protocol takes four to 10 weeks. “I recommend taking at least a month to adapt to nutrition changes,” says Spar.

During each training session, pay attention to your body’s signals to adjust what, how much, and when you eat. Feeling lightheaded or dizzy can signal dehydration, Spar notes. Craving salt can be an early sign that you’re running low on sodium. Stomach pain and muscle cramps are reliable indications of low electrolytes.

And feeling a lack of energy could be a sign of carbohydrate deficiency. If you crave sugar immediately after a workout, you likely didn’t eat enough carbs before or during your routine.

Learn from your missteps and your successes. Take note of what works for you and rehearse that winning recipe. By race day, you’ll be optimally fueled and ready to go.

Endurance Fuel

Figuring out your race-day nutrition strategy is an essential element of your training. Dial in your nutrition and fueling plan to support your athletic performance with the expert advice at “How to Fuel For Your Next Big Race,” from which this article was excerpted.

The post What to Eat During a Race appeared first on Experience Life.

]]>
https://experiencelife.lifetime.life/article/how-to-fuel-your-body-during-a-race/feed/ 0 photo of foods eat while competing in a long distance race
What to Eat Before a Race https://experiencelife.lifetime.life/article/how-to-fuel-your-body-before-a-race/ https://experiencelife.lifetime.life/article/how-to-fuel-your-body-before-a-race/#view_comments Thu, 27 Mar 2025 12:00:55 +0000 https://experiencelife.lifetime.life/?post_type=article&p=111423 Experimenting with your nutrition strategy before your race is as important as deciding what shoes you’re going to wear. Dial in your fueling plan with this expert advice.

The post What to Eat Before a Race appeared first on Experience Life.

]]>

Your body uses food as an energy source by breaking down macro­nutrients (carbohydrates, proteins, and fats) into smaller molecules — namely glucose, amino acids, and fatty acids. It then uses them to produce adenosine triphosphate (ATP), the body’s primary energy currency.

There are several ways your body turns what you eat into what you do. Known as your metabolic energy systems, these pathways all switch on during physical exercise — but their roles depend on the available energy and specific demands of your chosen activity, explains Mike Thomson, CSCS, USATF, a Life Time running and triathlon coach.

Once you begin intense activity, it takes just thousandths of a second for the adenosine triphosphate-creatine phosphate system, or phosphagen system, to kick in. The ATP stored in the muscles can fuel only about six to 10 seconds of serious effort. This system might engage at the start of a race for quick acceleration, but its utility is short-lived.

The glycolytic system provides energy for high-intensity, short-duration bursts of activity. It can produce ATP rapidly without oxygen, using glucose as fuel. It kicks in for short bursts lasting about 10 to 75 seconds — great for picking up speed to overtake a competitor.

It’s the third energy system — the oxidative system — that is most critical for endurance athletes who need to maintain a relatively moderate intensity for a longer duration. This system uses oxygen to generate ATP. The oxidative system is also called the aerobic system.

“Think of it as the body’s slow-burning furnace,” designed to provide the body with most of its energy, says Thomson. This is the system you want your nutrition plan to stoke. (Learn more about the body’s energy systems at “All About Your Metabolic Energy Systems.”)

Mind Your Gut

Because the body breaks down glucose, fatty acids, and amino acids to produce ATP, it might seem intuitive to fuel and refuel for an endurance event with a balanced blend of carbs, fats, and protein. But not so fast.

“Food as fuel is not the same as nutrition for your health,” says  Ashley Koff, RD, founder of The ­Better Nutrition Program. While con­suming optimal amounts of macro- and micronutrients is imperative for overall wellness, the unique needs of a body under duress can make getting them from certain healthy foods hard to stomach.

During intense or prolonged activity, the body diverts blood to the muscles, lungs, heart, and brain, and away from the digestive tract, which may impair digestion and drastically alter gastrointestinal transit time. And hormonal changes during intense and long-duration exercise can tamp down hunger cues and diminish appetite. As a result, it’s common for endurance athletes to experience nausea, diarrhea, abdominal pain, and vomiting.

But digestive upset is not a foregone conclusion, says Koff. She suggests avoiding high-fiber, high-fat, and high-protein foods and drink — all of which are more filling and as a result more difficult to digest — immediately before or during exercise. And limit these nutrients the day leading up to an event.

Thomson recommends avoiding unfamiliar foods, drinks, and nutritional aids the day of — or even in the week leading up to — your race.

