So I'm thinking a lot about where things kind of went wrong in terms of not hitting my goal time, and I think it comes down to a general aversion I have to pushing myself outside of my comfort zone. This is something I've probably always been struggling with, but I've noticed it most since I started trying to get back into running shape after Charlie was born. I have potential to be going much faster than I have been, but I have a hard time maintaining it, for whatever reason. I need to work more on the speedwork, if for no other reason than to get used to how it feels to not be comfortable and to push myself. I tend to give up too easily, and I just need to get past that. I do need to cut myself a break, too, because in the grand scheme of things, I'm not all that experienced of a runner. Every marathon teaches me more about what I need to do differently in the training, how I need to learn to push myself, all that good stuff. I'm pleased with how I did Pittsburgh, since I think I did the best I could have done for how I was feeling on the day, but I've got high hopes that Columbus will be even better.
The other big thing I need to do is more stretching and cross training. My sports medicine doc (
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Do you know the yoga pose called "pigeon"? That's the best thing I've found to stretch the ITB.
No way! I didn't know pigeon was good for the ITB. It was the best way to stretch out my piriformis and SI joint when I was pregnant (they still get really tight), but I didn't know it was good for much else. There are a bunch of different ways to do pigeon, do you know which one works best to stretch the ITB?
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