26.2 Reasons Why You Should Run A Marathon

By Tina Alexander

For anyone that has braved a marathon, I’m sure you relate to the constant battle that is your internal conversation. Sometimes you think you’re going crazy and other times you think you are on top of the world. But once you cross that finish line, every mile leading up to those 26.2 is worth every black toenail you lost.

1. Because this is what it feels like to conquer the world.

For a moment in time, whether it is a moment that lasts for two hours or six hours, no one can bring you down.

2. Because beer will taste extra delicious afterwards.

You may not even be a beer drinker, but after those 26.2 miles, you will want one. You will seek it out. You will drink it and you will rejoice. (And chances are, somebody else will pay for it.)

3. You will meet some of the strongest and inspirational people on this earth.

That grandmother running for her sick grandson. That double amputee that put in a few miles with you. That ordinary girl, putting in miles in between her two jobs and full school course load. That blogger trying to get the word out that we can all do this. They will all inspire you.

4. You will build up your endurance.

During your training for a marathon and after, you will be surprised by your endurance. Training makes you do things you have never done before. Never did you think you could run 10 miles on the treadmill or walk on the Stairmaster for an hour. But you will find your limits, and you will pass them with ease.

5. As cliché as it may sound, you will find yourself.

You will find yourself and you will want to scream it off of the top of the highest mountains. Do it. Scream. You will find strength and ambition that you never knew existed and I tell you, do not let that go. Use it in every other aspect of your life.

6. You will be in the best shape of your life.

Training for a marathon will undoubtedly introduce you to other fitness outlets like yoga, spin or CrossFit. It will hopefully inspire you to eat healthy and make positive changes to your diet.

7. You will go for the gold in every other aspect of your life.

Remember that time you ran a marathon? This is nothing. You got this.

8. You will realize you can do anything.

Anything. And you will want to do anything and everything, too. You want to do an Iron-Man or run those 100 miles? What about that movie you wanted to audition for or that book you wanted to write? Or that girl you wanted to ask out but you were too scared? Go for it. What do you really have to lose but a moment in time?

9. You will branch out and try new things.

You will start to do things you have never done before. Maybe yoga was a foreign thing to you but your body needed the stretch. Maybe you have a phobia of working out with others but you know a running group will really help you log those miles. You will step out of your comfort zone and it will be worth it.

10. You will treat your body like a temple.

In trying to avoid injury, you’ll slowly begin to treat your entire body better. Training for and running a marathon is holistic. You will begin to seek out the best food you can. It will be like your mother is in town visiting and you only want to show her the best things for the next 6 months.

11. You just may inspire your friends, family and perfect strangers to log their own miles.

That friend that always made fun of you for being so weird about your running just may reach out to you to help them train for their first 5k. Your blog could inspire hundreds of people and you may never know it. Your drive could change someone else’s life and yours at the same time.

12. You will learn what it feels like to not give up.

There are moments when you are training for and running a marathon that you want to quit. In fact, you planned exactly how it would go if you did. You would collapse on the road, sink to your knees, and give up nobly, tears streaming down your face. But you didn’t. And instead, you’ll begin to compare every other life experience to that time you ran for hours on end just for fun, so why would you give up now?

13. You will gain self-confidence.

You will know you are a boss. No questions asked.

14. You may make some major life changes.

In realizing their dreams of 26.2 miles, lots of marathoners find the drive to quit that job they hate, get out of unhealthy relationships, move to that city they’ve always wanted to live in, and go for their dreams. Do it all. You can do anything, so why not do it now?

15. You will have a hunger to do better, either in your next marathon or other aspects of life.

You will tell yourself you will never run a marathon again. You will. You will strive to beat your time. You will train harder than last time and if it doesn’t pay off, you will keep trying until you get there. You will learn what it’s like to try to improve upon yourself.

16. You could lose some pounds or tone up.

You may have to buy new jeans here and there, but you will be happy with the changes and with the dedication and hard work it took to get there.

