10.7 COMING BACK FROM AN ILLNESS

Don’t run if you have a lung infection. A virus in the lungs can move into the heart and cause serious damage. When there is a significant infection, get permission from a doctor who wants you to get back into running as soon as you can. When permission is given, start with a 10-minute walk and always walk or run with a relatively short stride, feet low to the ground. Every other day, extend the walk by three to five minutes until you reach 30 minutes. Then, insert a 5- to 10-second jog every minute into your walk. If this is too much for you at first, walk continuously when needed. Don’t do any running the day after you have inserted running segments into your walk to rest the running muscles.

Your goal is to finish each run-walk feeling like you could continue for another 10 minutes or more without any huffing and puffing. When you feel comfortable at a 5- to 10-second run/60-second walk for 30 minutes, extend the time by 5 minutes on one day every other weekend until you reach an hour. On the shorter weekend, stay at 30 to 40 minutes. Shift to doing two other runs a week (usually Tuesday and Thursday) and increase the amount of running. When 10/50 feels too easy on the shorter runs, move up to 10/40. After three to six of these workouts, shift to 10/30. You could either stay at one of those strategies or continue to gradually increase to 15/30, then 15/20, then 15/15, and so on—as long as there is no huffing and puffing.

Note: Don’t feel compelled to do more every workout. Find a ratio that works and feels comfortable.

There are a lot of issues in coming back from an illness. Even when you feel somewhat normal, living a sedentary life, the body may not have repaired itself completely. Remember that your muscles, heart, blood system, and mind–body connections can all work as a team if you progress gradually and avoid setbacks. If you have any aches, pains, or lingering fatigue, drop back to a more comfortable ratio and treat the area if there is possible injury. If you suspect that there are medical issues concerning your recovery from the illness, check with your doctor.

Read the last situation on TMS if you have pains. Pain generated by TMS can be managed in most cases while you continue to train. You may need to get your doctor to evaluate whether there is damage in the area that could be increased by running. Stay below the threshold of irritation of a real damaged area.

Don’t allow your reflex brain to take control and stimulate negative hormones. These trigger thoughts such as, “You used to be in such great shape,” “This is baby stuff, you can push yourself today,” or “You’ll never get back to your former fitness level.”

Instead, talk back to the reflex brain to shift control to the frontal lobe:

“I’m getting back in shape.”

“I feel good about myself.”

“I have overcome an injury and am a smarter runner now.”

“Speed is not important—it’s the joy from each run that keeps me going.”

Quick strategies: