Marathons are becoming more and more popular
these days. Marathons in large cities around the United States have
started lotteries to pick the participants because of overwhelming
registrations. At Liveleantoday.com, we wanted to support people
with their marathon training programs. If you are going to make
the commitment to train for a marathon lets make the effort count.

1. Proper Running Shoes: The most important decision you can
make is proper running shoes for the biomechanics (way your foot
moves) of your feet. The number one cause of injuries while training
is improper shoes. There are three types of running shoes: stability,
cushion, and motion control. Stability shoes are designed for
those that have neutral to slight pronation (rolling your foot
inward) during running. Cushion shoes are designed for people
with high arches, and motion control shoes are designed for people
that over pronate or roll their feet too far inward. Find a running
shoe store that can test your biomechanics and recommend proper
shoes for you.
2. Eat carbs: We don't need to over eat carbs, just make them
60% of your daily diet. Carbs don't make you fat, they are actually
your major source of energy. Often people running marathons for
weight loss don't eat enough total calories for the amount of
exercise they are doing. This puts them into an exercise starvation
mode that shuts their bodies' fat burning properties off and people
actually store more fat. If you are not losing weight with your
marathon there is a good chance you are not eating enough. Use
a heart rate monitor to measure your calories you are burning
and add every calorie burned over 500 back into your diet.
3. Get electrolytes: Drinking water is good enough. Electrolytes
we eat and drink absorb water to keep us hydrated. Especially
running in heat people sweat out tons of electrolytes and without
replenishing them stay dehydrated even if they drink water. Electrolytes
are found in salty food, sports drinks, and many of the running
gels you can purchase.
4. Interval Training: Most marathon training programs only put
interval training into the advanced programs. Interval training
is actually great for people at every level. Interval training
is workouts where you repeat short durations of high intensity
followed by short durations of low intensity running. Interval
training is the most efficient way to increase your speed and
your body's ability to produce more energy. With proper heart
rate training any person can do optimal interval training.
5. One Long Day: You actually only need to do one long run a
week. If you can do it once you can do it for your race. Most
people do too many long runs each week, which puts too much extra
toll on your body. This extra toll causes so many of the marathon
training related injuries. Most injuries occur from people doing
too many miles, not running to fast.
6. Plenty of Sleep: Your body needs the rest from all of your
training. The best way to have a poor race is not to give your
body adequate amounts of sleep. Getting rest the week before your
race isn't good enough. To be in peak shape for your marathon
you need to get a good nights sleep for the entire training program.
One night of bad sleep isn't going to do anything though consistent
lack of sleep will greatly damper your results.
7. Train with a Heart Rate Monitor: The best way to train at
the correct pace for you is using a heart rate monitor. Training
each week at different heart rate zones optimizes your speed and
your body's ability to produce energy. Liveleantoday.com, an online
personal trainer and dietician website, customizes your heart
rate zones for optimal marathon race results. Secondly, noticing
changes in your heart rate from day to day can tell you if you
are overtraining, not getting enough sleep, or you are dehydrated.
8. Training Partner: To run your best marathon it is good to
get a training partner. A person that will help you be accountable
to your training program and get out of bed on some of those tough
days. If you are unable to find a training partner on a regular
basis, find a person you can do interval training workouts with
to push you and challenge you to become faster.
9. Rest: You want to be in peak shape for your marathon race
day. A good taper for a month before you race is ideal. A taper
is a slow decrease in the mileage each week allowing your body
to recover. You are not going to make any training improvements
that will matter for your race, so give your body the rest and
run the fastest race for you.
10. Start Slow: We all want to start fast and look good at the
start of the race. Most people take off too fast and burn a high
percentage of their stored energy in the first mile. Taking off
to fast will drastically slow down your pace for the whole marathon.
To run a fast time start even slower than you think and gradually
pick up your pace until you get to a good pace for you. Starting
slower will give you energy to go at a fast pace for the entire
race and even go faster at the end. The greatest way to run a
poor time is to be slowing down the whole second half of the marathon.
Article Source: http://www.articlecube.com
About The Author:
Bryan Ashbaugh, MS Exercise and Sports Science is CEO of LIVE,
llc of www.liveleantoday.com - visit the website for more information
on weight loss, core fitness programs, optimal diets, and online
personal trainer and dietician services.