Wednesday, January 30, 2019

Weighted 40-Minute Jog

Jan. 30, 2019
Two whole days after running Tateyama Wakashio Marathon 2019, I jogged for 41:01.76 with 7 kg weights on my waist and a 2 kg dumbbell in each of my hands. I did it in preparation for the Ohme 30 K Road Race that I'm running on February 17. The first half is an upward incline. I want to build my ability to press forward against the gravitational pull. 

To my surprise the weighted run was manageable. Tonight I fell short of my original goal of reaching 10 K. Hopefully next time around I will run a little farther. 


Tonight I ran in Oleno's running socks for minimum protection.  Compared with running in complete bare feet, it was comfortable. 



Monday, January 28, 2019

裸足でサブ4:館山若潮マラソン2019 (My First Barefoot Sub-4 Marathon: Tateyama Wakashio Marathon 2019 )

Jan. 27, 2019
42.195 K: 3:54:16 gross (3:52:43 net)

On Jan. 27, 2019 Tateyama Wakashio Marathon 2019 took place. I joined it in bare feet, and ran my first sub-four marathon without wearing shoes. There was an added bonus of running a negative split (running the second half faster than the first half). Below is a report of how I ran the race.

The gun went off at ten o'clock sharp. I ran from the coral for runners aiming for sub-4. It was sunny with daytime highs expected to reach 10 degrees Celsius and the humidity of 60 %. Occasionally fairly strong winds blew from the north-north-east, but other than that the condition was good for a marathon.

I kept telling myself that the first half was warm up. I carefully ran on painted lines on the road with smooth surface. It was an important strategy to minimize damage to the sole. I talked with every part of my body--my legs, my feet, my knees, my ankles, my back, my cardio, and so on. They said they were ready, and that they were enjoying every step of it. I felt both relaxed and strong. 

Near the first aid station I took my first pee-break. In the past I would have been upset about time loss. But today I didn't mind it at all. My main goal was not to renew my PR. My goal was to complete the race in bare feet. It was going to be a long and hard journey. I knew I should take comfort over speed.

I ignored the first aid station and made my first stop at the second one at the 11 K mark where custard cream bread from local bakery Nakamuraya's was served. I grabbed four pieces, holding two in my both hands, and put the other two into a small ramie bag tied to my waist strap. I enjoyed having all four over the next couple of kilometers. 

Around the 12 K mark the course slowly curved to the south, and winds stopped. Suddenly strong rays of the sun were felt on my forehead and I could feel the temperature was up a couple of degrees. From there the course continued to go east southeast for almost 10 kilometers. It's almost straight. Also, there were downward inclines every now and then. Most inexperienced runners will pick up the pace here. I did so when I first ran this course. But this is where strategic patience is required, because once past the halfway point and past the 22 K mark, the course takes a U-turn into a west-north-west-bound road that leads to the hilliest part of the course. Being too bullish before hitting this area can take a toll on your legs. Saving energy is the key to success. So I took two strategic pee breaks after my first one before getting into the more challenging section, alleviating all sources of future anxiety as well as giving a strategic rest to my legs.


When I finally reached the 25.5 K point where my friend Ui san waited to cheer me on, I was almost 15 minutes slower than last year. Later he told me that something was definitely wrong with me. At this point he never imagined that I would run a negative split. But he was right about one thing. There WAS something wrong. Not so much about me, but rather about the road condition! It was far worse than I had expected, and that DID keep me from running as fast as I wanted to. But the flip side was that I was able to save up enough energy for the latter half which is much richer in undulation. 

The deterioration of the road condition after the 25.5 K was beyond description. I often had to significantly slow down to avoid injury. Then came the so-called "Wall" which is a long and steep hill that lasts for almost 500 meters. This is the biggest challenge the course presents to the runners, and it is also the section of the course that I most welcome. I run this course to conquer it! Thanks to a temporary adrenaline rush I felt less pain as I hammered up the incline. I overtook one runner after another. Many were gasping for air, contorting their faces in grimace. Some were taking care of cramps midway up the hill. They were paying the price for going too fast in the first half. 

Once I reached the top of the hill, I relaxed for a moment and then started a descent at an equally brisk pace. 

Soon another aid station was in sight near the 32 K mark. Locally grown strawberries were served. I grabbed four of them, and threw them into my mouth one after another. They were incredibly sweet and my motivation shot up right away. As I went farther away from the aid station, a faint smell of the sea was in the air. I felt a sure proximity to the coastline. 