17. You will be in awe of the people supporting you.

You will never know the power of a person cheering you on quite like they do in a marathon. In your weakest moments, a complete stranger will catch you running around that corner with your head down and defeat in your eyes and they will lift your spirits right when you want to quit.

18. You will belong to a small, proud group of people.

You will be hard-pressed to find another person in the same room as you that has run a marathon. Teach then about it, share your experiences, be proud of the accomplishment whether you came in first or last, and feel a bond with any other marathoner you ever meet for the rest of your life.

19. You will become completely obsessed with whatever artist was playing when you crossed that finish line.

You may never again speak poorly about Kanye West, but just to be on the safe side, it’ll take about 4 “BEYONCE”s to get you to the finish line.

20. That runner’s high never goes away.

Ever. You will always be on cloud nine about those 26.2 miles.

21. You can crush all the reasons “they” say to never run a marathon.

They will call you crazy. They will tell you not to do it. They will tell you that the human body was not made to withstand running 26.2 miles. Few things feel as satisfying as proving “them” wrong.

22. You can raise money for charity and give back to your community.

The only thing that feels better than running a marathon for you, is when you’re running a marathon for someone else.

23. You can toss that gym membership, hit the pavement and save some bucks.

If it is marathon season and all you want to do is log miles, save yourself the money and cancel your gym membership for a few months. Training on the treadmill will not help prepare you for the impact of pavement. Trust me, I’ve done it.

24. That medal on your wall will be a constant reminder of how badass you are.

You will wear that medal in the privacy of your own home for absolutely no reason other than to celebrate that you earned it. You would walk around every day with that medal on if you could—but that would be taking gloating to the next level.

25. You may get to travel to another city, or even another continent.

Running a marathon in another country could be a great reason to travel. Kill two birds with one stone, and explore a new place from a completely unique vantage point that few will ever see.

26. Because it is a celebration of life.

Whether it is with a beer, a gathering of friends, a quiet moment to yourself, or those cupcakes you’ve been craving. You will celebrate.

26.2… And you will celebrate hard.

Sure, you may not be able to walk or sit down properly for a few days, but the long-term effects will last forever. You will never regret running that marathon. 

Source: http://thoughtcatalog.com


6 Reasons to Run a Marathon



If you're new to running, or new to marathons, you might be intimidated by the distance. Yes, 26.2 miles is a long way, but more people are taking on the challenge each year. According to Runningusa.org, there has been a one-percent increase in finishers from the same 367 marathons for 2010 and 2011 (495,135 vs. 500,206). Since 2000, there's been a 47-percent increase of U.S. marathon finishers (353,000 vs. 518,000). 

If you're thinking about doing a marathon, here are six fantastic reasons for you to take the plunge and register for a one.

More4 Last-Minute Marathon Tips for First-Timers

Get Fit

Training for 26.2 miles will help increase your endurance. It will help make your heart stronger, improve circulation, and strengthen your muscles. You will probably also see mental improvements as well, such as feeling less stress, being more upbeat, and experiencing the "runner's high" on a regular basis.

Raise Money and Awareness for a Charity

Many runners now combine their marathon goal with the goal of helping others by raising money for charity. Use the inspiration and motivation that you're helping others get you through 26.2 miles. Plus, it's difficult to quit when someone else has donated on your behalf.

MoreJoin an Endurance Charity Program

Step Out of Your Comfort Zone

Everyone has at least one fear or insecurity. For many people, running a marathon seems like a huge undertaking, in fact, it might even seem impossible. It's true that running a marathon is a challenge that requires commitment and perseverance. That being said, every time you step outside out of your comfort zone and accomplish something new, you grow stronger and become more confident.  

Make New Friends

The running community is amazingly tight knit, welcoming and diverse. Training for a marathon with friends is always easier and many fellow marathoners welcome newcomers with open arms. Once you make the commitment to the marathon, reach out to your local running club or other runners in your community. The chances are that you will find someone to train with and also make some new and long lasting friends in the process. It's hard not to bond when you run over 20 miles together.

