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Location:

Draper,UT,

Member Since:

Jun 11, 2009

Gender:

Female

Goal Type:

Local Elite

Running Accomplishments:

5K- 16:37

6K CC - 19:55 

4 miles- 22:10 

10K- 34:38

15K- 49:57 

Half Marathon- 1:12:03

20K - 1:08:38 

Marathon- 2:35:49

Short-Term Running Goals:

Stay fit and have fun doing some local races.

Get my youth cross country team, www.racecats.org off the ground.

Long-Term Running Goals:

Feel energized. Stay healthy and balanced

Personal:

Four awesome kids ages 4, 8, 10, and 12 years old. Love to run, play, and write. Married to entrepreneurial Aaron.

Favorite Blogs:

Click to donate
to Ukraine's Armed Forces
Miles:This week: 0.00 Month: 0.00 Year: 0.00
Book Dissolved Lifetime Miles: 6539.00
Altra Intuition Lifetime Miles: 35.00
Easy MilesMarathon Pace MilesThreshold MilesVO2 Max MilesTotal Distance
0.000.000.000.000.00

Rode my bike for 40 minutes or so until the rear tire popped and I had to walk home.  I'll confess, I tried jogging a little to speed up the 3 mile journey.  I did about 30 second jogging intervals every few minutes and it felt quite strange.  My left quad and glut are quite unfamiliar with the running motion.  It was kind of like one of those dreams where you are on the starting line of a race and the gun goes off but you realize you have forgotten how to run and it is super awkward.  

When I got home from that adventure I quickly showered and drove to Vail for my 6 week post-op appointment with Dr. Philippon.  I got there at my 11 a.m. appointment time and seriously waited for three solid hours in a boring empty office for Dr. Philippon to come in and see me.  He must have been in surgery and running way behind.  If you think waiting 30-40 minutes for a Dr. to come in the room is annoying, try waiting 3 hours!  I kept opening the door and walking down the hall, I went to the bathroom, did my PT exercises in the room, and read things online with my phone (thank goodness for that) but it was painfully mind-numbing.   Finally around 2 p.m. Dr. Philippon came in, asked me how I was feeling, did an evaluation, watched me walk and stretch, and told me everything looked great and I could start running again!  Three minute visit, tops.  He also told me I should never run on a treadmill again. His theory is that with the belt moving under my foot as my foot strikes it causes a motion that pushes my femur forward and puts too much torque into my the front of my hip joint where he operated, so I should avoid it altogether.  But then I pried a little more and he admitted that if I was choosing between running on crazy slick ice or treadmill, he agreed that treadmill may be okay a few days a year but to be aware that it may irritate my hip.  

Then I went downstairs to the PT, Mark who works with all of Philippon's patients and has also had the same exact surgery with Philippon two years ago. Mark gave me a more detailed protocol for HOW to get back into running.  I start with 1 minute of jogging/4 minutes of walking X 4 to a max of 20 minutes (that is a total of 4 minutes of running) three times a week the first week.  The program maps out an increase of a minute or two every week, so it is a very gradual progression.  The hope is that in another 8 weeks I should be able to run 5 days/week for an easy 30 minutes pain-free.  Mark also gave me all sorts of new exercises to be doing to get my gluts firing properly and strengthen my quad and medial hamstrings which are very weak right now.  It'll be a project, but I'll get back eventually. 

Comments
From Sasha Pachev on Wed, Sep 14, 2011 at 17:30:28 from 192.168.1.1

Congratulations on the progress, although it might appear small. Odd that I just thought: "I wonder if Nan can run again" and decided to check your blog.

Next time you have a chance, ask your doctor what he thinks about you running on the track. At least for me, doing all intervals on the road makes a difference between being healthy and having a knee problem. My thoughts are that when you have any kind of significant imbalance, you should avoid anything that introduces an imbalance of its own, unless it has been calculated and targeted to properly compensate for the one you have.

From Toby on Wed, Sep 14, 2011 at 22:52:00 from 216.194.124.36

Hooray for getting clearance to run! I'm sure you will be enjoying your 4 minutes of running and will be back to your speedy self soon!

From jess1 on Thu, Sep 15, 2011 at 09:26:53 from 74.179.3.11

Dr.'s offices and there torn up, 10 year out-of-date magazines make me shudder. Congratulations on the return to running!

From MichelleL on Thu, Sep 15, 2011 at 10:24:39 from 219.79.122.198

That sounds like a great plan. I am happy that you get to start, though so gradually. My first run back was 1 mile and it felt so long and it was 10:03 or something crazy like that. It felt so long. A more gradual ease in sounds wise.

From Lily on Thu, Sep 15, 2011 at 11:57:56 from 67.199.178.210

I am so happy for you. I had the same thought as Sasha. I wondered if you could run again yet. And here I am seeing that you can. Good luck getting back into it! :)

From DLTheo on Thu, Sep 15, 2011 at 19:28:08 from 155.130.107.41

Praise God for being able to return to running. I've been on that road of ridiculously short running after an injury, too. It does get you back to running, and sooner than you think. I have a hunch that somewhere down the line you'll cheat and run further than you're supposed to and find out it is ok. Just be careful!

From Scott Ensign on Fri, Sep 16, 2011 at 01:21:02 from 67.42.254.227

great news Nan!

From Russ on Fri, Sep 16, 2011 at 12:05:05 from 74.114.3.253

Congratulations! Hopefully the return will be much less painful than a 3 hour wait in the Dr. office. It has to be better than that.

From AmberG on Fri, Sep 16, 2011 at 14:09:01 from 67.2.217.49

Hey GOOD NEWS Nan! We all must have been thinking the same thing, wondering how you're doing. Glad things are on the upside for you :) Keep hanging in there!!!!!

From seeaprilrun on Fri, Sep 16, 2011 at 18:28:33 from 68.103.248.97

Great to see that you can run again! I have my suspicions as well about treadmill running and injury--my stress fractures came after a period of heavy treadmill use(and overtraining). Anyways, congratulations and you will be back quite soon!

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