I used to at the start, and also getting a skipped heart beat when your heart is racing can be fun 🙉 the more you run the easier and more relaxed you will feel over time ☺
Thank you, I am new to running and I noticed this and it was discouraging. My first 1.25 is tough. after that is smooth sailing. I even said to my wife that running seems to get easier as I go. I complete 3 miles and I am barely winded. However, I am sucking wind at 1.25 miles. I am over weight and losing weight while building cardio. Very good video.
I live in Las Vegas where in the summer I hike at around 2500 meters in our surrounding mountains. I then hike up another 600 or so meters in the actual hike. Thank you for explaining why I want to die after ten minutes but then go on and feel great. Makes sense!!!
Thanks for this!! I recently started training for military service, I’ve got a year to prepare and I’ve always been terrible with running. I’m starting my running training tomorrow so I wanted to educate myself on why running is so difficult for me, and I think I got my answer. Thanks again!
what you describe is similar to what i found. i’m 62. my first K is terrible, breathing not right, knee pain, general discomfort. if i battle through for approximately 1k at about 6min/k then stop and rest, standing still for about 2 minutes, then start my planned run, everything is good. the aches & pains disappear and breathing is fine.
I'm not overweight, dont smoke and i cant even run for over a minute, after that is seems impossible to continue any longer. Tried couch to 5k and couldn't even do that
@@X85283 thanks for the feedback, I'm not even exaggerating. I tried slowing down but it was literally just above walking pace and that was just boring. After about 40 seconds I start blowing really heavy and my lungs are killing me. It REALLY pisses me off
I searched this up because I just got back from the gym- I have been running for a year and love to do a 5k on the treadmill a few times a week, but EVERY time, I almost give up during the first mile. I hate it- but I know it’s gonna get better every time and it does! I can coast easy after that. I didn’t know why…thanks for explaining!
For a while I thought it was just me! I started running about 12 months ago and I would struggle with my breathing and chest burn for the first 10-15 mins....so much so that I'd be on the verge of stopping. I though it was a combo of a few things wrong with me. I'm 60 years old and I was obese nearly all my life until up to 7 years ago. I ended up having a heart attack and I had open heart surgery. I turned my life around since then. During surgery, part of your lower lungs get incapacitated. I thought it maybe a combination of the effects of the surgery had on my heart and lungs and also that my former 80 a day smoking habit had taken its toll on me. On top of that, I had to consider my age and fitness levels too. Although they probably have some bearing on things....I think now that they weren't as big an effect as I thought they were. Thats because I don't suffer now like I used to and its a result of a few modifications that I was ignorant about. I found that I had bad posture, a poor breathing technique, id dive into the first mile too hard, and I would also dive in cold. So I practised getting my posture right, my upper body to relax, and learned how to breath properly. Then I learned to pull the reigns back on that 1st mile and take it handy until everything got warmed up or got up to speed and over that hump. And speaking of warm up which I used to ignore....I now think that it is the most critical 5-7 minutes of time that you can spend on yourself especially if you are an older runner with a body that has been abused most of its life. I do some dynamic exercises for upper body, glutes, quads, hams and I pay double attention on calfs which I had bother with in the past with too. I round it off with a minute or two of air squats and jumping jacks to elevate the heart rate before I start. I don't spend all day on it....usually about 5-7 mins and its the best 5-7 mins that I could spend. All these combined has made a huge difference for that first mile or to get over that hump and also for the rest of the run too.
That is really inspiring. I hope your running is still going well and your heart health is improving. Will start including upper body exercises in my warm ups as well. The breathing techniques helped me improve too. So glad not to get a cold throat and gasping now.
@@joelouden6592 Yep...I was a chain smoker and could do 4-6 an hour. Sometimes i light up one after the other. Its also over a quarter of a million cigarettes consumed in the 20 years that I smoked. I'm lucky to be still alive to tell the tale and most grateful that I haven't smoked in years and I'm free of them. Financially I couldn't afford it anyway. The price of them has over tripled in my country since I've stopped. Then you have the hassle in where to smoke...in my day you could smoke in cafes, pubs, restaurants ect....you can't smoke anywhere now.
I don’t have any advice but just wanted to say this is so awesome!!! I’m so glad you turned your life around from obesity and 80 cigs a day! At 60, please make sure to always just let someone know when you’re going running though (I do this even at only 25 because you never know). If you don’t have anyone else in your life, I would even volunteer because it’s so important. I’m very obese and yet can run up to 12.5 miles now without a break. I’m happy. I just started only a month ago running consistently so I’m hoping to have the same journey as you!!! I know it will be over soon. Your diet is number 1, and running number 2. I also smoke about 5 cigs a day but trying to end that. Wishing you the best. God bless you and keep you on your healthy journey 🙏🏽
Thanks for the info., warming up before a run is the best way to address. I jog before a race. Not at my actual pace, but slow to get my muscles warmed up. This really helps. Used to just stretch only then run. I can feel the difference between the two. Once that first mile is done then the runners high kicks in and you can just go.
I really thought i have health issues and couldn't reach my first my first mile. After watching your video i think i know why. I will give it a try again.
Thanks for the video. I have never really gave it much thought, but when you explain the physiology it makes sense. I am no expert, and certainly I am no sprinter, I tend to start slow and build my pace gradually each mile. I think it's called running negative spits or something. It seems to work for me.
the funny thing is for me i tired to run on friday and well i noticed that during the whole run basically i felt like it was hard to breath and this was for about 30 min or so like i wanted to stop and at the end i honestly kind of regreted it. i regreted the whole run and wanted it to stop.