“It’s important to train like you race and race like you train.”

So, what should you consume to fuel your performance?

It’s vital to make sure you’re topped up with fluids, electrolytes, and carbohydrates before you begin your activity.

“Trying to make up for a deficit if you start a bit dehydrated or energy depleted by eating and drinking during the activity itself is definitely leaving it too late,” writes sports scientist Andy Blow, BSc, in an article on his training website, Precision Fuel and Hydration. In other words, you can’t play catch-up during heavy activity.

Follow these tips in the days leading up to your event.

Carbo-Load With Care

We primarily store glycogen in our skeletal muscle and liver. An adult can store about 100 grams of glycogen in their liver and approximately 15 to 25 grams of glycogen per kilogram of muscle mass in their skeletal muscle (total storage varies by muscle mass).

On average, adults can store about 600 grams of total glycogen — and you want those stores to be topped off before race day. Rather than eat as much pasta and bread as possible the night before an event, take a few days to shift your carb-to-fat ratio, Blow advises. Your overall caloric intake likely won’t change; rather, the proportion of your calories from carbs gradually increases while that from fat declines.

This doesn’t have to be drastic. An extra spoonful or two of oatmeal or rice (or other carb-rich foods that you enjoy and tolerate) at each meal can go a long way while sparing your digestive tract from an abrupt change, notes Koff. (Learn more about carbo-loading at “What Is Carbohydrate Loading?“)

 

Hydrate Holistically

Like carbo-loading, sufficient hydration is a gradual process and involves more than just chugging plain water before toeing the start line. Samantha McKinney, RD, CPT, recommends the following best practices for hydration throughout your training cycle and in the days leading up to your event.

 

Plan Your Prerace Meal

It’s paramount to test any preworkout nutritional strategy during your training cycle and to avoid mixing it up the day of your event.

With that important note, here’s what experts suggest for your first race-day meal:

  1. One to two hours before your event, consume a meal of easily digestible, low-fiber carbohydrates (70 to 80 percent of the meal’s calories) with low to moderate levels of fat (less than 15 percent of calories) and protein (10 to 12 percent).
  2. Additionally, drink 16 ounces of water with electrolytes. (For preworkout food ideas, visit “12 Quick Preworkout and Postworkout Snacks.”)

With ample glycogen and hydration stores, you’ll be set to perform your best when the race starts.

 

Practice Makes Perfect

It can’t be overemphasized: Make intra-event fueling part of your training. “It’s important to train like you race and race like you train,” Thomson insists.

The number of training sessions needed to ensure a successful approach varies. One study on endurance runners, published in Applied Physiology, Nutrition, and Metabolism, found that two weeks of gut training resulted in improved gastrointestinal symptoms.

Other studies and experts say a gut-training protocol takes four to 10 weeks. “I recommend taking at least a month to adapt to nutrition changes,” says Spar.

During each training session, pay attention to your body’s signals to adjust what, how much, and when you eat. Feeling lightheaded or dizzy can signal dehydration, Spar notes. Craving salt can be an early sign that you’re running low on sodium. Stomach pain and muscle cramps are reliable indications of low electrolytes.

And feeling a lack of energy could be a sign of carbohydrate deficiency. If you crave sugar immediately after a workout, you likely didn’t eat enough carbs before or during your routine.

Learn from your missteps and your successes. Take note of what works for you and rehearse that winning recipe. By race day, you’ll be optimally fueled and ready to go.

Endurance Fuel

Figuring out your race-day nutrition strategy is an essential element of your training. Dial in your nutrition and fueling plan to support your athletic performance with this expert advice at “How to Fuel For Your Next Big Race,” from which this article was excerpted.

The post What to Eat Before a Race appeared first on Experience Life.

]]>
https://experiencelife.lifetime.life/article/how-to-fuel-your-body-before-a-race/feed/ 0 a woman ties her shoes with a water bottle in front of her.
2 Essential Moves to Enhance Your Running Performance https://experiencelife.lifetime.life/article/2-essential-moves-to-enhance-your-running-performance/ Tue, 30 Jul 2024 12:00:53 +0000 https://experiencelife.lifetime.life/?post_type=article&p=99458 Step up your running game with these two complementary strength and mobility moves targeted at weak glutes and tight hip flexors.

The post 2 Essential Moves to Enhance Your Running Performance appeared first on Experience Life.

]]>

The key to enhancing your running might not be just doing more of it. Instead, incorporating strength and mobility training into your routine could be the secret.

