fitness
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Quotes
A fascist worked out today, did you?
“I’m an ardent believer in equality, and being in the Communist Party is a way to spread this form of socialism and freedom for all the people”-Jeff Monson
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Resources
Beginner's Health and Fitness Guide: https://liamrosen.com/fitness.html
Databases for lifts/muscles:
Flexibility:
The R*ddit Wiki:
TDEE Calculator:
Please be aware that this calculator will ask if you're male or female
Other cool shit:
How to make your own foam roller
Athletes guide to foam rolling
WIP Schedule
Friday: Weekly check-in. Discuss what went right and wrong in terms of goals from last week
Saturday: Declaration of goals+community focus. What tangible, numerical goals are you going for? Don't know? We have ideas!
Sunday: Gals and enby pals take center stage
Monday: Meme Monday
Tuesday: Toot Your Horn Tuesday. Brag about what you've done, how good your progress is, who's making googly eyes at you, etc.
Wednesday: Wing Chun Wednesday. All about martial arts
Thursday: Nutrition. What's been bothering you about nutrition? Maybe we get some comrades from c/food to see if we can't get you where you're trying to go.
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Seven months is plenty of time to train up to that distance if that's your goal, but you'll need to purposefully train if you don't want to have a really bad time or hurt yourself. Your current fitness level and age will also be factors.
The main thing is that when you train for longer distances than your body is used to you need to slowly work up to the target distances so you don't injure yourself. The general practice is the 10% rule where you should only ever increase your total weekly mileage by 10% from the previous week. As a former shin splint haver and person who ran a half marathon last weekend, running injuries suck and take a really really long time to heal fully from. You don't want that when you're on a tight deadline, so best to be careful.
Generally when you're training for distance you don't want to do more than a single "long run" day per week so that you don't strain your joints and bones too heavily. There's a bunch of "couch to whatever distance" schedules out there that can give you a good schedule to start off with as a skeleton and, if you want, you can modify it for your body and timetable. Your long run is usually only ever going to be like 80% of the race distance max unless you're doing a race trial(which you should do once or twice in the last month or two of training).
I don't know how high altitude this is and I don't know if your body is used to the altitude that the race is at or not, but if it's not you'll also need to know that the lower air oxygen concentrations of a high altitude race will hit you like a truck if you're not ready for it. Just keep that in mind and it will make things much harder. If you don't have access to the altitude your race will be at you'll essentially need to train for a longer race than you're actually doing.
Hills suck. Hill workouts suck, but they also make your legs super strong, strengthen your lungs, and get you in shape very quick. Try to incorporate them into your workouts every other week or so in the beginning until you can add runs with decent hills organically built into them. Hills are a part of cross country running and you've just got to learn to power through them.
Get used to waking up early. As your distances increase and your runs take longer, first thing early in the morning is usually the only time to organically and consistently fit an hour or two of running into a day for most working adults if you've got a normal day job type schedule. Otherwise you'll just need to figure out what works for you.