Yesterday was a tough day in my running world. GI problems continue to be an issue. During my run yesterday I was hit with
immense nausea and stomach cramps. No
urge to use the bathroom, just overall discomfort. With 12 miles on my marathon training plan, I
wasn’t sure how I was going to manage.
I have read and researched a lot about GI issues troubling runners. This is something I tend to go through a least a few times a week. After my long runs on Sundays I am often plagued by intense nausea and sometimes vomiting. During the Shamrock Shuffle I had a similar experience. I was able to push through the stomach pains, though I felt exhausted and defeated at the end. I can usually decrease the nausea by eating carbohydrates afterwards. For me, something low on the GI scale like a sweet potato helps the best. Yesterday I was hit hard by nausea that ebbed and flowed throughout my run. The first two miles it was mostly quiet, sort of an annoying background noise. I tried my best to ignore it and soon felt better. I completed my first of 2 x 4 miles at tempo pace. I turned around and started my second set. After the first mile of that set I knew I was in trouble. I started to feel the bile in the back of my throat and sharp pain in my lower abdomen. I took walking breaks. It subsided a little, and I was back at it. I drank some water which also seemed to help a little, as GI issues can often be related to dehydration.
I finished my last tempo miles and felt defeated. I was exhausted by trying to keep up a tempo pace, averaging about 7:45/mile, and ignore my GI issues. I walked my final two easy, cool down miles home. I too often beat myself up for not completing a run. It’s easy to feel like I will never finish my marathon if I can’t push through 12 stinking miles. Unfortunately I did not bring my cellphone with me yesterday. Instead of calling Chris for a ride home and to avoid letting my mind wander about my “failure” and if I could just finish those last 2 miles, I had about 30 minutes to sulk and mentally berate myself. Not one of my best qualities.
I have read and researched a lot about GI issues troubling runners. This is something I tend to go through a least a few times a week. After my long runs on Sundays I am often plagued by intense nausea and sometimes vomiting. During the Shamrock Shuffle I had a similar experience. I was able to push through the stomach pains, though I felt exhausted and defeated at the end. I can usually decrease the nausea by eating carbohydrates afterwards. For me, something low on the GI scale like a sweet potato helps the best. Yesterday I was hit hard by nausea that ebbed and flowed throughout my run. The first two miles it was mostly quiet, sort of an annoying background noise. I tried my best to ignore it and soon felt better. I completed my first of 2 x 4 miles at tempo pace. I turned around and started my second set. After the first mile of that set I knew I was in trouble. I started to feel the bile in the back of my throat and sharp pain in my lower abdomen. I took walking breaks. It subsided a little, and I was back at it. I drank some water which also seemed to help a little, as GI issues can often be related to dehydration.
I finished my last tempo miles and felt defeated. I was exhausted by trying to keep up a tempo pace, averaging about 7:45/mile, and ignore my GI issues. I walked my final two easy, cool down miles home. I too often beat myself up for not completing a run. It’s easy to feel like I will never finish my marathon if I can’t push through 12 stinking miles. Unfortunately I did not bring my cellphone with me yesterday. Instead of calling Chris for a ride home and to avoid letting my mind wander about my “failure” and if I could just finish those last 2 miles, I had about 30 minutes to sulk and mentally berate myself. Not one of my best qualities.
Why am I putting all this out there? I find that sometimes it’s too easy to get
down ourselves for not finishing a “perfect” run or sticking to our training
plans. I am one that all too easily
falls into this category. To me, nothing
beats the sense of pride while completing another training run. Yesterday made me reflect on when it is
appropriate to push through different running issues like GI problems and when
to back down and call it a day. It is
definitely something I am still learning to do, but yesterday will help me
better understand my body’s signals on when enough is enough.
10 miles
1:21:01
2 miles easy, 2 x 4 miles tempo
Today I still felt a little queasy, but more confident about conquering my run. This cute face didn't hurt.
4 miles
31:45
Do you have GI issues while running?
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