• @[email protected]
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    3616 days ago

    How do they do this?? I need at least an hour or so after waking up just to have my legs feel ready to move

    • NakamuraEmi_bias
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      2716 days ago

      Only started running relatively recently so it’s not first thing in the morning but it’s a habit. I needed a way to “warm up” for the day and be physically active.

      Aside from the general hype of “it feels great” “healthy” yada yada, it gets to a point where you feel uneasy not running. Like after training my legs, they want to go for a run and be used.

      You need to account for having time (sleeping early and getting up early with naps during the day) and slowly conditioning but the most important thing is consistency. Only evaluating based on your previous efforts rather than comparing to others.

      • The Assman
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        1116 days ago

        +1 to slowly conditioning. I did not slowly condition and now I have arthritis.

        • @[email protected]
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          416 days ago

          Could you elaborate? How did you ‘incorrectly’ condition. Was it because you took too long breaks in between or did you overexert yourself.

          • The Assman
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            816 days ago

            It’s pretty easy to run beyond the point of injury due to adrenaline, etc. I fucked up the joints in my feet without realizing I was doing it, and the chronic pain came long after I actually caused the injury.

          • The Assman
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            516 days ago

            Yes, your body needs to get used to running slowly. Basically I said one day, “I can run a marathon,” without any real preparation beside just running a lot. I actually didn’t have any chronic pain until after I ran it and then quit running lol

    • BlanketsWithSmallpox
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      16 days ago

      Having normal bodies that probably don’t need Adderall and other medications to function properly.

      Sleeping at 9pm.*

    • @[email protected]
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      616 days ago

      I can run a full 5k in the afternoon, morning is impossible, I’ve tried it. It’s like my body needs to get rid of the sleep juice in my body. These people must be running a half mile or something.

      • @[email protected]
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        216 days ago

        “sleep juice” feels startlingly accurate for how I feel in the morning. When I was young people would say you need to “de-dormir” - de-sleepify yourself.

        For me that was hunching over a bowl of porridge with a blanket wrapped around me.

        I like running, but doing that in the morning - foof

        • @[email protected]
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          215 days ago

          I guess it’s called sleep inertia and can be caused by decreased blood flow to the brain. This tracks with my issues as I am dissy when I first wake up. I have to set an alarm 15 minutes before I have to get up so I can “recombobulate.”

    • @[email protected]
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      516 days ago

      I am just home from a run. I just set myself a time by which I’m out of the house and I move fast when clothing up so doubts don’t have time to kick in. I might do a few stretches too once I’m out of the door so my leg muscles aren’t that cold.

    • @[email protected]
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      416 days ago

      I do it because it’s the least worst option available to me. If I hit the gym at lunchtime it’s usually fairly packed and I have a hard time getting the machines I like. But if I go in when the gym opens before work, then I can get in, get my sweat on, then shower+change+etc before work.

      I wake up at 6, am dressed and out the door by 630, rolling into the gym parking lot at 655, and waiting by the door when they unlock it at 7.

      I don’t enjoy it for intrinsic reasons. I’ve always been a night owl. But I do like the effects of it - in the last year since I started going before work, I have needed a sleep aid fewer than five times.

      • @[email protected]
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        516 days ago

        Do you schedule to sleep at 10? Your cycle seems pretty neat actually.

        I attempted similar morning exercise before but I found myself nodding off quite violently to sleep by lunch. Like flat out drooling if I shut my eyes. Maybe the trick is moderating workout intensity.

        • @[email protected]
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          316 days ago

          I get to bed anywhere from 1030 to 11.

          And yeah I’m not going hardcore like I’m training for the Olympics or the NFL. I’m just a middle aged dude who doesn’t want to be as fat as I have been recently.

      • @[email protected]
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        116 days ago

        I wake up at 6, am dressed and out the door by 630

        We are not the same

        I am so slow in the morning. I’ll try to rush but then forget 5 things as I leave the house

  • @[email protected]
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    3016 days ago

    We’ve given morning people far too much power in society. Meanwhile they can’t stay awake past 8 or 9 pm smh /s

  • Em Adespoton
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    2616 days ago

    It’s like diving into cold water… the act of getting there can often be done better when your brain isn’t fully engaged.

    So you run before your mind starts making excuses and before your body starts getting too insistent that you’re hungry and tired. And then it just does it and it’s over.

    • ditty
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      1016 days ago

      Exactly this. It’s sort of like cheating in that you just get going before your brain is fully awake, and before you know it you’re already done exercising for the day!