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Tag: Women’s Running

Posted on August 7, 2021

Without adequate recovery—easy days, sleep, downtime—training adaptations go down the tubes. @WomensRunning






Women’s Running

@WomensRunning

·
31m

Repeat after us: Without adequate recovery—easy days, sleep, downtime—training adaptations go down the tubes.

https://www.womensrunning.com/training/recovery

Posted on July 22, 2021July 22, 2021

Repeat after us: Without adequate recovery—easy days, sleep, downtime—training adaptations go down the tubes. @WomensRunning






Women’s Running

@WomensRunning

·
31m

Repeat after us: Without adequate recovery—easy days, sleep, downtime—training adaptations go down the tubes.

https://www.womensrunning.com/training/recovery

Posted on July 20, 2021July 20, 2021

Need Help Winding Down? Try These 9 Yoga Poses






Women’s Running

@WomensRunning

·
1h

You up? Hit the hay with ease after this yoga sequence.

Need Help Winding Down? Try These 9 Yoga Poses
If you’re feeling tired yet still wired at the end of the day, this gentle yoga sequence can help you get a good night’s sleep.
womensrunning.com

Posted on February 28, 2021

When was the last time you took full rest day.?

Rest Days are Key to Staying Healthy

Planning a full rest day into your routine can actually make you a better runner. Here’s how it works.

August 26, 2020Amanda Smith


Whether training for your next marathon or your first 5K, there is something crucial that can sometimes be neglected by women with a lot of ambition—rest (especially in the form of one full rest day).

When rest is neglected, training suffers. Adequate rest and nutrition throughout any training process are the best ways to ensure not only performance, but overall good health and injury prevention. According to the 2020 National Runner Survey, half of all respondents had an injury that kept them from running for four or more days in the last 12 months.

Fitting in rest days are crucial to keeping your body going in the long run. “It’s extra time to allow for all the, essentially, mechanical repair to go on in the body; production of collagen to repair tendons, muscles, bones, all those tissues taking some breakdown in normal exercise,” says Robert Wayner, PT, DPT, and director of the Ohio Center for Running Performance. A rest day also allows the body to build energy stores back up. “We know that our athletes, over a six-day training period, they may start the week off with full tanks and really good energy balance. But as the week wears on then, especially since some of their workouts are more demanding than others, those more demanding ones are going to take a longer period of time to essentially recoup from caloric energy-wise,” he says. One consequence of continually skipping the rest day and not allowing energy stores to build back up is developing Relative Energy Deficiency in Sport (RED-S) that Wayner says he sees runners fall into inadvertently.

A lot of runners feel guilt around taking a rest day, which comes as a result of a society that glorifies productivity and hyper-competitiveness. Those feelings are especially felt by women who try to ‘do it all.’ The reality is that you cannot train to your full potential if you never let off the gas. Eventually something will break down. For that reason, a group of runners created an Instagram account dedicated solely to idealizing rest where they show how runners like Colleen Quigley, Amelia Boone, or Molly Seidel spend their rest days.

Women’s Running@WomensRunning

Posted on February 7, 2021

You have to find some purpose in putting one foot in front of the other and tap into why you run. It can’t just be about race results.”






Women’s Running

@WomensRunning

·
6h

“You have to find some purpose in putting one foot in front of the other and tap into why you run. It can’t just be about race results.”
https://www.womensrunning.com/culture/people/desiree-linden-the-peoples-champion/
Posted on February 1, 2021

May Your Run be as STRONG as your coffee


k_stokes829
May Your Run be as STRONG as your coffee ☕️!
..
Monday vibes Winter Wonderland edition ❄️! Woke up to some fresh powder this morning and some super icy 🥶 roads. It was essentially a whiteout hence why this picture looks like I took it with a white backdrop 😂! Therefore, I’ll be taking today’s speed workout to the treadmill later since it’s just not worth the risk of falling. I’m so excited to start week 4 of @demarathon and @hotchocolate15k training!
..
Ps. It’s Monday and a new month so let’s hear what goals you’re planning to crush this month ⬇️?!
– – – – – – – – – – – – – –
Posted on January 27, 2021

When you’re out on a run, you want your phone in reach…Oiselle.


oiselle
Verified
When you’re out on a run, and you get 270 text messages, you want your phone in reach…⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
One of our favorites for trail running, the Flyout Bra, comes with a mesh pocket on the back — plus wide straps for comfort under hydration packs, if that’s how you fly.⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
Available in Setting Sun, Black and Empire (in limited quantitie
Posted on January 14, 2021

8 New Rules of Hydration – Women’s Running

Women’s Running
@WomensRunning
·

40m

The temperatures might be getting a little cooler, but hydration is still critical. The average runner tends to under-hydrate on a daily basis.
8 New Rules of Summer Hydration – Women’s Running
When temps are at an all-time high during the summer months, proper hydration before, during, and after your workouts is even more crucial.
womensrunning.com
Posted on December 24, 2020December 24, 2020

Walking Just 30 Minutes a Day Has Tons of Health Benefits





Women’s Running

@WomensRunning

·
6h

Even if it’s a rest day or you just don’t have time to get in a workout, here’s why you should still set aside a half hour and get walking.

Walking Just 30 Minutes a Day Has Tons of Health BenefitsHere’s why you should still set aside a half hour and get walking.womensrunning.com

Posted on December 23, 2020

When was the last time you took full rest day.?

Rest Days are Key to Staying Healthy

Planning a full rest day into your routine can actually make you a better runner. Here’s how it works.

August 26, 2020Amanda Smith


Whether training for your next marathon or your first 5K, there is something crucial that can sometimes be neglected by women with a lot of ambition—rest (especially in the form of one full rest day).

When rest is neglected, training suffers. Adequate rest and nutrition throughout any training process are the best ways to ensure not only performance, but overall good health and injury prevention. According to the 2020 National Runner Survey, half of all respondents had an injury that kept them from running for four or more days in the last 12 months.

Fitting in rest days are crucial to keeping your body going in the long run. “It’s extra time to allow for all the, essentially, mechanical repair to go on in the body; production of collagen to repair tendons, muscles, bones, all those tissues taking some breakdown in normal exercise,” says Robert Wayner, PT, DPT, and director of the Ohio Center for Running Performance. A rest day also allows the body to build energy stores back up. “We know that our athletes, over a six-day training period, they may start the week off with full tanks and really good energy balance. But as the week wears on then, especially since some of their workouts are more demanding than others, those more demanding ones are going to take a longer period of time to essentially recoup from caloric energy-wise,” he says. One consequence of continually skipping the rest day and not allowing energy stores to build back up is developing Relative Energy Deficiency in Sport (RED-S) that Wayner says he sees runners fall into inadvertently.

A lot of runners feel guilt around taking a rest day, which comes as a result of a society that glorifies productivity and hyper-competitiveness. Those feelings are especially felt by women who try to ‘do it all.’ The reality is that you cannot train to your full potential if you never let off the gas. Eventually something will break down. For that reason, a group of runners created an Instagram account dedicated solely to idealizing rest where they show how runners like Colleen Quigley, Amelia Boone, or Molly Seidel spend their rest days.

Women’s Running@WomensRunning

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