Strength training helps build durable, powerful muscles and stable joints, which translates to better performance, fewer injuries, and improved recovery.

Mobility work, meanwhile, is “going to unlock your body for the work you’re going to be doing, which helps with proper muscle recruitment, range of motion, and all the things that can help lead to injury prevention,” says NASM-certified personal trainer and corrective exercise specialist Carrie Boyle.

Incorporate these moves recommended by Mike Thomson, CSCS, a USATF-certified running and triathlon coach with Life Time, to help level up your performance.

Mobility

Couch Stretch
Use this stretch to loosen your hip flexors after every run.

illio of couch stretch

Full Instructions
  • Kneel on the floor in front of a sturdy structure, like a wall, bench, or, as the name suggests, a couch, facing away. Position your right shin close to the wall or couch with toes pointed toward the ceiling. (Place a mat, towel, or cushion under your right knee, as needed.) Position your left foot flat on the floor in front of you with your left knee directly over your ankle.
  • Lift your torso and rest your hands on your left thigh. Lean back until you feel a slight stretch along the front of your right hip and thigh.
  • Hold for 10 deep breaths, sinking a little deeper on each exhale. Switch sides.

Strength

Bulgarian Split Squat
Include this exercise in your routine two or three days per week.

illio of Bulgarian split squat

Full Instructions
  • Stand 2 to 3 feet in front of a knee-high platform (like a box, bench, or step), facing away. Extend your right leg behind you and rest your toes on the bench. Toes can be flat or tucked, depending on personal preference.
  • Keeping your torso upright, slowly lower your right knee toward the floor. Your front knee will form approximately a 90-degree angle. (It may go farther, depending on your mobility; just make sure your knee doesn’t cave inward.)
  • Distribute your weight evenly across your left foot as you push up to return to the starting position. Squeeze your rear glute at the top of the movement. Do three sets of 12 repetitions per leg.
  • Use only your body weight when learning the movement. Then add weight by holding dumbbells or kettlebells at your sides.

More On the Moves

Running relies heavily on the hips — and limited hip mobility can create issues. Tight hip flexors (the muscles in the front of the hip that kick in with each step) tend to be common in runners, thanks to their use in running and sitting.

“If your hip flexor is tight, you’ll have limited ability to extend your hip,” says Mike Thomson, CSCS, a USATF-certified running and triathlon coach with Life Time. If you can’t extend your hip, you won’t be able to recruit as much of your glutes, which means less power with every stride.

Runners can also benefit from strengthening the glutes and legs to provide more stride power and minimize fatigue. This may help you run faster and longer, as well as prevent injury and pain by keeping other muscles and joints (like those in the lower back) from kicking in to compensate. For runners, Thomson favors the Bulgarian split squat, performed with the rear leg elevated, because it both stretches the hip flexor and strengthens the glutes and legs one side at a time.

Level Up

From basketball to Zumba, discover the mobility and strength exercises that can enhance your favorite cardio workout and boost your overall performance. Learn more in “Level Up Your Favorite Cardio With These Strength and Mobility Moves,” from which this article was excerpted.

The post 2 Essential Moves to Enhance Your Running Performance appeared first on Experience Life.

]]>
a person running
Ready to Expand https://experiencelife.lifetime.life/article/ready-to-expand/ Tue, 02 Jul 2024 13:00:00 +0000 https://experiencelife.lifetime.life/?post_type=article&p=98343 Experience Life's editor in chief shares her goal of running a marathon and the steps she’s taking to prepare her body — and her mind.

The post Ready to Expand appeared first on Experience Life.

]]>

When I crossed the finish line of my first half marathon, in 2006, I remember thinking there was no way I’d want to double that distance to complete a full. If I was going to run long distances, I should have started with 26.2 miles and then done a half — it probably would have seemed a lot easier in that order.

I maintained that mindset for more than 15 years, during which I avoided running with any real consistency. Instead, I centered my fitness routine around strength training and yoga.

But my outlook started to change last summer when I decided to run the Medtronic TC 10-Mile race and fundraise on behalf of a local nonprofit. As my training progressed into fall and race day drew nearer, I realized I was falling a little bit in love with running — how it gave me time to brainstorm and problem-solve, how it got me outside, how it reminded me of my strength and boosted my confidence. For the first time, I started seriously contemplating longer distances.

I achieved my “rundraising” goal and ran those 10 miles — and then I kept up my running routine. I even ran through the colder months; last year’s unseasonably mild Minnesota winter allowed me to maintain solid weekly mileage without relying on a treadmill.

