The Runner's Code: The Unwritten Rules of Everyday Running BEST BOOKS OF 2021: SPORT – WATERSTONES
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About this ebook
Cracking... full of running gems, realities and giggles. Nice work!' – Martin Yelling, Marathon Talk
'Lovely – very impressive' – TalkSPORT
'From now on, if anyone I know mentions that they want to start running, this will be my first recommendation' – Stuart Heritage
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The Runner's Code explores the unwritten rules of everyday running and is essential reading for anyone who marvels at marathons, tears round the track or simply plods round the park.
Filled with smart advice and brilliantly knowing humour, this unique celebration of running takes the newbie and veteran alike through the secret, nuanced and blindingly obvious rules of running to answer all the important questions, such as:
- What's the correct etiquette for acknowledging other runners?
- What should you do if you get 'caught short' on a run?
- And exactly how many times can you ask colleagues for marathon sponsorship?
The book is packed with plenty of need-to-know information to help you deliver your best running performance, such as coping with different weather conditions, advice on kit and clothing (how many miles can a pair of trainers last, and is it ever appropriate to run in a mankini?) and pavement etiquette (overtaking dawdling pedestrians on a busy street).
There are also sections on getting the best race-day nutrition, finding the perfect running headspace and gaining maximum joy from your running.
The Runner's Code features exclusive contributions from BBC presenters Nicky Campbell and Louise Minchin, sports writer Henry Winter, and leading running authors Anna McNuff, Paul Tonkinson, Rachel Cullen, Martin Yelling, Liz Yelling, Helen Croydon and Michael Stocks. They each brilliantly reveal what they love and what they hate about running.
Written by journalist, author and self-confessed running nut Chas Newkey-Burden, The Runner's Code will help us to all run better and more responsibly, while reminding us of the joy and, at times, the wonderful absurdity of running.
Chas Newkey-Burden
Chas Newkey-Burden is a keen runner who has completed over 100 events in several countries including marathons, half-marathons and Parkruns. He writes for dozens of publications, including the Guardian, Four Four Two, Shortlist and Attitude. He is also the author of several books.
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The Runner's Code - Chas Newkey-Burden
You always encourage me to run and write better, so this one is for you, Chris
Bloomsbury%20NY-L-ND-S_US.epsContents
Introduction
Welcome to the Tribe
• How to start running
• Home truths
Kit
• Gearing up
How to be a Considerate Runner
• The runner at home
• The runner out and about
• Run with your conscience
Nutrition
• Eat right
Events
• Your pre-event checklist
• Dos and don’ts during the event
• How to finish
Clever Running
• Learn from the experts
• How to run with a dog
• How to run into old age
Health and Safety
• Prevention is better than cure
• To run or not to run?
• How to run (or not) with a cold
• How to run in the rain
• How to run in the dark
• How to run in the cold
• How to run in the sun
• Learn to identify common injuries
• Simple injury-prevention methods
A Bit of Fun
• The good, the bad and the ugly
It’s All in the Head
• Listen up
• Tricks of the mind
• Take in your surroundings
Run Happy
The A–Z of Running
Acknowledgements
A Note on the Author
Chas Newkey-Burden is a running fanatic who has run at hundreds of events including marathons, half-marathons and over 100 parkruns. He writes about running for The Guardian, Daily Telegraph, Metro and The i, and has contributed to Runner’s World and Men’s Health. He is the author of several books, including Running: Cheaper Than Therapy and Get Lucky: Rituals, Habits and Superstitions of the Rich and Famous.
Introduction
Running is so simple. You put one foot in front of the other, then the other foot in front of that one. You keep doing that, quite quickly, until you’ve had enough. What more needs to be said?
Quite a lot more needs to be said. From safety to clothing, nutrition to stretching, this is a curiously complicated and layered hobby. The Runner’s Code explores the unwritten rules of everyday running and helps you make the right choices.
Let’s be honest: runners are a curious bunch. We are the sort of people who forego a lie-in on a winter’s morning in favour of huffing round a freezing park before sunrise, or who train all year for a run so long that it makes our nipples bleed.
We are eccentric characters who might inadvertently rub other people up the wrong way, if we remained unchecked by codes. Most of us are lovely people and running is a lovely pastime. What keeps it lovely are the hitherto unwritten codes that we are bound by. The better we understand those codes, the more we can keep to them.