A few minutes after I left the aid station, the course took a right into a straight down hill that leads right to the coastal road. A majestic view of the Gulf of Tateyama suddenly opened up ahead. However, this straight road had the worst road surface in the entire course. I had no choice but walk for a while. And when I realized that not even walking was possible, I stepped aside to the sandy bank and walked down the bank for 10 meters until I finally reached the coastal road where the condition was much, much better. 

Once back on the coastal road, I wasted no time and surged. The last quarter of the race is the hardest for most citizen runners. It was the case for me too in the past. But today I was a different man. I was waiting for this moment. I was so happy I was still full of legs at this stage of the race. I hammered down the road, overtaking another barefoot runner near the 35 K mark who had left me behind in the initial phase. He was hurting significantly. I talked to him as I went past him, but no reply was returned. That said it all.

When I was finally back on Hojo Kaigan Dori Street leading straight into the finish area, I only had 3 K to go. Near the 40 K mark I finally overtook the sub-4 pacer. I didn't have the slightest intention of going with him. I got around a huge crowd of citizen runners surrounding the pacer into the front of the pack. I was going so fast that a roar of surprise was heard behind me. But my mind was so set on going as fast as I could and finishing strongly that they were soon off my mind. 

A mid-size condominium with an orange roof designed in Southern French fashion is a landmark 300 meters from the finish line. I waited for it to come in sight as I pressed on. Congratulatory words welcomed in returning runners. I looked back on the long and hard journey, especially the formidably rough road surface at so many sections of the course, and I was overwhelmed with emotion and tears welled up in my eyes. My vision was blurred, and I couldn't see well. There were now so many people on both sides of the street. They were walls of encouraging cheerers, clapping hands and shouting congratulatory remarks at the top of their voices. 

Then came the last left-turn into the home stretch. A pebbled part stretched for about 20 meters before fluffy lawn started. Sharp pain shot through my spine and I almost choked. My face contorted in agony. I literally tip-toed through it. Some spectators who knew very well I meant business couldn't help but laugh to see me troubled. But when that last ordeal of the race was finally over, I wasted no time and kicked to the finish line like a mad dog. And at 1:54:16 p.m., exactly 3:52:43 after I crossed the start line, I crossed the finish line.


Mission accomplished! I ran my first barefoot sub-4 marathon in 3:54:16 gross and 3:53:43 net.


My next race is the Ohme 30 K Road Race. It is held on Feb. 17. My goal is to run the entire course in bare feet. There is no time goal. My PR recorded last year is pretty good. Running my first barefoot 30 K road race and renewing my PR for that distance at the same time seems too ambitious for me. I want to achieve one goal at a time. This year I want to run for a modest goal of completing the race in bare feet. Then in Year 2020, which is the Olympic year, I want to go for my PR in bare feet. 


To close this report I want to thank my friend Ui san who volunteered to give me a ride to the venue, my bilingual companion Chiaki who managed my diet and total health care, and my runner friend Takahashi san who ran with me to make the event memorable. He had a broken rib, but dared to run the race and went as far as 10 K. Awesome achievement! Both thumbs up for his bravery.







Wednesday, January 23, 2019

60-Minute Jog

Jan. 23, 2019
5.1 K: 31:10.76
5.1 K: 30.42.73
Total 10.2 K: 1:01:53

Jan. 24, 2019
5.1 K: 33:07.05
5.1 K: 30.53.27
Total 10.2 K: 1:04:00

Strictly following the training regimens recommended by former ultra marathon world best record holder Mr. Takahiro Sunada, I had a one-hour jog two days in a row on Tuesday and Wednesday night.


Both times the main purpose is to slowly recover from the fatigue accumulated through the long and hard training over the course of almost three months since Aqua Line Marathon 2018. There were two extremely hard-fought races during this course of time. In one of them I renewed my PR for 10 K. In the other I completed an entire half marathon in complete bare feet. When I didn't have a race, I was almost always hitting the road, training, except for only a day or two in a week when I gave myself a complete rest.

I now have a sure feeling that I am much stronger than I was at the same time last year. My soles are more endurable. My cardio is stronger too as I can run a longer distance in one go. I am faster, partly because I am lighter. In other words I am a much stronger version of myself than I was in more ways than one. And my mission this coming Sunday is to translate this positive feeling into actual performance.