As it warmed up, I realized my mindset had truly shifted: I want to run a marathon, I found myself thinking. It scared me, as unfamiliar challenges often do. But the desire outweighed the fear.

So, in the spirit of my word of the year, “expand” (referring to growth outside of my comfort zone), I registered for a fall 2024 marathon.

My goal is to train for and complete the race knowing I’ve done everything I can to optimize my efforts and be at my peak potential (the theme of this issue). To do so, I wanted a clear understanding of my starting point, as well as a plan for nourishing and supporting myself through the process. So I did a few things leading up to the official kickoff of my marathon training:

  • I got an active metabolic assessment to determine my anaerobic threshold and heart-rate training zones, which inform my workout intensity and help me avoid overtraining.
  • I took a food-sensitivity test to identify anything that might negatively affect my digestion and joint health, as both can be significant issues during endurance training. (I was surprised to learn that potatoes and garlic are potential problems for me.)
  • I had a chiropractic and vestibular assessment to address any structural alignment, balance, or cognitive issues, and to determine performance-focused practices I could do to both complement and recover from training.
  • I sought out support and insight from family, friends, and colleagues who’ve run the marathon distance. I gathered their best tips, tricks, and practices for making it across that finish line.

I’ve also been seeking inspiration from stories like that of pro off-road cyclist Haley Hunter Smith — she bikes hundreds of miles time and time again; I’m leveraging the expertise from “Level Up Your Favorite Cardio With These Strength and Mobility Moves” by incorporating the strength and mobility moves into my postrun and cross-training regimens; and I’m taking note of how to balance my running routine with nature’s cycles (see “How Following Ultradian, Circadian, and Infradian Rhythms Can Boost Your Health“) so I don’t burn out.

I’m excited to push myself to a new limit. How about you? In what areas might you be ready to step outside your comfort zone to see what’s possible?

The post Ready to Expand appeared first on Experience Life.

]]>
headshot of Jamie Martin, editor in chief of Experience Life magazine
Expert Answers: How Do I Minimize the Impact of Hitting the Outside of My Shoe on the Ground When I’m Running? https://experiencelife.lifetime.life/article/expert-answers-how-do-i-minimize-the-impact-of-hitting-the-outside-of-my-shoe-on-the-ground-when-im-running/ Fri, 19 Apr 2024 15:27:28 +0000 https://experiencelife.lifetime.life/?post_type=article&p=96584 If posterior striking is one of your running challenges, these four strength exercises can make your body more resilient to the impact.

The post Expert Answers: How Do I Minimize the Impact of Hitting the Outside of My Shoe on the Ground When I’m Running? appeared first on Experience Life.

]]>

Many people don’t realize they strike on the posterior, or outside, of their feet when they’re running. It’s a landing position typically based on how a runner’s legs swing through in stride, and is more pronounced if they’re bow legged, or when they’re running down hills or leaning back. Do they mean to do it? No. Is it common? Yes.

This can be problematic: Landing on the outside of your feet can cause tightness in the lateral chain of the legs, including the muscles, fascia, and soft tissue, leading to misalignment. You may then experience external rotation of your hips, as well as your lower limbs. One example is toe whip, which occurs when the toe comes off the ground and kicks or whips laterally. (After training, your muscles naturally get tighter — that’s why it’s important to strengthen the other side to balance them out. Deep tissue work, such as working with a Dynamic Personal Trainer, Dynamic Stretch Specialist, or massage therapist can help prevent our muscles from getting too tight and out of control.)

An exaggerated foot strike in the front of the body can also put the angle of your shin in a compromised position. This can lead to a “braking” effect at the foot’s first point of contact when it’s bearing weight. The more the foot is in a check-mark-like position, and the less vertical it is to the shin, the more aggressive the force of the strike is in the foot, shin, knee, and hip.

While running drills can help you change how your feet hit the ground when you run, strengthening your abductors and medial calf muscles can build your resilience to running’s impact. It also helps your body accept the weight of your current stride, so any existing imbalances don’t get worse.

These are four of the exercises I often encourage runners to do to strengthen these muscles.

1. Squeezers

These strengthen your abductors and the muscles high in your groin.

  • Place a workout ball on the ground between your legs and stand over the ball.
  • Use your lower body to squeeze the ball at 50 to 70 percent effort for five seconds.
  • Rest for three seconds.
  • Repeat six times.