This Code helps you deliver your best performance (coping with running in different weather), advice on clothing (how many miles a pair of trainers can last, and whether or not it’s ever appropriate to run topless) and pavement etiquette (how to deal with dawdling pedestrians on a busy street).
What should you do if you get caught short on a run? What's the correct form when it comes to acknowledging other runners? And how many times can you ask colleagues for marathon sponsorship? You will discover the answer to these, and many other dashing dilemmas, in the pages ahead.
We will also hear the thoughts of a string of fascinating people, who will tell us what they love and hate about running. Broadcasters, running coaches and football stars join authors of running books and podcasters to spill their loves and pet peeves about running.
The hope is that this book will help you run better and more responsibly, as well as bringing a smile to your face, as we explore the joy and, at times, absurdity of why we run.
Welcome to the Tribe
When you first start running, you join a tribe to which people of all speeds, shapes and sizes are welcome. This is a special club – the only membership condition is a pair of trainers and a willingness to put one foot in front of another. Quickly.
However, it can also be a bit bewildering. Friends and colleagues who run will have plenty of advice for you but some of them will contradict one another. You’ll also find that when some runners offer advice they’ll actually just be showing off about their own achievements. Then, when you look online, there are yet more tips and suggestions.
A lot of that information is irrelevant to you at this stage. You don’t want to be overwhelmed, so the trick is to get the advice that you need as a beginner. No more, no less.
The early days of any runner are make or break. The ones who start up the hobby with good advice tend to stick at it, often for the rest of their lives. The ones who don’t get good advice sometimes decide that running isn’t for them and they never try it again. So, the stakes couldn’t be higher. Luckily, you’ve got the Code to guide you.
How to start running
Sometimes you just want to get going, so here is our equivalent of those ‘quick start’ pages you get in product manuals. If you follow these guidelines it will make starting running so much easier for you.
Walk/run
A great way to get into the groove of running as a beginner is to combine jogging and walking. So, if you are just getting started, try jogging for 30 seconds, walking for 30 seconds and then jogging for 30 seconds. As you grow in confidence in the weeks ahead, you can tweak the ratio, increasing the jogging sections and decreasing the walking sections, until you are purely jogging.
It’s OK to go slow
Just as new converts to a religion can be more zealous than those who were born into it, so new runners can be more concerned with ‘rules’ than those who have been at it for years. Although experienced runners think nothing of slowing down or even walking during their runs, newcomers are often absolutely terrified to do so, for fear it will make them look bad. Take it from the Code: there is nothing wrong with taking a breather.
Short runs are better than no runs
So you don’t have the time or the motivation for that 5km (3-mile) run you had planned for today? Why not head out for just 1.5km (1 mile)? You can do the longer distances another day but in the meantime you’ve kept your body and mind ticking over.
Don’t go out too often
Newbie runners often ask how often they should run. Sometimes they assume they are meant to run every day. But in the early days, you shouldn’t be doing more than a maximum of four outings every seven days.
Build distance gradually
Enthusiasm will be one of your greatest friends as a runner, but too much of it is a fast track to failure, disappointment and injury. This is particularly true when you’re a beginner: it’s so easy to aim too high, fail, and then say: ‘I knew running wasn’t for me’.
I’ve witnessed this quite a few times. Someone I vaguely know on social media sends me a private message to tell me that they’ve entered a marathon and need tips because they’re completely new to running and ‘can’t even run for a bus’. I ask them when the marathon is, hoping it’s at least 12 months away. They say: ‘Oh, in eight weeks.’ Eight weeks to go from being unable to run for a bus to running a full marathon? Don’t be like those people. There will be time to run long distances, in the meantime just build gradually. Beginners’ training programmes or the Couch to 5K app will help you.
Don’t run too fast
When I told someone I’d run a marathon, she asked me how long it took. When I said four hours, four minutes, she asked: ‘So you actually sprinted for four hours and four minutes? Wow!’ She was so impressed I was tempted to not correct her but I did. However, her funny question does show that some non-runners assume that every run is meant to be a full-pelt slog. This isn’t the case. When you are starting up, always aim for a comfortable pace. One way of nailing this is to check whether you can comfortably hold a conversation as you run. If you can’t, you’re running too fast.
Find your best time of day to run
If you discover the best time of day for you to go out running then it’s more likely that you’ll do it regularly. Ultimately, there is never a bad time to run but to help you find your sweet spot, here is your rundown of the positives and negatives of each time.
