Growing old as a runner is like changing residences. Your
body is no longer a youthful temple; it has transformed into
what Realtors call a "fixer-upper" and you are the handyman
constantly attending to stiff muscles, sore tendons, achy
joints and dull pains. If you heed the advice "listen to your body," you may actually
hear clicks and squeaks in your knees and ankles as you
walk downstairs first thing in the morning. But changes are
going on elsewhere too.
Age tends to level the competitive playing field. Guys who
20 years ago trained fanatically, logging 100 miles a week,
may not be able to run 50 now. However, if you used to run
40 miles a week at a comfortable pace in the 1980s, it is
likely you can still do so. Those tortoises, who routinely got
beat by the hares in their youth, may now find themselves
passing those one-time speedsters.
And those Johnny-come-latelies who didn't even start
running until they were in their forties may now be racing
past the ancient tortoises and hares.
Racing Tips for Aging Runners
If you are patient and use the wisdom that allegedly comes
with age, you can still be a healthy and happy competitor.
You just have to look at things differently.
Let's start with shoes. Most old runners have logged tens
of thousands of miles over several decades. Our foot
suspension is not light and springy anymore; our arches
have likely flattened and x-rays may reveal spidery bone
lines of old injuries.
Ditch the racing flats. Wear training shoes for your races.
Furthermore, buy new shoes every 400 to 500 miles, even if
your current ones still look nice and have good rubber left on
the heels. You can't see it, but the mid-sole of those old
shoes has lost its cushioning.
Warm-ups are key for the older runner. You wake up stiff in
the morning, even after days you don't run. If you start your
day with a run, first shuffle, then jog, and finally --
sometimes a couple miles later -- run. Even then, some
days you may just never loosen up.
All training programs emphasize easing back on workouts
as you taper before a race. With older runners, the taper is a
flat line -- no running at all for the last two or three days
before a race. In this way, you may actually arrive at the start
with no muscle stiffness.
Don't be deceived. No matter what your brain tells you,
you're still as old as the Rolling Stones and this race will not
mark your return to the good old days.
As you near the starting line, do a couple run-outs to make
sure you can hold a reasonable race pace; but realize once
the gun fires, a good chunk of the field will still pull away
from you.
That includes women. Banish all thoughts of, "No woman
is gonna beat me" -- they can and will.
Racing is Tough on Everyone
Racing is painful for everyone. If you're running hard, no
matter how old you are, it still hurts plenty.
Senior runners find that their leg muscles tire before their
lungs do. When our aching quads won't push us any faster,
our wind allows us to talk with other runners. Thus, as
racers pass me, I often cheerily wish them "good luck" or tell
them they're "looking good."
One might observe philosophically that because older
runners take more time to complete the race distance, they
are getting more for their entry fee.
The home stretch is no longer a venue for heroic sprints. If
you haven't been practicing sprinting, don't try it now or your
hamstrings are apt to split open like the skin of bratwurst on
a hot grill. Just quicken your turnover and gamely
short-stride it to the line.
Seconds after crossing, expect to have a race official hover
next to you asking, "Are you OK?" Yeah, we probably do look
awful and feel terrible, but no worse than when in our
thirties.
The difference is that where everyone expects young
runners to recover, we old guys have faces that look like
ones in obituaries. Race officials fear we might expire right
there in the chute.
Good News for Senior Runners
Recent studies by David Costill, Stephen Blair and Ralph
Paffenberger indicate people who exercise regularly can
expect to live two to seven years longer than people who
don't -- and those should be healthy years as well. The
down side is exercisers are more likely to die during or just
after working out.
That sounds good to me. I'd rather live longer and die
quickly on a trail run, where no one would be there to drag
me into a hospital and run tubes up my arms.
Though I've often heard scoffers say we are out of our
minds to be running, a recent Seattle-based study tells
otherwise. Tests of more than 1,700 men and women who
were 65 or older and exercised at least three times a week,
showed them 32 percent less likely to develop Alzheimer's
or dementia. I can't think of a better reason to be out there
running.
It is easier running when young, no doubt. But if we listen to
our bodies, we older runners can stay away from most
injuries. In addition, those daily runs burn up calories, so we
can still stay trim and eat better than our sedentary peers.
Although sometimes our bodies ache a little, most days it
feels good to be out and running. Plus, if the science is
correct, we are going to enjoy longer, healthier lives.
Where I once wondered what it would feel like to be still
running as a senior citizen, I now know. It feels pretty good.
MR
Dave Foley, retired Michigan Runner Editor and Cadillac
High School coach and teacher, has hardly retired from
being active. But at age 59, he takes things a step at a time,
he says.