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Thread: Has anyone stopped runnin

  1. #11
    Master L.F.F.'s Avatar
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    Hi again everyone,

    Thanks a lot for your replies. It's really good to hear it's not so uncommon.

    Sorry to hear of your situation Stagger. That's obviously a lot more serious than just a general losing your motivation and I'm sorry to hear you're going through it. I hope you'll be out the worst of it soon.

    Thanks Chris (doughty84), PeteS and Travs too. That's really similar to some of my feelings now. I entered two races for 2018 only a couple of months ago and felt really up for them. I've even had some decent training runs lately. But something's switched. And like with you (Chris), my children are 8 and 4 and I look at them and think, what if I had a whole Sunday with them and didn't have to disappear for an hour and a half? Or what if I didn't have disappear even when we're on holiday! Maybe it's just a runner's selfishness that I haven't thought these things before...

    And once the joy has gone a bit, there's probably no point just flogging yourself, as joy's pretty much the point.

    And thanks to Bill, Manhar, Derby Tup and Wheezing Donkey. All definitely good points and really helpful.

    One thing I sometimes think about and find really interesting, is Gavin Bland. He was obviously amazing in his younger years and then seemed to stop (as far as I know). But then one year, maybe 2012ish, I remember seeing him at Loughrigg Silver Howe, and seeing him, Chris Steele and Rob Jebb trott off up Loughrigg all chatting to each other, while others drifted behind. That year, he went on to win the British Champs! And then he seemed to go again! So it's possible to leave it for a bit and rediscover your love for it.

    One final thought, I remember saying to my wife that standing on the start line of the Langdale Horseshoe reminded me a bit of the story of The Ugly Duckling - for me standing there was the equivalent of the moment when the duckling finds out who he really is.

    Maybe the feeling's gone a bit, but those years of running, especially fell running, served a massive purpose that'll always be appreciated.

    Thanks again.
    Josh Hubbard - Ambleside AC

  2. #12
    Master that_fjell_guy's Avatar
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    I think the trick is variety. I've 'ran' since about 1986/7. Then joined a club so I could train for triathlon. did XC...loved it, did triathlon...loved it. 5 years in stopped loving the triathlon as I wasn't training hard enough for 'longs'. Did more local North York Moors fell races...loved that. Got injured....fell out with it all but plugged on and moved to Cumbria. Took six months out due to additional injury. Ran bits, walked bits...Munroing and 1000' top in Lakes bagging. Found the injury cleared and slowly built up. Sometimes enjoying it, sometimes not. Started on Lakes Longs/Super Longs plus Yorks Three Peaks....loved it. Did Marathon....loved it. Now I'm on 'Ultra's'/LDWA stuff (bits...). Now I had a down after having a bad L100 so decided to back off in 2018 and do more events with Mrs tfg, challenges she might fancy. Mojo went October/November. Then decided on Run Everyday December...now I'm on Do Something Everyday January/December and loving it again!! It's ups and downs, looking for new challenges...new horizons. It's sometimes not easy, but I'd guess 90% of the guys/girls who are saying they're 'off it' here will be back on it at some stage. Good luck, I'm sure your mojo will be back...or re-directed!
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  3. #13
    Master Daletownrunner's Avatar
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    I changed jobs just under 5 years ago, I was really lucky that in my last job I could run to and from work, so it was a steady 3 miles in the morning and anything from 7 to 15 miles in the evening, the beauty of this was I never trained during the week, only at the weekends my current job doesn’t allow me to do that and to be honest my running has taken a severe knock, unfortunately I’m a pig that likes his food, the only way I stay thin is to run so the thought of splashing out on a bigger pair of Levi’s has reinvigorated my mojo, at present I’m just plugging away, enjoying what I’m doing, be it road or fell, I walk the hills if I think a heart attack is imminent and just plug away, the beauty of my new routine is that I actually stop now and look at things, in the past I was just running, head down banging the miles in

  4. #14
    Moderator Mossdog's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by that_fjell_guy View Post
    I'm sure your mojo will be back...or re-directed!
    I think TFG is spot on LFF. As runners we wax and wane, and there's nothing wrong in that at all. You've done some excellent running over a number of years and now your key interests have shifted. All quite natural, and probably quite psychologically healthy too. Trouble is, also as runners, part of our psyche is constantly nagging us to always be out there doing more; sending us on a guilt trip if we stray. It's that obsessive-compulsive aspect that can be both positive and helps us with our running (e.g getting out there with the head torch on those dark rain filled wintery nights when most folk are truly sedentary in front of the telly), but which doesn't really have a wider and more balanced sense of perspective - one that real life demands. As TFG said, if you return to enjoy running for a spell, that's great. If you do something else instead - that's great too.
    Am Yisrael Chai

  5. #15
    Master
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    I'm not sure that I can add much to the wisdom that others have already provided, but it is clear that people do stop running for all sorts of reasons -- and then some of them start again at a later date. So don't beat yourself up about it if you don't feel like running now, although obviously you should keep doing some sort of (moderate) exercise.