Monday, January 21, 2019

"I Confess" by Alfred Hitchcock

I watched "I Confess" by Alfred Hitchcock, starring Montgomery Clift. God only knows how many times I have seen it before, but each time is a renewed enlightening experience.


Without giving too much away, the story is about Father Logan. One night a man is killed. The murderer is a man named Keller. He is a servant in a church where Father Logan serves the God. On the night of the murder Keller wears a priest's robe to hide his identity. Later on, the robe is found in Father Logan's personal bag with the victim's blood on it. Father Logan becomes a suspect. Fortunately, he has an alibi. He and his former girlfriend were seeing each other until 11 p.m. Autopsy showed the murder was committed around 9:30 p.m. Father Logan's former girlfriend, who is now married to a renowned lawmaker, testifies out of her intention to protect her former lover and now good friend Father Logan. However, this testimony of hers serves to make Father Logan more vulnerable than before. Later the police says the initial autopsy was wrong, and that the corrected estimated time of death is around 11:30 p.m. The only way for Father Logan to prove his innocence to the police is to tell the police what he heard on the night of the murder--Keller's confession in the confession booth! But in the Catholic Church it is the absolute duty of priests not to disclose anything that they learn from a confessor during the course of confession. Father Logan is now put on trial, with Keller and his wife Alma in the gallery watching him being interrogated by a prosecutor with a series of relentless questions! What will his verdict be: guilty or not guilty?

All in all, the director Alfred Hitchcock does a marvelous job of making us audience experience the inner conflicts of the main characters, especially those of Keller, Father Logan, and his former girlfriend. The catastrophe is particularly dramatic, and Hitchcock's way of showing how the truth is revealed to all parties involved including the police is so elegant and sophisticated. I especially like the scene where Father Logan's former girlfriend, looking relaxed as she believes that the police no longer suspects her former boyfriend, holds her husband arm lightly and says, "Take me home." It's a damn good movie that you should not miss. I highly recommend you to add it to your to-watch-list for next weekend. 





Former President of Gyudon Restaurant Yoshinoya Mr. Shuji Abe, and His Philosophy

I re-read a book about former president of gyudon restaurant Yoshinoya, Mr. Shuji Abe. I've been a big fan of him ever since I watched his interview on TV years ago when import of US beef was banned due to BSE.


Contrary to the typical reaction by its competing operators, Yoshinoya decided to stop serving their flagship beef bowl, saying, "If we use non-US beef, it's no longer Yoshinoya's beef bowl. 

Yoshinoya naturally experienced a temporary setback, but once the ban was lifted, it made a dramatic comeback in terms of sales and revenues. 

In fact, world-renowned consulting firm Mckinsey & Company forecast a series of declines for Yoshinoya's stock price from the perspective of rigorous corporate analysis.

To their surprise, though, the decline in the stock price was minimum, and soon it started rise steadily. 

Mckinsey & Company attributed this phenomenon to three main reasons. I'm not going to elaborate on all of them here, but one thing leaves me with a strong impression, and that is that Yoshinoha has a core value, and it didn't change it at the time of crisis. 

Change is usually a positive value. It's especially true in the US, and it's generally considered important in times of rapid social change. However, what Yoshinoya teaches us is that there is something you should never change in business operation, and that is one of the most vital things that navigate you through adversities. 


Sunday, January 20, 2019

22 K Jog in My New Pair of MUTEKI

Jan. 20, 2019
11 K: 1:05:23
11 K: 1:00.29
Total 22 K: 2:05:52

Almost 24 hours after doing a weighted 10 K barefoot pace run, I was ready for another training session: 90-minute jog. I asked myself whether I should go barefooted or in shoes. I opted for a shoe-clad practice. There was slight soreness left in both of my soles.

I put on my new pair of MUTEKI split-toe minimalist shoes with no cushioning. NIKE's Vaporfly with thick cushioning is all the rage. But it's not for me.  I'm a citizen runner who wants to become a stronger version of himself. Not a professional runner running for a prize money. I want to be faster. But I equally want to be more endurable. More accommodating of discomfort and more resistant to pain.


I took off, aiming to reach the Kashiwai Water Treatment Plant 9.9 K from home, and was going to decide how much farther to go from there. If I ran a lap around the water plant and headed straight back home, that'd be roughly 15 K. If I ran a lap around the water plant, and went back where I came from, that'd be 22 K. I didn't need to decided right away. I could go with the flow, and decide depending on my mood.


