My fitness on the bike is back to where it was
pre-baby, in fact, I almost think it is better. The average speeds I am hitting
on what feel like easy aerobic base rides are far superior to where I was at 18
months ago. I haven’t done an FTP test to see where I am at power-wise and, to
be honest, I don’t really care as I simply don’t have the time or flexibility
to commit to a structured training schedule that works off numbers right now.
Everything is done on feel as and when I can fit it in, but I have always been
pretty good at judging my efforts on the 1-10 RPE scale, so I am just basing all
my training on that. Not very scientific, but that is the approach I had prior
to taking on a coach in 2018 and that is the approach that got me to the
European champs in 2017 and got me a silver medal. Besides, it’s the only
approach that logistically works for me and my family right now. If I were to
follow a regimented coaching plan, I would just be left feeling constantly
guilty: guilty that I am asking too much of others to help look after my baby
whilst I train; guilty of not being with my baby when he needs me because my plan
says it’s swim time now, not Sylvester time; and guilty to the plan and/or my
coach because there would inevitably be several missed sessions when my
full-time job as a Mum just takes priority over a training plan. It would add
pressure to the whole thing and, right now, I am under enough pressure just
trying to survive with a baby who doesn’t much see the point of sleep or who is
in too much discomfort with reflux and teething to be able to sleep. What I
need now is for exercise to be escapism, my bit of 'me' time, and for me to just
enjoy it as and when I am able.
So I have put in for these qualifiers but am going into
them not expecting much. The way things are going with Sylvester’s night time
sleep, I know I will be towing the start line already knackered and therefore
at a disadvantage to most of my fellow competitors who have had a nice easy
taper week, put their feet up, got the good nutrients on board and had a few
nights good quality slumber. I will be relying on coffee to get me through.
Coffee and a can-do attitude… let’s hope it’s enough!
My running has ben steadily improving and my times
also. This weekend I managed a 5k parkrun in 20:13; still two minutes down on
my PB but only a minute shy of my best since I made the switch from being exclusively a runner to a multi-sport athlete in 2015. As my
bikes times seem to have improved slightly, this should hopefully only see me
around 1 minute slower than where I was at for the other qualifying races I
competed in, in which I won my category on all three occasions (to qualify I
only need to place top 4, so I am confident that this is achievable… baring
mechanical disasters!!)
Nope, not walking a parkrun - walking to the start of a parkrun, namely Southwick in Trowbridge
Southwick parkrun - my 210th parkrun at 49 different events
And another new Post-partum parkrun Pb (a p-p.p.pb) of 20:13
I have been thoroughly enjoying the running and have
been pleasantly surprised by how quickly I have regained my fitness. The leg
speed has been slower to return, but the endurance – to say I am doing nothing
longer than 4 miles in one go – is there. I was so shocked to place second lady
at the ever popular and competitive Totnes 10k at the start of August and be
only 1m30s slower than my course best time, which I set in 2013 when I was at
my fittest and running all my PBs. Plus being able to reset the clock from the
date I gave birth has given me a mental boost: rather than seeing a 20:13 parkrun
5k as a disappointing 2 minutes slower than my PB, I can see view it as yet
another post-partum parkrun PB (or, as I have coined it, a quadruple ‘p’), and
I have had the pleasure of setting a few of those over the past few months,
seeing my times fall from the high 23 mins when I first started back, down to
the low 20s. Very motivating! We have also been continuing our tour of the
country parkrun by parkrun! My total now reaching 49 different events over 210
runs and 20 volunteers (with the goal of hitting the big 50 in Gloucester this
weekend). Last Saturday was Southwick: we had to leave at 7am to get there, but
that is no longer a chore when we have already been awake for 2 hours anyway!
Totnes 10k: one of my fave trail races; I have run it 5 times now
2nd lady, only 1m30s slower than my course best: a most unexpected result!
My 5 month old giving my prize his 'Syl' of approval...
Also, since Sylvester turned 6 months, I have been
able to run with him in his running buggy, a big plus as it means I can now combine
my training with his nap time: for a baby who will only nap in a buggy on the
move, this now means 6 miles of walking and one 4 mile run as opposed to 8
miles of walking (4 naps x 2 miles each, minimum, assuming he is quick to doze
off… longer if the first mile sees him still in the land of the wide-awake!) plus
a separate training run on top, bringing my daily foot-fall to well over 10
miles…. all on the back of atrociously disturbed sleep. It’s a good job I am a
naturally energetic person and powered by Duracell as I think lesser mortals
running on cheap batteries from the pound store would have long since fallen by
the wayside! But even I have my limits and this week has been particularly
tough: terrible nights of teething and reflux screaming, doctor’s appointments,
new medication, baby not gaining weight etc etc and the worry of all this on
top of the sleep deprivation and training fatigue has even got to me,
super-Mum (Sylvester bought me a mug for Mother’s Day that says I am, so it
must be true!). There have been 3 rest days in the past 5 days: unheard of! (By "rest" I simply mean no training, of course that pram still needs pushing come rain or
shine!)
Buggy running at Haldon Forest with my boy!
An unexpected side-effect of all these challenges is
that I can literally eat whatever I want, in vast quantities, and I still weigh
around 5lbs less than before I was pregnant. A lot of people have commented that
I am looking rather slim for someone who recently gave birth and I think they
assume that I have made ditching the baby bulge a priority, but this couldn’t
be further from the truth. For once I didn’t care that my stomach wasn’t toned
and my physique at last resembles that of a woman rather than an athletic teenage
boy (I have the short hair again, but this time I also have hips and boobs, and
so the question put to my parents at races in seasons gone by – ‘How old is
your son?’ – should na’er again be repeated!) I was prepared for it to take
as long as it takes to get back in shape as I now had something more important
in my life than the vacuous achievement of looking fit and toned: I was finally
a Mum!! Indeed, I was shocked by the rate at which the weight just fell off,
especially in the two weeks immediately after the birth and I was back at my
pre-pregnancy weight by 14 days post-partum. But when I do the maths, it’s not
too surprising. 500 calories a day are burned just breastfeeding. I burn an
addition 500 – 1000 (depending on the activity and length of it) six days a
week doing my training; then there are the miles upon miles of pram walking (at
least another 500 calories). Lastly, factor in that when I am at home, I am
never just sat around anymore: I am running around! Changing nappies, doing the
laundry, carrying a baby, playing with a baby, moving a baby from one activity
station to the next because he got bored there after 10 minutes… and in between
this there are multiple visits to the fridge to shovel food in. I am probably
burning around 2000 calories a day on top of the 2000 I already burn just
existing. 4000 calories a day is an awful lot of food to put back in, particularly
when finding time to prepare and eat food is a challenge, so on top of my three
regular meals, things like dairy-free cakes and chocolate etc have also
featured. Bloody hell – there have to be some treats to keep me going and sadly
gin and prosecco are still off the menu whilst I’m breastfeeding!
Got to skidaddle now: my boys are back! I sacked off
a bike ride today because I am just too knackered to contemplate it and so my
kind and supportive husband, who has taken the week off work to support me, took our boy out in the pram this afternoon to give
me a couple of hours chill time. Chill time over: they are back! Hopefully
write a post about how the qualifying races go (one in September, one in
October)… so maybe get chance to write about them before January is over?! Who
knows…. That is all rather dependent upon a certain little someone who is now
here next to me, eyeing up my boob with longing (men huh, they never change in
this regard!), so must dash!