Morning
Pros:
Your body burns calories faster on an empty stomach, so morning mileage can mean you reach any weight goals more quickly.
A study found that morning exercise leads to better sleep quality than afternoon or evening exercise.
A morning run gets your daily mileage out of the way early, leaving you free to face the rest of the day with your fitness task already achieved, rather than wasting time debating when, or whether, you’ll squeeze it in.
Many scientists say that morning is the best time of day to boost muscle.
Most races and events are held in the morning, so it is very useful to be accustomed to morning running, rather than having to adjust on the big day.
Cons:
Lung function is poor in the early hours, so you may find breathing – and therefore running – considerably harder.
Your body temperature is low in the morning, so your muscles are stiff and you’re more likely to pick up an injury.
It’s usually colder around dawn.
In winter, the pavements are more slippery in the morning. Be careful!
The rest of the day can stretch long when you’ve already run several miles before breakfast. All day, whenever you look at the time you find yourself thinking: ‘Sheesh, is that all?’
Afternoons
Pros:
Your body temperature is higher after lunch and experts say this higher temperature makes athletes perform better.
If you always run during your lunch hour at work, running will never eat into your family time, meaning your partner and children will be happy with you.
An early afternoon trot breaks up the day and allows you to take stock of what you’ve done so far and what you have left to do.
Some runners find it easier to motivate themselves to get out there once they’ve been up and about for some hours.
Cons:
To make it work, you have to either have an early or a late lunch; just scheduling your food around an afternoon run can be enough to make you give up on it.
You’re either going to end up having two baths/showers in one day, or be a bit smelly for half the day. This is far from ideal.
Weather data shows it is more likely to be raining after lunch. Some enjoy a rainy run from time to time, but probably not all the time.
Evenings
Pros:
A run at dusk can be a pleasant and fitting way to shake off any of the stresses of your day.
Although some runners find it hard to sleep after an evening run, others really love getting into bed with their muscles tired, and that post-run glow still bright.
When it’s dark, you get to wear a head torch, and you can imagine you’re in a film.
Running in the wee small hours can be fun. Big parks or busy city centres can feel wonderfully surreal as you trot through them at 1 a.m. (But stay safe.)
Cons:
Motivation can be tricky – you put off the run all day and then, come evening, you just might not feel like it after a long day at the office.
For much of the year, it’s dark out there at night. This can be depressing.
Safety is an issue. You have to try harder to make sure drivers can see you and criminals might be lurking in the park. Many women feel safer running in pairs after dark.
It’s very antisocial: you miss out on a chat with the family, after-work drinks and other social events.
Guest Feature Lexie Williamson
A thing I love about running: That moment about five minutes into the run when your clunky, awkward legs find their rhythm, your heart settles into a nice pace and the whole thing shifts from mechanical to mental. Whoever insists that settling the mind must be done seated stock still in Lotus pose should try running alone on a cold, crisp, sunny morning through the woods; it is, without doubt, a kind of moving meditation.
A thing I hate about running: The first five minutes of the run! (See ‘A thing I love about running’…) When your legs are on strike, all you can hear is puffing and wheezing and you can’t quite shake off memories of the warm duvet. Push through that, though, and you’re winning.
Lexie Williamson is the author of Yoga for Runners.
Don’t worry about small aches
It’s perfectly natural and normal for your muscles to ache a little when you first start running. However, if the pain lingers for days, or if it begins to even hurt to walk, then get it checked out.
Don’t be a ‘hero’
If you’re injured, don’t run again until you’ve fully recovered. Just don’t. You may think you’re Rocky Balboa as you limp along, but you’ll risk turning a five-day lay-off into a five-month lay-off – or worse.
Anxious about crowds at events? Ease in gently…
For the more introverted runners, the biggest challenge of a running event is not the miles they spend panting along, but the big crowds and the sense of occasion. If you’re concerned about this, a good way of testing the waters is to go along to an event as a spectator, to get a taste of how it all works. Alternatively, many longer-distance running events have smaller runs tagged on to them – such as a 5km (3-mile) fun run on the same day as a half marathon. Joining the smaller version is a good way in.
Home truths
Running wisdom doesn’t need to be long-winded, like a marathon. Sometimes it’s short and sweet, like a 100m dash. So from footwear to mood swings, here are quick and easy tips to get your blood pumping.
Not all trainers are created equal
While it’s true that you can buy surprisingly cut-price footwear in those cramped discount sportswear stores, you will pay a huge price in the form of discomfort, lack