When I reached the far end of the water plant, I was still full of legs, so I decided to go back the same route that I came from to make it a 22 K session.


But as I went on, I found myself gradually getting hungry, and motivation started waning. I considered taking a shorter route to settle for a 90-minute jog as originally scheduled. But then another side of me said, "When you feel hungry, it means you have run out of your belly fat. Now your body has tapped your subcutaneous fat reserve to sustain your effort." I discovered meaning in going farther. I dropped the idea of taking a shortcut, and completed a 22 K run.

While running, I listened to a couple of lectures by world-renowned Canadian professional speaker & sale consultant Brian Tracy who says there are a number of keys to becoming a positive person, and one of them is eating good food. So as soon as I got home, I had organic miso soup, fresh watercress, fresh spinach, and fresh fruits. 

Tomorrow I will give myself a full rest. After that three days of a 60-minute jog follow. Then comes interval training on Friday. Saturday is another 60-minute jog day. And then comes Sunday when I run for my first sub-4 barefoot marathon.

Weighted 10.2 K Pace Run in Bare Feet

Jan. 19, 2019
5.1 K: 26:57.75
5.1 K: 26:45.86
10.2 K: 53:43.61

With eight days remaining before Tateyama Wakashio Marathon 2019, I did a 10.2 K pace run. I ran in bare feet with a 2 kg dumbbell in each of my hands.


I ran the first half in 26:57.75, and the second half about 12 seconds faster. As I had done a weighted run a few times, I got used to the extra burden. I expect the extra weight to force me to choose the most economical arm swing, and therefore when I run at a race without weights, my running economy will be greater.


Because I ran a faster pace today, the friction between the soles and the road was greater. But they withstood the greater friction nice and well. There was no pain, not to mention any blister developed in either of the soles as a result of the practice run.


From tomorrow on, I will strictly follow the training regimens recommended by former ultra marathon world best record holder Mr. Sunada. It looks like this:

Sunday: 90-minute jog
Monday: Off
Tuesday: 60-minute jog
Wednesday: 60-minute jog
Thursday: 60-minute jog
Friday:  Intervals: 1 K by 2 sets
Saturday: 60-minute jog
Sunday: Race

I still haven't decided whether to practice in shoes or barefooted. Any injury could kill all my previous effort, so I need to be careful. But at the same time, without adequate stimulus the soles can soon become softened. Also, if they become sore, it takes a while for them to heal. I do not want to run the race while they are still in a healing process as it takes two to three whole days for them to recover fully. So Thursday night will probably the last time I will practice in bare feet. Friday and Saturday I am most likely to practice in MUTEKI. 

Wednesday, January 16, 2019

Interval Training: [1 K @ 4/30 + 1-Minute Rest] by 15 Sets

Jan. 16, 2019
Warm Up 4.2 K: 26:04.87
Rest: 1:00.05
<Interval Training>
1st K: 4:29.69 (slightly longer than 1 K due to a few wrong turns)
Rest: 1:00.32
2nd K: 3:59.19
Rest: 1:00.43
3rd K: 4:19.61
Rest: 1:00.12
4th K: 4:20.99
Rest: 1:00.29
5th K: 4:20.66
Rest: 1:00.42
6th K: 4:28.18
Rest: 1:00.23
7th K: 4:18.73
Rest: 1:00.24
8th K: 4:25.53
Rest: 1:00.43
9th K: 4:23.46
Rest: 1:00.21
10th K: 4:28.20
Rest: 1:00.31
11th K: 4:23.90
Rest: 1:00.28
12th K: 4:21.53
Rest: 1:00.59
13th K: 4:22.61
Rest: 1:00.29
14th K: 4:20:54
Rest: 1:00.00
15th K: 4:17.50
Rest: 1:00.00
********************
Warm Down 4.2 K: 29.11.94
Total 23.4 K: 2:16:40

Inspired by men's marathon world best record holder Eliud Kipchoge's legendary pre-Berlin Marathon training of 1 K @ 2:50 by 15 sets with a two-minute rest between sets, I had a go at a similar session at a much slower pace of course, but with a shorter rest between sets.



I jogged to the Kashiwai water treatment plant, and did intervals around a new 1 K loop near the plant that I measured on Google Map.


To make a long story short, I completed it. It's an incredible confidence booster. I felt exhilarated when I finished the last lap. 

