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Training for the Boston Marathon and First Female Runners of the Boston Marathon | Image Courtesy of Malik Skysgaard via Unsplash
Training for the Boston Marathon and First Female Runners of the Boston Marathon | Image Courtesy of Malik Skysgaard via Unsplash

Road to Boston Marathon Part 1

A Tribute to the First Female Runners

On April 18, 2022 I am excited and grateful to be able to run the historic and prestigious Boston Marathon! As a physical therapist at Fusion Wellness /Femina Physical Therapy and avid long-distance runner for over 20 years, I’m excited to share my training journey with you leading up to the race. This race holds a special place in the hearts of long-distance runners because you must run a qualifying race with a qualifying time. Females ages 18-34 must run 3 hours 30 minutes or better, and males ages 18-34 must run 3 hours flat or better.

My most recent qualifying race was California International Marathon (CIM) in Sacramento, all the way back in December 2019! Due to the Covid pandemic, the majority of running races in 2020 and 2021 had been postponed or canceled, and they accepted qualifying entries back to 2019. Normally, I would compete in marathons and ultra-marathons throughout the year, but due to the risks of COVID, I refrained from competing for the past two years. In runner time, that feels like a lifetime! Being able to run any distance, like any other endurance sport and fitness in general, is use it or lose it.

Over the course of the past three months, I have steadily been getting back into marathon shape since my racing hiatus. There are several major components to training:

  • Running (go figure!) this includes speed-work
  • Hill training (hill repeats), long runs
  • Tempo runs at 10 km pace or faster
  • Strength, endurance, and dynamic balance training (see Part 2 in this series)
  • And lastly (but just as important) is recovery! (see Part 3)

At the beginning, I felt the sluggishness of not training seriously for two years. During 2019 and 2020 I kept my overall running mileage at about 15-25 miles per week for mental well-being, stress relief, and physical health during 2020 and 2021, but I had not kept up with the speed-work, hill repeats, tempo runs, and long runs that are crucial to running a fast and strong race. Over the course of the next few weeks leading up to the race, I will share my journey to the Boston Marathon with you, detailing my conditioning and strengthening, as well as how I recover after all those fast or long runs!

A little history about the race itself

The Boston Marathon was inspired by the spirit of the Olympic Marathon based on the Greek story of Pheidippides who ran 24-miles from the Greek city of Marathon to Athens with news of a victory over a Persian army. The first Boston Marathon was on April 19, 1897 (Patriot’s Day).

What may be lesser-known is that the Boston Athletic Association (also known as B.A.A., the race organizers) did not permit females to register or run the race until 1971! Trailblazer Roberta Gibb unofficially ran the race for three years from 1966 to 1968 by hiding in the bushes near the starting line without an official race number. Another trailblazer, Katherine Switzer, officially registered under the name K. Switzer, and ran in sweatpants and a baggy sweatshirt the entire race so as to dissuade officials from noticing that she was female. The first official female finisher of the Boston Marathon was Nina Kuscsik in 1972, the year the B.A.A. permitted females to register for the race.

As I toe the line on April 19, I will do so with the respect, admiration, and gratitude to the females who came before me and put it all on the line to be able to participate in endurance racing.

Source:

https://www.baa.org/races/boston-marathon/history

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No one could tell me why I was having pain during sex--sharp pain, not just uncomfortable, pain. I was referred to Heather Jeffcoat after researching several different options. I had seen a specialist who told me physical therapy would not help and my only option was surgery. I really didn't want to go that route, so when we got a referral, I decided to try it--it can't hurt, I thought. I am so glad I did. She diagnosed the problem right away, which was a relief in itself.

To know why I was having pain eased my mind immensely. And to hear that she could fix it without surgery was another relief. She said she could fix the problem in 6 weeks. I think it was actually 4 for me. She was very methodical, and treated me as an intelligent human being capable of participating in my own recovery. I would absolutely recommend her to anyone. She did not try to prolong my session numbers, she worked hard to accommodate my schedule (and the fact that I had to bring a baby to sessions), and she was completely honest the entire time. It is so hard to find someone with these characteristics, much less a professional who is so good at what she does. She has my highest respect.

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A personal journey and testimonial from one of my patients:

I was diagnosed with vaginismus 4 years ago. I never heard of such medical condition until after I got married. At first my husband and I didn't know what to do, we didn't know what the issues were or how to overcome it. Being born and raised in Armenia and being Christian I wasn't that open about talking to sex with others and so it wasn't easy to seek help. But eventually I went to an Ob-Gyn and luckily she knew about the medical condition (not many doctors know). She referred me to a physical therapist and I couldn't believe it and thought it's something I can handle myself. I ordered a kit from vaginismus.com and started practicing with dilators. There was some small progress but wasn't much helpful.

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Heather is without exaggerating AMAZING! After years of trouble with a certain part of my body, in no time, she made everything change back to equilibrium and to what would be considered normal. She explains everything in detail and therefore gives you a better understanding of why things are the way they are, and how you can work towards turning things around. I would highly recommend Heather for any type of Physical Therapy. She has created her own "Method/Therapy" through years of studying (with some of the greatest practitioners), practice and breaking down the issues of her past patients, enabling her to fine tune her own system. I'm so thankful to have found her, and I'm especially grateful for the quick recovery I've achieved, after years of distress. If you cannot afford her, I recommend you purchase her book. Although it may not be Heather in person, it can still help you to get on the right path to recovery!

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I have been going to see Heather for a while now, and I can't tell you enough how much she has improved my quality of life. Heather specializes in issues like pelvic floor, but I see her for other orthopedic issues.

I have a lot of chronic joint pain and dysfunction issues (back, hips, neck) that require that have ongoing physical therapy maintenance. The effects of my problem joints/areas overlap and interconnect with each other in complex ways, so helping me requires really having a complete understanding of the entire skeletal and muscular system. Pain does not always appear where the problem actually is, the human body is a twisty, many-layered puzzle. I have an exercise program I do at home and I am very functional, but there are just something things I need a PT to help me out with.

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