I have always run with stronger runners, from my road days to my years on trail. I’ve always been taught that training with faster people will help you become faster. I’ve done this with weightlifting, cycling, and in my professional life. There are definitely benefits, but what are the risks? Let me take you down memory lane. Mine not yours, come on back now 😉.
As someone who always struggled to keep up with
friends on group runs, I told everyone that it didn’t bother me, but it did…
for quite a while. Going on a group run
and then running it mostly solo, to me it defeated the purpose of going out
with friends. They would wait at splits
in the trail, which was kind of them. It
was also necessary as I typically had the keys to the car. I may not be fast, but it gives me more time
to think.
In 2020, three of my friends got into my van and set
out for The Grand Canyon. We had this
awesome idea to do the Rim2Rim2Rim. For those unaware, its roughly 42-50 miles
depending on the route and over 10,000 feet of gain. We started the South Rim
at roughly 3:00am and ran up to the South Kaibab Trailhead. From there, we started one of the coolest descents
I have ever run. We descended into the
darkness until the most beautiful sunrise peeked above the horizon. Eventually we crossed the river and started
our climb up the North Kaibab Trail to the North Rim, where you turn around for
the second half.
I was doing great on the way down and kept up with my
friends as we weren’t pushing too hard, but at a decent pace. I had a hard time keeping up with my friends
on the climb up and was pushing harder than my body could handle until I
started to have heat stroke (the GoPro videos are amazing). I did what we do and stopped in the shade
when I could find some and sat down. I
would drink water and eat before getting up and moving forward, sometimes only
20 feet before needing to sit down again.
I saw another friend from Southern California on the
trail and he really cheered me up. Finally a few miles from the rim, I was
feeling good again. I could see the
trailhead, my friends, and about 50 people resting. Then I could tell everything I consumed on
the climb up was going to make a grand reentrance into the world, so I ducked
behind the nearest tree.
I made half the journey that day and had to walk the
parking lot like… well, I better not say. Eventually I got a ride for my friend
and I from awesome National Parks Contractor who was driving back to the other
side for work. It was the best
experience and even though we didn’t meet our original goal, we got a guided
tour during the drive. That is after we
stopped pulling over for more visits from my lunch. We got to a lower elevation, and I felt ready
to run again.
The moral of my story is that I pushed way too hard
trying to keep up with my friends instead of doing what my body needed. In that case, I believe if I hiked slower on
the way up, the heat stroke and altitude issues would have been minimized. Run your own race. Don’t let the voice in your head or your
faster friends dictate your race strategy.
This is a pattern that I have seen in my group runs, the voice in my
head, and the goals I set.
I herniated a disk on a separate run where I was
trying to keep up with my younger girlfriend.
I felt great pushing down the hill and was near PR pace. Later that night, I was laying on the floor
and could barely move. Now 15 months post-surgery,
I am finally back on the trails. I don’t
know what the future will hold, but I will be doing things smarter, not harder.
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