The biggest challenge was not so much the pace. 4:30/K isn't such a big challenge for me any more by itself. But when it comes to repeating it over and over again, it's a whole new story. Six is the number of reps I was most used to recently. Tonight I did 9 more reps.  

Naturally, the first lap beyond the 6th was tough. My body wasn't ready. I felt lactic acid building in my legs. I ran economically by taking shorter strides lest I should be burned out. 

When I finally hit the 10th, there was a surge of endorphins in my brain in response to the feeling of accomplishment associated with finally reaching a two-digit number.

But the remaining five sets were not easy. I told myself to imagine that the last fives sets were the last 5 K of the Tateyama Wakashio Marathon that I'm running in ten days. How could I give up there?

The new 1 K loop contains several intersections where I had to watch out carefully for possibly coming cars. It was a bit stressful especially when you are exhausted after doing many 1 K repeats. But it was late at night, and traffic was limited, so loss of energy caused by frequent traffic check was minimum. 

On my way back home I felt light, and I felt calm, steadily taking small steps forward, thinking of the race I'm running in ten days. 

I listened to Brian Tracy's lecture while running. A couple of things still remain on my mind. I will write about them sometime tomorrow.




Tuesday, January 15, 2019

Weighted One-Hour Barefoot Jog

Jan. 15, 2019
5.1 K: 31:37.24
5.1 K: 30:45.00
Total 10.2 K: 1:02:22

Almost forty eight hours after the 42 K run, I found myself pounding the road again, this time in bare feet, and with a 2 kg dumbbell in each of my hands. When I first did it last week, it was hard. Now it feels less so. I am amazed at the human ability to quickly adapt to increased burden.

I carefully checked my running form so as not to damage my soles. Any injury at this stage of preparation will cause a huge setback. I can't let that happen.

Tomorrow is interval night. I may do 1 K by 15 sets inspired by Eliud Kipchoge. Or I may settle for a more moderate session, like 3 K + 1 K recommended by former ultra marathon world best record holder Mr. Sunada. Or I may do something between the two. I will make my choice depending on my mood.

(In January 2018 I ran my first sub 3:45 marathon in the Tateyama Wakashio Marathon. I ran it in a pair of aqua shoes with zero cushioning. With two kilometers remaining, I took off the shoes, took off from the sub 3:45 pacers, and surged.)



Sunday, January 13, 2019

Post-TOEIC Practice Run: 42.42 K

Jan. 14, 2018
10 K: 52:54.03
2.72 K × 7 sets=19.04 K: 1:43:39 (5:24/K pace)
10 K: 56:26.82
3.38 K: 19.29.17
Total 42.42 K: 3:52:29

Earlier today I took the TOEIC L&R Test to check my English communication skills. It went well. I thought all my effort paid off.

After coming home from the test, I had a long run scheduled for the day. I was going to do a 35 K run, followed by an additional session to make the total running distance for the day beyond the full marathon distance of 42.195 K.


When I finally hit the road after dinner, it was already 9:30 P.M. I was first going to run the 10 K route leading to the water treatment plant in Kashiwai. I felt light as in my previous training session on Friday I had dumbbells in my hands while running. I almost felt like I had wings on me. 


I reached the water plant about 52 minutes after I left home. I started lapping around the plant. This 2.2 K loop around the plant is one of my recent favorites. It's so quiet and the road condition is good. There is one upward incline and one downward incline along the course. Otherwise it's almost flat, but there are slight changes in undulation throughout the course. It's perfect for practicing strategic running. 


Tonight I added an additional lap around the 520 M loop below to the 2.2 K loop above, and make it a 2.72 K lap. I repeated it 7 reps in 1:43:39. The additional 520 M has a merit. There is a public restroom available. I used it a few times during the training session. There is tap water available too as I have mentioned it before. 


After the session near the water plant, I went back where I had come from. I was going to increase the pace, but I couldn't. I was too hungry. I hung on to the moderate pace that I had been keeping. As I came nearer to my home, I started thinking about my eventual goal tonight. It would be a solid 39.02 K session if I called it a day when I got home. An additional 3.2 K after a short break would make what I call double training, where you run a distance beyond a full marathon in one day by two sessions. But I was afraid that once I got home and took a rest, I would never muster up the power to stand up again. So instead of going inside my home, I immediately turned around and head back to the park in my neighborhood and lapped a larger loop around it twice, and then lapped a smaller inner loop twice to cover an additional 3.38 K, making my total running distance 42.42 K. I ran it under 4 hours, but it does not include one p**p break, and several pee breaks that I took during the session. If those times are included, the time will be a lot worse. 

