Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Running wrecked my skin, knees and hips. I don't do it anymore.
Not sure about hips, but running being bad for your knees has been debunked as a myth, provided you’re not overtraining or using bad form. My skin is wrecked, too, but can’t say for sure it would’ve looked any better if I wasn’t a runner. I use sunscreen and a hat and mostly just don’t care. The way running makes me feel trumps any concern about “runner’s face.”
Dp. Is running like alcohol in the sense you build a tolerance and have to increase speed and/or miles to get the same effects? Can one simply run for an hour every day (or however often) and enjoy the same boost in mood week after week?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Running wrecked my skin, knees and hips. I don't do it anymore.
Not sure about hips, but running being bad for your knees has been debunked as a myth, provided you’re not overtraining or using bad form. My skin is wrecked, too, but can’t say for sure it would’ve looked any better if I wasn’t a runner. I use sunscreen and a hat and mostly just don’t care. The way running makes me feel trumps any concern about “runner’s face.”
Dp. Is running like alcohol in the sense you build a tolerance and have to increase speed and/or miles to get the same effects? Can one simply run for an hour every day (or however often) and enjoy the same boost in mood week after week?
Anonymous wrote:Running wrecked my skin, knees and hips. I don't do it anymore.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Running wrecked my skin, knees and hips. I don't do it anymore.
Not sure about hips, but running being bad for your knees has been debunked as a myth, provided you’re not overtraining or using bad form. My skin is wrecked, too, but can’t say for sure it would’ve looked any better if I wasn’t a runner. I use sunscreen and a hat and mostly just don’t care. The way running makes me feel trumps any concern about “runner’s face.”
Anonymous wrote:Running wrecked my skin, knees and hips. I don't do it anymore.
Anonymous wrote:I’m 45 and have been running regularly since I was 18 or so. It is something I have to do, not something I force myself to do. I look forward to it. It sort of feels like the glue that holds a lot of other things about me together. Mental health, weight control, even a social outlet, as I often meet up with a friend to run. It has been the one consistent thing that I do solely for myself, so I try to relish every minute of it. (Even in this heat.) And there are so many life lessons that can be practiced and reinforced through running: learning how to persist through discomfort, how to moderate your pace/effort depending on conditions beyond your control, how to accept your own limitations, to name just a few.
Anonymous wrote:I’m 45 and have been running regularly since I was 18 or so. It is something I have to do, not something I force myself to do. I look forward to it. It sort of feels like the glue that holds a lot of other things about me together. Mental health, weight control, even a social outlet, as I often meet up with a friend to run. It has been the one consistent thing that I do solely for myself, so I try to relish every minute of it. (Even in this heat.) And there are so many life lessons that can be practiced and reinforced through running: learning how to persist through discomfort, how to moderate your pace/effort depending on conditions beyond your control, how to accept your own limitations, to name just a few.
Anonymous wrote:Running wrecked my skin, knees and hips. I don't do it anymore.