Thursday morning I woke up at 4am with a horrible pain in my ankle and calf. The pain refused to subside regardless of the ibuprofen I took or the stretching I tried. I iced the ankle, elevated it and begged for the mercy of the world. I pulled on a compression sleeve hoping that it was just a strange occurrence. It turned out to be just a muscle spasm (probably because I chose hard cider over water for most of Wednesday) but I couldn't help but allow the thoughts of disaster to flow through. My back is finally feeling better. My pace is steadily increasing to where it needs to be and my the extra wight is finally falling off. Thankfully, for me it was just a bad moment and my body reminding me to stay focused and enjoy vacation a tiny bit slower. For those of you, who like me, have struggled with an injury and finding your way back to a healthy you, I hope you love this post as much as I do!
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| Totally unrelated picture of what we spent the rest of the day doing once my body decided to cooperate!! |
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Christie Tate blogs at www.outlawmama.com
from her home base in Chicago. She is a
recovering lawyer and writer who has two small children she takes to Costco any
chance she gets. She runs when her butt
lets her. You can follow her on twitter at @theOutlawMama# # # # #
During the long Chicago winter, I spent hours on the
treadmill dreaming of the warmer months when I would be untethered from the machines
and running outside. In preparation for
summer running, I bought new running clothes and made an inspirational mix for
those long runs I planned to enjoy. I
toyed with signing up for a 10K by the end of September.
This summer, however, I haven’t run a single step, thanks to
a weekend in New York where I insisted on wearing zero-support ballet
flats. I walked mile after energizing
mile in Manhattan, hoping that the natives would love my shoes and treat me
like one of their own. My body let me
have my big city weekend, but then it extracted its revenge in the form of a
torn muscle in my glute (also known as my “butt”).
The pain hit the morning I got home—it took my breath
away. At first, I limped around in
denial. “It’s just a little kink! I’m
fine!” By the end of the first week, I
begged my physical therapist to see me. When
he saw that I could barely walk, he quickly put me on exercise
restriction. “How long until I can run
again?” I asked, holding my breath. “At
least two weeks,” he responded.
Two weeks? I thought I would die. It was early June, and I had some cute purple
shorts from Nordstrom Rack just waiting for a 5-miler. I hated the thought of losing 2 whole weeks
to this butt injury. I moped around, I
Googled other blogs about injuries, and I cried. A lot.
I cried because it hurt to sit and to stand and to move. I popped Advil every 6 hours. It actually hurt to sleep at night. It felt like it would never ever heal. I
began to understand why chronically ill people take up heavy narcotic drug use.
At the three-week mark, the pain was still acute. My physical therapist cleared me to walk and
admonished me to use the foam roller every
single night, which I did religiously.
As I realized my injury was more serious than a little
strain, I had to confront some deep-seated fears.
My TOP 6 FEARS about
going all summer without running:
1.
I will get fat
2.
None of my clothes will fit anymore, because I
will get fat
3.
I will go crazy mentally and emotionally without
the release of running
4.
I will get depressed
5.
I will lose all my conditioning, and it will
SUCK to start over
6.
I will get fat
Over and over, I bargained with God to fix my injury so I
wouldn’t have to work through the fears.
God, of course, had other plans.
Now, it’s been almost 3 months, and I still haven’t run a
single step. But I have stayed in shape, and I suspect I might be a little
saner. I have actually learned important
lessons from this no-running summer. And
while I would prefer to be injury-free, I have learned some lessons this summer
that are treasures to me.
TOP 8 GEMS FROM THE
NO-RUNNING SUMMER
1.
I learned that it’s important to trust my body
and let it heal, no matter how long it takes
2.
Gentle yoga and walking are healthy ways to move
my body when running isn’t an option
3.
I will not die if I can’t do strenuous cardio
(but I will have moments when I feel like I will)
4.
I will not get fat if I can’t run
5.
Those great purple shorts? I can wear them
walking
6.
Taking walks with my kids is a fun way to
combine exercising and parenting
7.
Getting older sucks, I might as well be nice to
my body starting TODAY
8.
Never, ever take my body for granted, especially
my butt, because I literally can’t make a single move without it.
I can say it’s been a great summer. I don’t wish injury on anyone, but if you
find you are derailed from your beloved exercise routine, there
may be some unexpected treasures on the road to healing!

Hi! Thanks for running the post. It looks like it cut off at the end . . . I hope I have something sage to say about this uncomfortable and painful injury!
ReplyDeleteYou are a miracle! And surrender looks good on you!
ReplyDeleteThanks, dear friend!
ReplyDeleteGreat post! Even if it has been cut off a bit.
ReplyDeleteI got told not to run for a few months in March/April/May and I wanted to give up on everything. But slowly, surely, we strengthen up again after a much needed rest, and it all comes back together...without getting fat! Those fears are so relatable.
Good luck!!
Groan. I'm always injured, but I've made this messed-deal, choosing sanity over physical health. My Achilles are gone--been hurting for at least 2,000 miles (or one year of running) but I gotta keep going. There's the fall marathon I'm running for charity.
ReplyDeleteRunning can be hell, but not running is even worse hell.
Sigh.
I'm hoping you're feeling better hun!
Awesome. I felt so many of those same things, and had the same concerns when I was out for three months this spring. Learned I wouldn't actually die or go crazy, but like you said somedays...
ReplyDeleteI hope your injury is soon behind you! I know what that's like-not the butt thing but I broke my foot in March and couldn't start back into exercising for a few months. You'll get there!
ReplyDelete