But overall, I am satisfied with the result. A number of reasons. First, there was no official aid whatsoever. No sports drinks. No food. No nothing. Just tap water along the way. Two, there was no cheerer along the road. I was all by myself. The only accompanying friend was the Orion in the sky. I was cold, and I was lonely. To withstand my misery, I almost needed a new religion of some kind to hang on to. But I knew deep down that I had nothing to rely on but my own two legs. With this borne in mind I pressed on. And the result? A 42.42 K run in 3:52:29 all by myself with just water. 

On Monday, I will go for a walk to a shopping mall in Yuukarigaoka. It's 6.4 K round trip. It's a good way to loosen up my leg muscles presumably all tensed up from the long running session. 








Friday, January 11, 2019

Weighted One-Hour Jog in Bare Feet

 Jan. 12, 2019
5.1 K: 31:12.91
5.1 K: 29:37.88
Total 10.2 K: 1:00:50

Ran an hour in bare feet. Covered 10.2 K in 1:00:50. Carried a 2 kg dumbbell in each hand to increase the challenge. Another challenge came from running the second half faster, though speed wasn't main focus for tonight's training.


The soles are in pretty good condition after the run.


Weighed exactly 60 kg after taking a shower. With an empty stomach might weigh a little less. Felt thirsty so had hot brown tea with no caffeine. Didn't drink alcohol as I learned that alcohol will kill athletic benefit of your training.


Didn't listened to any business lecture while running, because left my IC-recorder in my office. Gotta be more careful.

Sunday I take the TOEIC Test. Later that night I am scheduled to run 25 K.


Thursday, January 10, 2019

Interval Training: 4.4 K + 1.04 K

Jan. 10, 2019
Warm up 4.2 K: 27.13.60
Rest: 1:00.31
<Intervals>
4.4 K: 18:42.83 (4:15/K pace)
Rest :1:00.36
1.04 K: 4:04.15
************
Rest: 1:00.40
Warm down 5.4 K: 34:59.24
Total 15.04 K: 1:29:47





Monday, January 7, 2019

LSD, or Long Slow Distance

Jan. 7, 2019
10 K: 1:06:46
10 K: 1:04:10
Total 20 K: 2:10:56

A hint of soreness crept into my legs a day after double training. I was afraid they could be as stiff as a log if I didn't do anything, so I decided to do an LSD session for a minimum of two hours just to loosen up my leg muscles.


I ran the 9.9 K course below, but added a short lap around my block to make it 10 K. 

When I first started off, my mind was heavy with a prospect of many miles ahead. But when I reached the end of the first half, there was a tremendous surge of endorphins, which gave me motivation to go on.

The second half was physically harder, but mentally less stressful. I paid more attention to my form than simply to reaching the target distance. I looked up at the starry sky and enjoyed the vastness of the universe.

In the last kilometer I picked up the pace as if it were the last K in a real full marathon, though time wasn't the main goal of the training tonight. But the idea of being able to change the pace if I want to was a confidence booster. 

When I finally reached home and stopped the timer, I knew I had negative-split it again, though once again that's not the main goal of the training tonight, but nonetheless it adds to a feeling of achievement, because that's how I always want to finish a race--to finish strongly.

Tomorrow I will give myself a full rest. And on Wednesday night I will choose between an hour jog and interval training depending on my mood. 






Sunday, January 6, 2019

7 Keys to a Positive Personality

While having my practice run yesterday, I listened to a number of audio programs mainly delivered  by Brian Tracy. Brian Tracy is a world-renowned motivational speaker. He was originally from a poor family on Prince Edward Island in Canada, which most people associate with Anne of Green Gables.

The reason I like listening to his lecture is threefold.
1) His ideas are useful. Most advice he gives is easy to understand and also easy to implement. I believe it's worth sharing with others.
2) His ideas can be trusted. He started from zero, and worked his way up to where he is now by doing what he preaches. I applied some, and got results. They worked for a dummy like me. They sure will work for my friends who know better than me.
3) His English is easy to understand. Brian speaks in ways people can understand his ideas easily. He organizes his argument quite logically. He begins with a clear conclusion, often prefacing it a quote by someone famous. He then gives us a series of explanations regarding why it's important. He often includes counter examples to illustrate what could happen if what he tells important is neglected.

