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Training For a Marathon? Is Running a Marathon a Good Thing For You?



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By : David ZM Allison    29 or more times read
Submitted 2010-08-16 00:55:00
My company is called Marathon Coaching Consultants, and one would think that I would be a huge proponent of running marathons... well, I am and I am not... Let me explain.

You see, while I believe that running a marathon is a tremendous achievement for anyone (elite or novice runner), I don't think it makes you more of a "runner" if you do one... In this case more is not necessarily better. Is a sprinter less of a runner because he's racing only a few seconds vs. a few hours of a marathoner? Of course not.

Yet, I come across way too many individuals who love to flaunt their numerous marathon finishes, or that they are training to run uphills both ways at 10,000 feet altitude in some "Run Up into the Thin Air and Drop Dead marathon" somewhere in the Himalayas. Or better yet, I love the individuals who are perpetually injured but love to tell how they ran their last marathon on tweaked knees, shattered collar-bone, and deviated septum, and now can't train for a month, but are going to try to gut it out in two weeks for some 30K tune up race in Alaska.

Am I saying you shouldn't be proud of your accomplishments? No, what I'm getting at is that there are those who want everyone to "look at me" and there are those who run for themselves and don't really care if you think they are crazy or not for wanting to run 26.2 miles on an early October morning somewhere in the Midwest.

So why am I in favor for running a marathon? I am in favor for the following reasons:

1. Great self-confidence builder

2. Great challenge to put on yourself

3. Training gets you into great cardio shape

4. Attainable goal, but commitment is needed

5. The amount of training makes working out a habit - which is a good thing

6. Wonderful way to meet people.

7. Training gives you quality time with friends and family if they do it with you.

Why I am NOT in favor of running a marathon:

1. If you are making the training a chore and are getting no joy out of it at all

2. Because you want to see how much pain you can take

3. Because you want to be a "real runner"

4. If you are neglecting family and friends because you "have to get this training in"

5. You don't have the correct amount of time to train for one safely

So, run a marathon because YOU want to do one, NOT because you feel everyone in your running group is doing one, so you guess you should too. That's not a good reason. Run a marathon because you want to see if you can put in the time and effort to finish such an enormous feat. Run a marathon for a loved one, or to inspire your kids.

My favorite distance to run is the mile - I love that race. Of course when you get to be an adult, there aren't too many competitive mile races you can jump into, but there are a boat load of marathons to enter. When I have the time and the energy (which are few and far between these days with two little ones, coaching, and a new 9-5 job) I do enjoy getting in shape for a marathon, but when I try to get in the training I need with a limited time schedule, the training becomes work, especially when I know I won't hit the time goal I would be satisfied with.

So, please run a marathon... or don't... you will still be a runner either way. Just run one for the right reasons, that's all I ask.
Author Resource:- David Allison is a running coach in the Phoenix, Arizona area. He has run competitively for over 30 years, is a Master All-American runner in the 800, 1500, and 3000 meter distances, top 50 finisher in the Boston Marathon in 2006, and has a PR of 2:27.17. He has coached junior college, age-group, high school, adult and professional athletes. His company Marathon Coaching Consultants can be found at http://www.marathoncoachaz.com or can be reached by phone at 480-326-1495.


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