Marathon Tips

With the Boston Marathon just around the corner, we are seeing a lot more runners starting to filter through our doors. We know that training for a marathon is hard enough, but having to dodge, turn, parry and spin from possible injuries makes matters even more arduous. Here are just a few simple tips to keep you on course to realizing this ‘bucket list’ achievement.

1. Recovery is part of your training:
You are starting to add more miles to your weeks as you ramp up. Reward your body for its efforts by taking the time to properly recover from your workouts. Obviously, a massage is a great way to recover, but that’s not the only means of doing so. Something as simple as a proper cool down walk (10 min), post run, is a fantastic way to allow your body an easier return to homeostasis.

2. Adjust your nutritional intake NOW:
Many runners fail to see the value in proper nutrition. When running 26.2 miles, your biggest opponent is not your legs, but rather your stomach. Take the time now to determine what supplements you will be able to consume while on the course. Finding out at mile 7 that a Goo makes your stomach do back flips is not the best path to a successful day. Also, take the time to understand what the optimal time is to intake supplements. Taking a supplement when you feel hungry is TOO late. Your body has already begun to store energy (survival mode).

3. Find your cadence:
When the race begins, it’s very easy to start fast and run with the pack. Before you know it, you just ran a 7 minute mile, well off your normal 9 minute mile pace. Understanding your cadence now, creates neuroplastic changes that, when done consistently throughout training, will allow for your natural cadence to reign you in before the adrenaline sends you flying out of Hopkington.

4. Don’t ‘run through’ an injury:
Too often we have runners who come in several weeks or months from the time they first felt a ‘tweak’ some place. As you up your mileage, you are essentially adding more and more wear and tear on your body. It’s completely normal for one to generate an overuse injury. Take precautions now by not ignoring the little things. It doesn’t make you a wuss. It makes you smart. Nothing bothers me more when I see a runner have to bail on the race because they failed to observe the signs of potential injury.

I hope these few tips will start you thinking about your training path for the next 6 weeks. If your goal is to raise your arms in victory when crossing the most illustrious finish line in the world, than heed this advice and you may very well surpass even your own expectations.

Please Pass the Mustard

I’m going to go way out on a limb and guess that the last time you had a leg cramp your immediate reaction was to either stretch it, rub it, ice it or a combination of any of these responses. What if I told you that you should eat some yellow mustard for an almost…

Read More

Cheers to More Energy, Mental Clarity and Focus in 2015!

The following post is contributed by Anne Turnbull. Ann is a global business development leader with Max International, a company in the forefront of glutathione research and development. She is a frequent presenter to audiences in Canada, US and Africa and is passionate about spreading the word about the importance of glutathione for good health.…

Read More

Wake Up and Smell the Coffee

Do you recall the days in college that you would brew a pot of coffee to get through the occasional all nighter? Today, you have an endless supply of vices to curb that ‘energy fix’ we all crave. From Red Bull to Death Wish coffee (yes, that’s an actual brand), you can all get your…

Read More

Running is as easy as 1-2-3

There are two kinds of runners in the world; those who love it and those who don’t. I am definitely the latter of the group. However, the one thing they all have in common is, you guessed it, running. Regardless of whether you are enjoying your time on your run or not, we all know…

Read More

Head Games

To paraphrase the great Yogi Berra; Running is 90% physical and the other half is mental. No one ever claimed to understand the old Yankee skipper, but we knew what he was attempting to say when he was discussing the ability to master the game of baseball. The same holds true with running (and many…

Read More

What’s the Scoop on your Poop?

Being the father of two little girls, I know I have my work cut out for me. I have come to accept that there are lessons that I can teach my children and there are others lessons they will simply have to learn through personal experience. One of the lessons I constantly remind them of…

Read More

Your Referrals Can Be A ‘Real’ Pain

No, I don’t mean the favor of your referrals of friends and family. We LOVE to get those. Today I want to talk about a type of pain known as ‘referred pain’. Referred pain is something that all of us have experienced at one time or another, yet may not have known what was happening.…

Read More

What are Shin Splints?

What are Shin Splints? We treat a lot of different conditions at The Boston Bodyworker, ranging from general stress and fatigue to chronic pain. One of the more popular complaints we get from our running population is shin splints. If you have ever had them, you know how uncomfortable the pain can be and how…

Read More

Let’s Talk About Sex!

There are three areas of conversation that we are told too avoid at all cost while in the treatment room; sex, politics and religion. These subjects are clearly based upon ones personal opinions and beliefs and are rarely needed to provide sound clinical outcomes in massage therapy. Today, I am making an exception. New research…

Read More

Tips on “That” Tape

Over the past year or so, we have seen a heightened interest in “that cool looking tape” otherwise known as kinesiology tape. The tape has become more and more popular and is now even being sold in places like Target and City Sports. To weekend warriors, success with this new tape has been a bag…

Read More