MoreHow to Find a Running Partner

The Sense of Accomplishment

There's nothing more rewarding than accomplishing a large goal you set. Running a marathon is one of the largest physical challenges you can set for yourself. Most marathoners equate the day they finished their first marathon with other special day, like their wedding or the birth of their child(ren). It doesn't matter if you finish last. You are still a marathoner and are part of an elite club of people that have completed 26.2 miles.  

Inspire Others

You may not realize how much your life and actions impact others on a daily basis. You may think what you do doesn't make a difference, but that couldn't be further from the truth. If none of the other reasons motivate you, then turn your focus outward. Run a marathon to inspire others to do something they thought was too tough or impossible. When others see you train and cross that finish line, someone will follow your lead and start running. They might even run their own marathon or face a different fear. 

How To Run A Marathon, According To Science

Story provided by Vox 

In the United States, marathons are way, way more popular than ever before. Over the past 40 years, the number of marathon finishers has increased twentyfold, and more than half a million Americans finished one last year.

This explosive increase means that tons of people are running (or trying to run) a marathon for the first time.

For most people, running 26.2 miles is a tall order. But experts — physiologists, sports psychologists, and others who take the products of research and use them to help athletes — have a number of tips that will make this feat as attainable as possible for first-timers, and as fast as possible for experienced runners.

Most of them boil down to one thing. “The really important thing for marathon runners is having a strong plan, which comes through training,” says Duncan Simpson, a sports psychologist at Barry University who coaches athletes in addition to conducting research. “Everything — your goal, pacing strategy, nutrition, hydration — should be a very calculated experience.” Here’s a brief guide to how that advice gets applied to specific areas.

The importance of training

(Photo by EyesWideOpen/Getty Images)

All the experts I spoke to agree on this: the right training program is the most important thing for finishing with a good time, or simply completing a marathon for the first time. Nothing you do on the day of the race matters if you haven’t put in the hours and miles in the months beforehand.

“The training is crucial, and it needs to be specifically targeted to the demands of a marathon,” says Paul Laursen, a physiologist at Auckland University of Technology who also trains New Zealand’s olympic athletes.

There are all sorts of training programs and plans out there, and different people recommend different ones. Laursen recommends long-distance running sessions intended to enable you to run at a given pace for increasing distances, interspersed with other sessions aimed at improving key physiological properties: your maximum muscle output (often expressed as VO2 max), your overall endurance, and other factors.

This training plan for first-time marathoners, for instance, includes one long-distance endurance-building run per week (starting at 6 miles), one day of cross-training a week, and three shorter-distance, higher-intensity runs.

Regardless of the particular plan you choose, you absolutely need to stick with it throughout the training period. Then, in the week leading up to the actual race, you should taper, doing shorter runs than usual before not running at all for the day or two immediately before it.

Stick to your pace

(Photo by Suhaimi Abdullah/Getty Images)

After months of training, you should know the pace you’re capable of sustaining for 26.2 miles. This is important.

“The first half is going to feel easy, but it’s got to feel easy,” Simpson says “You’ve got to make that first half as easy as possible and not get carried away and speed up. You need to have the discipline to do that.”

Basically, this means that during the first half of the marathon, each of your mile split times should be equal to (or even a bit slower than) your overall goal. Conserving energy here will leave you enough so that you can hit that goal during the latter half of the race.

For relatively inexperienced runners that might not know exactly how a given pace feels — in terms of running speed — Laursen recommends GPS-enabled watches that tell you exactly how fast you’re going.

You don’t need to carbo-load

(Photo by Suzanne Kreiter/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)

A number of studies conducted in the 1980s and ’90s led to the widespread idea that eating a ton of carbohydrates the night before a race would improve performance. The idea behind this was that carbo-loading would increase levels of glycogen(a molecule that stores energy) inside your muscles, giving you extra fuel to get through a marathon.

But more recent experiments have essentially debunked this idea. Most experts now say that you don’t need to eat an especially high amount of carbohydrates right before racing.

