During my run today I kept thinking about how much nonrunners are missing out! It was one of those perfect runs: cool temps, shining sun, forgiving terrain (rolling hills and flats), beautiful ocean views.

This was one of the views from the run. Can you tell why New Castle, NH is my favorite place to road run?
My goals for this runs were....well, to see if my IT band will hold up to a road run (I've been running only trails since the marathon), and to see if I completely lost my marathon fitness. I also planned to focus on my form: small steps, body tilted forward from the ankles, not waist, pelvis pushed forward.
As I started, my thoughts were: "You are going to be so slow, maybe you should not even get the Garmin, do you want to have a slow run on record?". I told my brain to stop babbling, but ignored the watch for a bit and focused on my form, scenery, and the podcast I was listening to. At mile 2 or so, I looked at my watched and was shocked to see I was running 7:55s. Wow! That put a smile on my face, mostly because that pace felt easy and effortless. I kept running up and down the hills, over a bridge, with the ocean on my R, through a park, then alongside the ocean. My pace was 7:50 at the turnaround, and I was still feeling great. I also noticed that the more I would pay attention to my form, the faster my pace, and the easier it seemed. Hopefully pretty soon all of this will become automatic!
At this point, the endorphins were getting released, and I was feeling on top of the world. Of course, that led to even faster running, so that by the end of the 10.1 miles, the average pace was 7:40 (this included a 400m sprint). I had to run up and down the street to get that .1 on, but I really want to start adding .1 or .2 to all my long runs, to get myself used to the fact that my marathon will most likely be a 26.5.
So now I feel much more prepared to spend a couple of hours at the McDonald's indoor playground doing my share of parenting as my husband plays tennis and makes dinner for our friends tonight! My brain is spinning with thoughts about my training plan for Boston. I am reading Brad Hudson's book "Run faster", and will incorporate some of his ideas into what I did for Baystate. My main dilemma is whether I should increase mileage or now. I ran Boston on 30 miles average, and Baystate on 40 miles average. Am I ready to go to 50? Would that help? I definitely want to run only 4 times a week, because I like to have 1 day of rest/Xtrain after every key run, so doing 50 miles would mean lots of looong miles, or double runs, which honestly I doubt I could fit into my schedule. I also have to take into account that I am still a beginner, with less than 1 year of actual training for a race, so my muscles, bones, tendons, are still getting used to running and getting stronger! So blogger friends, share some wisdom!
In return, I leave you with my view as I type this post, from my mom in law's house in New Castle, NH...