
Wed, Feb-19-03, 14:15
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Senior Member
Posts: 151
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Plan: Sugarbusters
Stats: 215/155/145
BF:
Progress: 86%
Location: NC
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Your story could almost be my story, except I'm 37. I wasn't very kind to my body through the 90s.
I took 12 years off marathons, 1989-2002. I would normally run them around 142-145 pounds although I was under 140 at one point (I'm 5 foot 6). I would always gain a few pounds in the winter (running sucks in Canada in the winter). In 2000, I moved to North Carolina and topped out at 215 pounds. I was in grad school and was going to start teaching. I knew I had to get back in shape before I tried to juggle a new profession, a grad school, along with day to day family stuff. A good friend of mine challenged me to get back in shape as he was running his first marathon. I casually mentioned that I ran 5 of them a long time ago.
Because of the same weight issues as you, I took it easy at first, as it was difficult to run and my knees were sore running at such a heavy weight. A treadmill helped a lot and I used the incline to increase intensity.
I didn't change my diet however and was always hungry with the extra exercise. I was only down about 10 pounds after many months of running. I got a boost by picking up a product that had some ephedrine and appetite control. I'm not really fond of ephedrine anymore, as coming off of it is difficult.
I used it for a little over a month and switched my diet to a "Sugar Busters" type diet, which has a lot of similarities to many of the other low carb diets. I was able to get to 171 before Myrtle Beach Marathon (Feb. 9th 2002) and thenfollowed it up with Shamrock (March 15). My weight stayed between 167-171, until I had a car accident in October and couldn't run for over a month. Needless to say, between that, Thanksgiving, Xmas, New Years, I got close to 180.
I'm now back to 168 and getting ready for a marathon on March 29th. I saw an article in Runners World a few months back where a guy was using a modified Atkins, lost that extra weight and was running around 3 hours marathons. I am looking for that mystical person for advice. I don't see 140 as an option; but I know that I can get to 150 and when I do I have strategies in place to maintain it. My biggest problem in the past was making a marathon a huge event and then not having a plan in place to keep training. I know keep an eye 4-6 months down the road for possible races to run.
I would be very interested in following up with you and other runners on training and diet. RW still talks so much about low fat /high carb, I'm tired of reading it.
A marathon is possible for almost anyone, you just have to really want to do it.
As for my times, my PR is 3:15 in 1987.
LAst year I ran 4:04, 4:08 (it was 83 degrees in Virginia Beach that day) and 4:44 - Grandfather Mountain - in the mountains of NC.
Ken
Last edited by kghamilton : Wed, Feb-19-03 at 14:17.
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