Anonymous wrote:I'm a runner and I have done both full and half marathons. For me, the best thing about running a marathon is having run a marathon. I do not think it was good for me; I do feel I was pushing my body in an unhealthy way (this could be the opposite for other people, I know). The truth is that I did not enjoy the full marathons and did not feel well after the race, so I don't do fulls anymore.
The half marathon distance is perfect for me, and I feel great after finishing. I also regularly do 10k and 5ks. But I am a self-indulgent creature and I run because it feels good and keeps me in shape. Full marathons don't do much for me in either of those areas.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a runner and I have done both full and half marathons. For me, the best thing about running a marathon is having run a marathon. I do not think it was good for me; I do feel I was pushing my body in an unhealthy way (this could be the opposite for other people, I know). The truth is that I did not enjoy the full marathons and did not feel well after the race, so I don't do fulls anymore.
The half marathon distance is perfect for me, and I feel great after finishing. I also regularly do 10k and 5ks. But I am a self-indulgent creature and I run because it feels good and keeps me in shape. Full marathons don't do much for me in either of those areas.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think running on marathon for 'fun' or to have the accomplishment of having run one is fine/good. Its a big undertaking and a big accomplishment to have done it and if its something that interests you that training for it and doing it is probably really rewarding/awesome.
But I do think that the people who are really into endurance training of all stripes, multiple marathons/ultra marathons/iron mans etc, really sacrifice a LOT to do it and to me it seems like is unhealthy in some way. If they're doing it right physically and training then do they have a healthy home life? If they have a healthy home life are they training enough? If they are somehow managing to do both are they happy mentally? I don't know, there are only so many hours in a week and endurance training requires a LOT ff them, something's gotta give there.
+1
I used to row competitively and trained a LOT - and have also run one marathon, and too many halfs/10Ks to count. Anything requiring that much training is going to be tough to sustain in a holistically healthy way for anyone with substantial work and family obligations.
As the first poster said, I don't see the harm in running one marathon to meet a goal. It's a lot of training, but doing it once isn't going to cause irreperable harm.
I have run one marathon. My experience bore out a previous poster who said high volume running increases risk of respiratory infections. When I was running long distances I got colds more often than normal and got bronchitis for the only time as an adult. I think the stress on my body did wear on my immune system. But I'm still happy I did it, even though I exercise in other ways now. It is certainly healthier than sitting on the couch.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think running on marathon for 'fun' or to have the accomplishment of having run one is fine/good. Its a big undertaking and a big accomplishment to have done it and if its something that interests you that training for it and doing it is probably really rewarding/awesome.
But I do think that the people who are really into endurance training of all stripes, multiple marathons/ultra marathons/iron mans etc, really sacrifice a LOT to do it and to me it seems like is unhealthy in some way. If they're doing it right physically and training then do they have a healthy home life? If they have a healthy home life are they training enough? If they are somehow managing to do both are they happy mentally? I don't know, there are only so many hours in a week and endurance training requires a LOT ff them, something's gotta give there.
+1
I used to row competitively and trained a LOT - and have also run one marathon, and too many halfs/10Ks to count. Anything requiring that much training is going to be tough to sustain in a holistically healthy way for anyone with substantial work and family obligations.
Anonymous wrote:I think running on marathon for 'fun' or to have the accomplishment of having run one is fine/good. Its a big undertaking and a big accomplishment to have done it and if its something that interests you that training for it and doing it is probably really rewarding/awesome.
But I do think that the people who are really into endurance training of all stripes, multiple marathons/ultra marathons/iron mans etc, really sacrifice a LOT to do it and to me it seems like is unhealthy in some way. If they're doing it right physically and training then do they have a healthy home life? If they have a healthy home life are they training enough? If they are somehow managing to do both are they happy mentally? I don't know, there are only so many hours in a week and endurance training requires a LOT ff them, something's gotta give there.