Yesterday one of the programs I listened to was about positive personality and 7 keys to creating it through conscious effort. They are described below. I couldn't remember them all by listening while running, so on the following day I sat and listened to the audio again and again, to make this note. I hope you find it useful.

1) Positive Self Talk (前向きな自己対話)

Psychologists say 49% of your emotions are determined by the way you talk to yourself as you go through your day. The sad fact is that if you do not deliberately and consciously talk to yourself in a positive and constructive way, you will by default think about things that will make you unhappy, or cause you worry and anxiety. 

2) Positive Visualization(前向きなイメージ)
Create a clear exciting picture of your goal and your ideal life, and replay this picture on the screen of your mind over and over again. All improvement in your outer life begins an improvement in your mental pictures. If you completely control the pictures that you play on the screen of your mind, as you see yourself on the inside, you'll start to BE that person with those accomplishments on the outside.

3) Positive People(付き合う人も前向き)
They control your self talk and your mental pictures. Associate with winners. Positive people. People who are happy, optimistic, and who are going somewhere with their lives.

4) Positive Mental Food(前向きな心の栄養)
Just as your body is healthy to the degree to which you eat healthy, nutritious food, your mind is healthy to the degree to which you feed it with mental protein, rather than mental candy. Read books, magazines, and articles that are educational, inspirational, or motivational. Listen to positive, constructive CDs and audio programs in your car and on your MP3 player or iPod. Every time you learn something new, you can improve your life; your brain releases endorphins, which are called nature's happy drug, and you actually feel happier even before you take action on a new piece of idea, you feel happier that you've learned a new idea in the first place.

5) Positive Training and Development(前向きな能力開発)
Jim Rohn said formal education will make you a living; self education will make you a fortune. When you dedicate yourself to learning and growing and become more effective in your thoughts and actions, you take complete control of your life, and dramatically increase the speed at which you move upwards to greater heights.

6) Positive Health Habits(前向きな健康習慣)
Eat excellent food, healthy and nutritious. Eat them sparingly and in proper balance. An excellent diet will have an immediate positive effect on your thoughts and feelings. Resolve to get regular exercise. When you exercise on a regular basis, you feel happier and healthier, and experience lower levels of stress and fatigue than a person who sits on the couch and watches television all evening. Get ample rest and relaxation. Vince Lombardi once said, "Fatigue makes cowards of us all."

7) Positive Expectations (前向きな期待)
Having positive expectations is one of the most powerful techniques that you can use to become a positive person and to ensure positive outcomes and better results in your life. Your expectations become your own self-fulfilling prophecies. Always expect the best.

Double Training Part 2: 10.2 K Barefoot Run

Jan. 7, 2019
5.1 K: 27:52.51
5.1 K: 26:23.76
Total 10:2 K: 54:16.27


After taking a nap for two hours, I woke up to feel like a new man. Soreness in my legs caused by the 32.5 K run before dinner was gone. Not a sign of stiffness was felt. I was ready to go.

I chose to run the new 5.1 K course that I had Google-Mapped recently. One merit of this course is a public toilet is available at two different locations, and so is tap water. Another merit is it's rich in undulation. The course in Tateyama has fairly hilly. There is a particularly long and steep incline near the 30 K mark. I want to be ready for that challenge. 


The road felt incredibly cold on bare feet. I was afraid my toes could come off from frostbite especially right after I started running. But slowly I got used to the cold, and from a certain point on I was able to cruise on just like every other time.

It was almost eleven at night. There wasn't much traffic on the streets. I felt undisturbed, and focused. 

The turning point of this course is the bottom of a long downhill. My goal for this session was to run a negative split, running the second half faster than the first. Though there was no serious soreness or stiffness in any of my legs, but they were reasonably fatigued from the previous training, so they wouldn't respond as well as I wanted them to. Taking longer strides to surge was especially hard. I just couldn't do it. So I took shorter strides and increased cadence to score gain no matter how small it might be. 

Running a negative split isn't easy with this course, because after the turn point you must run an upward incline for about 300 meters. If you push here, you waste energy, and can risk slowing down after that. If you slow down too much here, it will be hard to make up for the time loss. So I ran up it as economically as I could to save energy but without sacrificing speed so much, and with 2 K remaining, changed the gear and picked up the pace.

When I stopped the timer and compared the first and second lap, I knew I negative split it. I felt satisfied. 

