has anyone started running for the first time after OHS?
has anyone started running for the first time after OHS?
Yep, I did.
Here's a link to a thread I posted after I had been at it awhile.
http://www.valvereplacement.com/forums/archive/index.php/t-15912.html
I tried to run before the surgery but it was just too hard to do and now I know why ! I've done 5 miles each of the last 3 Saturdays and I'm running twice a week in the mornings at 3 miles a pop. I think Im running now simply because I can.
Thanks Scott ... I have never had an interest in running/jogging but I find at times that walking is just not giving me what I want ... I think the AVR and putting down the smokes and losing weight has given me the idea that it might be possible to run for fun ... I am walk/running now two miles in the morning and two in the evening ... I am being careful not to over do and hurt myself.
Cooker,
I'm 53 and haven't ran in years but started recently after my OHS.
My goal is to run a 5K race this fall.
How about we start a "Cookers Run In---Friday Smack Down the Miles" thread.
to report the miles we log each week?
John
I would stress caution -- not getting caught up in a sudden burst of enthusiasm and doing too much, too soon.
Have you ever seen a runner smile?
Have you ever seen a runner laugh?
The one time I tried It I kept spilling my beer
and I couldn't keep my cigar lit!
There's your answer!
Cookie, I'm worried about you hurting your legs or knees. Does power walking interest you?
Also, swimming is the best workout and the safest....jump in the neighbor's pool....you know which one!!
I find this idea very interesting. I wasn't allowed to run or take PE in school from day one, although I ran everytime my folks weren't looking. Every spring I would beg my dad to let me go out for track but he would never relent, being obedient to the doctors' directions. I've always dreamed about running. And it's really fun in my dreams. But I'm still not, even walking, able to pull any kind of hills without some discomfort.
The other thing I would consider, if a person hasn't run as a young person and developed certain leg and ankle and foot muscles, that they would want to have excellent shoes, maybe run on a softer running track, and build up slowly and gradually.
For you real runners, does that sound correct?
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