Instead, some recommend a relatively high-carb diet throughout the training process. Combined with a tapering off of training in the days leading up to the marathon, that will be enough to increase your muscle glycogen levels to the necessary level for the race.

At the other end of the extreme, though, a few experts actually recommend a low-carbohydrate diet throughout the training period. “You want to be as fat-adapted as possible,” Laursen advises. “The more fat you can burn as a fuel, the better off you are.”

Still, it’s unclear which of these approaches might work better, since there hasn’t been a ton of researchinto the effects of low-carb endurance training yet. The only thing that’s clear is that you don’t need to eat a ton of pasta the night before you run.

Drink water — but not too much water


(Getty Images)

There’s also been a similar sort of reversal when it comes to experts’ advice for how much water to drink during a race. Everyone loses a ton of weight via sweat during a marathon, and for years, guidelines said that you should drink enough water so that you don’t lose more than 2 percent of your total body weight.

To make sure this would happen, the thinking went, you had to drink before you were thirsty throughout a race. It was also recommended that you weigh yourself before and after training runs to calculate your exact sweat rate and drink accordingly.

But more recent experiments by Laursen and others have shown that all this isn’t actually true — and might actually lead to over-drinking, which can slow you down and even make you sick in extreme cases. “You don’t have to worry too much about your hydration status,” Laursen says. “In general, if you’re drinking to thirst, you’re probably fulfilling your body’s needs.”

Obviously, not drinking enough can still lead to dehydration, but the key here is that if you basically just drink when you’re thirsty, you’ll be fine.

How to prepare your mind for pain

by David L. Ryan/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)

Marathons hurt. This is true for first-time runners as well as veterans who want to improve their times. Knowing this at the outset, Simpson says, is essential. “You’ve got to have some acceptance that discomfort and pain will happen,” he says.

One of the best ways of dealing with it, he and others recommend, is remembering the fundamental reason you’re running the race, whether it’s a specific time you want to hit, a charity you’re raising money for, or simply a basic desire to finish a marathon for the first time.

“I like to ask clients, ‘why are you doing this?,'” Simpson says. “When your legs are cramping 20 miles in, you’ve got to be able to answer that, because it can help push you forward.”

Among sports psychologists, one big question regarding endurance-based events like marathons is what a runner should be doing with his or her mind during the race. Essentially, it comes down to two strategies: one called association (in which you think about your body, your technique, your pace, and other concrete aspects of running) and another called disassociation (in which you essentially zone out and try to think of anything else).

At the moment, it seems like there isn’t necessarily one strategy that’s better than the other. “There are benefits to both approaches,” says Simpson. “For more experienced runners — who know what a particular pace feels like, and know the right amount of pain — it can help to pay attention to what’s going on in their body. With less experienced runners, it can help tend to think about anything else to avoid all the pain that’s going on.”

In other words, if you have a very specific time you want to hit, you really need to be focusing on your body throughout the whole race. If you really just want to finish for the first time, you definitely need to pay a bit of attention to your pace (especially so you don’t use up all your energy in the first half), but when things really get tough, just thinking about whatever gets you through the last few miles — whether it’s the beer you’ll drink that evening or the glory of posting your marathon pictures on Facebook — is totally okay.

How to recover

(Craig Prentis/Allsport via Getty Images)

There isn’t a ton of research when it comes to recovery, but on the whole, experts have one main recommendation for the days and weeks after a marathon: take it easy.

Recovery times can vary widely from person to person — some people can run comfortably again within days — but for most people, it takes two to three weeks. It’s often said that recovery times directly correlate with race lengths (i.e. a 26 mile race would require 26 days of restful recovery), but there’s not really any truthto this idea.

The key is to give yourself as much time as you need. Your muscles will take time to replenish their stores of glycogen. Once they’re no longer sore, it’s a sign that they’re ready to do work again, and it’s best to start with shorter, low-intensity runs and gradually work your way upward.

Sorce : http://theinformationage.co/

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