    For myself, I never completely stopped running; but having run a race 4 weeks before my son was born, my next race was 14 years later, after I kept seeing posters advertising the Woodhouse Eaves May Day Challenge on my Beacon Hill runs (I believe you have "form" in that event, L.F.F.); and I was down to one or two runs per week within that period. So there's certainly nothing wrong with giving your family priority. And I have no regrets about missing out on all those M40 and M45 prizes because I wasn't racing in those age groups. I am now enjoying life as a M55, though still only racing occasionally (only 5 races in 2017).

    Something else that has kept my mojo up is that I keep getting injuries! Every time I have a few weeks off with an injury, I come back full of enthusiasm to get fit again!

    Finally, I should point out that Wheezing Donkey's accusation that I did "impressive personal challenges" is greatly exaggerated. Those runs were impressive mainly for the obscurity of the hills I was on, and certainly not for their length.
    In his lifetime he suffered from unreality, as do so many Englishmen.
    Jorge Luis Borges

  6. #16
    Moderator noel's Avatar
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    FWIW, I fall in and out of love with running most years. In the spring and early summer I'm mad keen and can't get enough of it. Then I get a bit bored towards the end of the summer/autumn and tick over through the winter.

    I think if you push yourself past a point where you're doing it for enjoyment, it reinforces the negative side of training (that you're doing it out of routine and not for pleasure). If you accept that you'll have ups and downs in how keen you are, it somehow doesn't put so much pressure on you. And you're less likely to drive yourself to those situations where you'll think "why am I doing this?"

  7. #17
    Master Witton Park's Avatar
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    I've never been a good runner. Probably best on a road, where I managed to get sub 40m for 10K, but then I prefer the hills.
    But the last couple of years seem to have been one niggle after another, where I have a few weeks off, get going again, manage to get up to 30 miles and break down again.

    So having had a foot problem since August, then a hamstring in December, I decided January would be back to basics, going back to 2003 when I first started as a 37 year old ex hockey player who had been a couch potato for 7-8 years.

    So I've tried to do something everyday in January, even if it's just running to the post office with parcels in a backpack - 1 mile there and 1 mile back on the canal.
    Longest run has been about 6.5 miles at 9 minute mile pace.

    I've stuck to the roads - quieter country ones or park roads - just because the foot problem I had seem to be worse after running on the rubble tracks around Darwen Moor.

    So far it seems to have worked.

    No niggles, no foot problem during runs, and I've only missed 2 days, one through weight of work and another on Saturday due to having a 24 hour bug that wiped me out.

    So feeling more positive.

    Plan is that in February I try to get a little longer and complete a 10 miler by end Feb. Possibly doing the Maryport 10 miler as my daughter now lives up there.

    All being well then it's back on the hills in March, the Stan Bradshaw, and then on to the Anni Waltz.

    I think some of the comments are spot on. Being in a club socially helps. Whilst I am in a club, I don't get to run with anyone at the club as I've spent most of the last 15 years coaching.
    I used to run with my wife who has run to a reasonable level, but we also foster and it's rare we get to run with each other. It's perhaps happened twice in the last 8 months.
    I used to love club reccies in the past. Whether local doing sections of 3 peaks, Pendle or Mary Towneley, or heading up to the lakes to do a section of BG.
    But we haven't done that for perhaps 5 years now and it would be good to get something going again.

    This crap grey weather doesn't help either
    Richard Taylor
    "William Tell could take an apple off your head. Taylor could take out a processed pea."
    Sid Waddell

  8. #18
    Master Wheeze's Avatar
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    Dont sweat it LFF. You've mentioned 2 key issues...young kids and a long way from fell country. Its no surprise that your initial enthusiastic phase has matured into the next stage....nagging guilt!
    You will find a new strategy, whether it be doing a few selected events, doing more local off road events, cycling or whatever. Then, in a few years, when kids are older or other life events have occurred, you may find you want to pick up regular fell races again. If you truly love it, it will never leave you.
    Personally, I had a massive first 5 years and then have piddled around ever since! Still totally love it though.
    Simon Blease
    Monmouth

  9. #19
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    About time you lot down there sorted out another epic challenge Wheeze (with trackers!!)

  10. #20
    Master Wheeze's Avatar
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    Definitely! The Steam Bunny Bluff is only resting pending the availability of next-gen trackers that communicate position by satellite as well as receive it. They have been around but cost has been adverse. But technology moves on and will be looking into it again soon.
    Simon Blease
    Monmouth

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