Today I ran a total of 42.7 K. Mission accomplished. Now I'll hit the road again, this time on my Kawasaki Vulcan S 650 ABS for a reward night ride, and feed my body with protein and iron.   









Double Training Part 1: 32.5 K Run in MUTEKI

Jan. 6, 2019
10 K: 55:06.35
2.2 K: 11:28.21
2.2 K: 12:03.87
2.2 K: 11:27.19
2.2 K: 11:54.05
2.2 K: 11:27.62
Sub total 11 K: 58:20.94
10 K: 52:42.18
Sub total 31 K: 2:46:09
Walk: 5:00.19
Warm down 1.5 K: 10:14.78
Total 32.5 K: 3:01.24
With only three weeks remaining before Tateyama Wakashio Marathon 2019, I ran 32.5 K in split-toe minimalist shoes MUTEKI in 3:01:24. The last 1.5 K preceded by a 5-minute walk is warm down, so the main part is the first 31 K. And I ran it in 2:46:09. Should I be able to keep the same pace for another 11 K, that'd be a 3:46:00 marathon. But as all of us know, the last quarter is the hardest part of the race, and most citizen runners will, and even elite runners can, significantly slow down during this stage...

I used the bathroom once, and made quite a few stops at red lights, and I stopped my watch when I did, so that rest factor is not reflected in the time. I would have run much slower, had I not had those rests.  

In the race in Tateyama I am going to aim at my first sub-four barefoot marathon. So I need to condition my soles for the feat also. But I need to walk on a fine line so to speak. While it's important to run in bare feet in training to keep the sole from losing durability, it's not wise to overdo it and get injured. It would set me back significantly. So in today's double training, where I aim at covering beyond the full marathon distance in one day, I decided to do a shoe-clad long distance run first, and then to have a barefoot follow-up run after dinner. 

I just had dinner. It'll take a while for me to feel ready to run again. Meanwhile I will take a short nap and recuperate. Hopefully I will wake up again in a couple of hours, and then when I wake up, I'll be feeling like a new man, ready to hit the road nice and barefooted!







Thursday, January 3, 2019

One Hour Weighted Jog in MUTEKI

Jan. 3, 2019
20 pull-ups
Body weight circuit training: 5 sets by 3 exercises:
1) Handstand
2) Tower pull in squat position
3) Various push ups.
Weighted 10.2 K jog
1st 5.1 K: 30:18.68
2nd 5.1 K: 30:37.61
Total 10.2 K: 1:00:56 


I had three exercise sessions today. The first is pull ups. I did 20 reps. Not in a row, but one by one. It's not very challenging. But that's OK, because I had lost a significant amount of upper body strength by focusing mainly on running training and neglecting training upper body. I will increase my pull up count little by little as I regain my upper body strength.

I also did some body weight circuit training before going for a jog. I did so mainly in order to use up much of my body's glycogen. This way my body will start tapping my body fat reserve to find energy source for my running. 


I went of an hour jog with a 2 kg dumbbell in each hand. Ever since I lost weight by almost 3 kg, I've been feeling a lot lighter, but running has become easier. Naturally, I've been taking advantage of my weight loss by running faster. But I am worried about losing power. I'm not sure if running weighted is the right thing to do, but I want to test the consequence of training this way. I am expecting to increase my ability to resist gravitational pull. In a race I expect this strength to work favorably when I run uphill. I also expect it to strength my shoulders too. The shoulders had been the most underdeveloped part of my body until recently, and I've been trying to develop them since I realized that. I intend to continue to jog with weights, and see how I will feel when I practice fast runs without them. I'm hoping the benefit is favorable. 

While jogging tonight, I was listening to a lecture on time management by world-renowned sale consultant and motivational speaker Brian Tracy. I had listened to a similar lecture before, but the one I listened to tonight was more condensed and spoken fairly rapidly mainly because he tried to put what would be otherwise stretched over two hours into a less-than-an-hour lecture. I copied the first 10 tips out of 21 onto my IC recorder and listened to it twice during an hour-long jog. 

I wasn't able to learn all ten points by heart just by listening while running, but one thing that remains on my mind is to make a list of things you want to do daily. It will structure your day, gives you a sense of accomplishment each time you finish a task from the list. To begin with, I penciled in two top priority task on my day planner, and four tasks to do tomorrow morning before I go to work. Let's see how it will affect my life.