2. Side Plank “Captain Morgan”

This movement ignites the firing of your inner abductor muscles, which helps to build new muscle.

  • Position yourself in a side plank, with your shoulder stacked above your elbow and the foot of your top leg in front of the foot of your bottom leg.
  • Alternating your legs, draw one knee at a time toward your chest, as if you’re marching. Take a two to three second pause each time your knee is raised before returning your leg to the starting position.
  • Perform for 20 to 40 seconds.
  • Switch sides and repeat for another 20 to 40 seconds.

3. Side Plank “Copenhagen”

This is a progression of the previous side plank movement; it also strengthens the abductors. Focus on keeping your body, especially your legs and feet, in control throughout the movement.

  • Position yourself in a side plank, with your shoulder stacked above your elbow. Place your top foot on top of a box or step that’s about a 12 inches tall.
  • Raise your bottom foot about halfway or so up the box or step.
  • Lower your foot back down to the base of the box.
  • Continue to raise and lower your foot for 10 reps (about 20 to 30 seconds).
  • Rest for two to three seconds before switching sides; repeat for another 10 reps.

4. Low Box Step-Up

This movement is great for the vastus medialis (part of the quadriceps muscle group), the vastus medialis oblique (the medial head of the quad, a muscle inside your thigh) and the groin. The leg that is in contact with the box or step should be the one doing all the work.

  • Stand sideways on a low box or step (about 12 to 20 inches tall) so that one foot is grounded on the box or step and the other is hanging in the air.
  • Sit your hips back to lower into a quarter squat with your grounded leg as you lower your outside foot to the ground.
  • Tap the outside of your heel to the ground.
  • Without pushing off your heel or foot, straighten your standing leg over a count of two.
  • Repeat for 20 to 25 reps (about 40 to 60 seconds).
  • Switch sides and repeat for another 20 to 25 reps.

The post Expert Answers: How Do I Minimize the Impact of Hitting the Outside of My Shoe on the Ground When I’m Running? appeared first on Experience Life.

]]>
runners legs blurry
Enhance Your Running Performance With Nasal Breathing https://experiencelife.lifetime.life/article/enhance-your-running-performance-with-nasal-breathing/ https://experiencelife.lifetime.life/article/enhance-your-running-performance-with-nasal-breathing/#view_comments Fri, 22 Mar 2024 06:25:31 +0000 https://experiencelife.lifetime.life/?post_type=article&p=93035 Nasal breathing is an efficient way to circulate oxygen through your body during a run. Master the technique with these three expert tips.

The post Enhance Your Running Performance With Nasal Breathing appeared first on Experience Life.

]]>

When you run, you’re most likely sucking air into your mouth and blowing it out through your mouth. While this breathing pattern feels natural when working intensely, there are advantages to learning to breathe through your nose while running.

Research suggests that nasal breathing is a more efficient way of getting the oxygen your body needs for exercise. Translation: Your body doesn’t have to work as hard to supply oxygen, which means it can focus more energy on other aspects of running performance. (Learn how to harness the power of nasal breathing with this body-weight strength-and-conditioning flow.)

Use these three tips from Harrison Klein, a breath-first fitness instructor, personal trainer, and breathing coach at his performance and recovery center, Sauna Strong, to get started with nasal breathing while running.

1) Slow your pace at first.

If you typically mouth-breathe while running, you probably won’t be able to sustain the same pace while nasal breathing — at least not in the beginning. Depending on how often you run and how diligently you practice nasal breathing, it may take several weeks for your body to adjust. In the meantime, dial back your running pace. “You can even scale it down to walking at first to develop the nasal-breathing pattern,” Klein suggests.

2) Practice during endurance-focused runs.

Longer endurance runs are a natural fit for practicing nasal breathing because your pace is typically slower. This allows you to focus on taking slow, calm breaths, he notes. Easy recovery runs are also a good opportunity to do nasal breathing.

3) Maintain a steady rhythm.

Aim to keep your breathing calm and steady while you run. Let the nasal inhaling happen naturally (passively), and actively contract your belly to exhale all the air and empty your lungs, he advises. If you feel your breathing get out of control, slow down or stop to reset.

check out all of the content in our detox and declutter digital collection

The post Enhance Your Running Performance With Nasal Breathing appeared first on Experience Life.

]]>
https://experiencelife.lifetime.life/article/enhance-your-running-performance-with-nasal-breathing/feed/ 0 a woman running