I struggled getting up to running my first mile distance no walking no stopping. So I am going to put that down to effects you described. After I reached that I found running the remaining 0.8 miles to work seemed to arrive much quicker than I expected. I will put that down to the effects you described. But I think there is also a psychological effect here that you have not described. Expectation of how long your body will need to perform for. I think your concious brain can sabotage you here. Only in that if it expects it will need to stop performing as you reach the distance you require it may start to signal your muscles, heart and lungs to begin doing less. I don't know that to be the case, just that every time I visualised a further distance on my journey that I must cover things became easier but the closer the next stage was things became harder, a lot harder. Almost as if my body was adapting to adapt to my brain expectations. So my way of overcomming the first mile difficulties will be to warm up and improve my heart rate first, including my breathing and imagine a longer distance than I know I will run. Let's see where that takes me.
Comming back to this. I managed to run my first mile and made it to 1.8 miles. Next day after 1.8 miles caught a cold so waiting for that to clear before I get back to running.
This makes a lotta sense. When I start out my brain is shouting STOP, STOP your not being chased by a wooly mamoth or bad guys why are you running? I find a somewhat energetic warm up helps with this; star jumps etc Thx for the insight
Love this video. Should show it to more people. It’s like my 5km parkruns. Takes me a couple of kms to get into the zone. Like the other day. 1st two kms were both 4:31 each and then I got faster for each one after that.
IDK, I always do at least 0,5km walking to start and the run the first 10 minutes in zone 2 at the begining, then continue in z2 most of the time and sometimes do interwals or threshold. I didn't know first mile being hard was a thing.
In my case it isn't my heart that feels funny but my head, it is like my brain isn't getting enough oxygen and I start to feel a bit faint and a little panicked because I usually run at night by myself and I know there's no one around to help me if I pass out but once I've caught my breath the first time which according to this video may actually be my circulatory system catching up I feel fine. I'm doing a Couch to 5k program and usually have a lot more energy once the thirty minutes or so is over than when I started, so much so that I will often run a few extra laps of the track just because it's fun and I feel good. Maybe I need a more vigorous warm up then the 5 minute brisk walk that the program specifies before I start jogging...
I am the opposite, when I start, I can run for 15 minutes, then I have to walk, then the minutes I can run keeps decreasing to around 2 minutes run time between walks
Hi DRFitness. Thank you for this, I thought I was slow at the start because I am mild asthmatic. At the end of your video you suggest to avoid O2 deficit before a race, go for a warm up jog 1st. Do you know the duration of the 'Steady State' ie how long before the event should I jog/run...
I would suggest doing your warm up in the 30 mins prior to the race start and allow no more than 10 minutes between warm up and race start, you don't want to 'cool down' in the gap between warm up and race start. I normally jog for 15 mins, dynamic stretches for 10 mins, then 5 mins of checking my laces, checking my garmin, going over my strategy in my head......then bang goes the gun....
@@DynamicRunningFitness thanks man. i guess if there is too may people around and no room to dynamically swing my leg in ab/adduction etc or if i'm try to look cool. i can do stationary voluntary muscle contractions or little jogging on the spot for the 10mins. thank you once again
I find running outside a little more tough than the treadmill. I have shorter strides and harder breathing. Ran a mile but it was tough. Had a 4 months off from running. So out of shape I think.
I can't run 2 miles non stop without feeling like I'm dying and I NEVER recover or get better. However I ran the St Jude half marathon non stop though my knees and legs were heavily damaged can someone explain this. I think all the other runners there was someone giving me strength
Try and slow your pace down don't concentrate on distance or speed that comes over time.. Best advice is every time u breathe count 4 steps and breath out So I use my left leg as soon as it hits the floor I count Left 1 right 2 left 3 right 4 breath even if your pace is no much faster then walking get rhythm down in your breathing don't kill yourself love yourself and remember your part of the 1% out there hope this helps x
That's interesting. I always noticed my best runs were after lifting. Does the body have an adjustment period for each muscle or is it a systemic change?
if first time starting don't run...just walk slowly....that is it...i have that experience also..if you people are heart pastions don't do...that...🤔🤔🤔
First 10 minutes? I'm two weeks in and I'm still gasping after each session. Have to stop at least three times. I'm 32 and I feel like I'm going to have a heart attack.
That means you are starting your run too fast. You need to start really slow for the first 2km. Maybe a 6:20 or 6:25 minutes per kilometer and then slowly increase your pace maybe to 6 minutes per km for the next 2 km and then you will start feeling good about the run then it is up to whether you want to go more faster or you want to stick to 6 minutes per km speed. I do 12-13km runs every morning and this is what helps me. Trust me even if I feel tired at 4 or 5km I know one thing and it is really true, running is most easiest at 7th and 8th km so I tell myself to keep pushing because around7 km it will all be alright. And from 7-13 km this is the case for me it is the most easiest and fun part of running. It is day 35 since I started running.
Does anyone else feel like their heart is gonna explode?
lol I used to feel that way😂
exactly
I used to at the start, and also getting a skipped heart beat when your heart is racing can be fun 🙉 the more you run the easier and more relaxed you will feel over time ☺
Yeah. I can run only 4 minutes 😂
Running is dangerous
I walk a brisk mile, slow jog, then I'll transition into running.
I've been running for two years and this is first I've heard of this. Thank you for sharing the info I can now plan to manage race starts!
Bold of you to assume I can run for a few minutes 0:12
So true
Lolz
It’s amazing how achy knee pain goes away after the first half mile.
Thank you, I am new to running and I noticed this and it was discouraging. My first 1.25 is tough. after that is smooth sailing. I even said to my wife that running seems to get easier as I go. I complete 3 miles and I am barely winded. However, I am sucking wind at 1.25 miles. I am over weight and losing weight while building cardio. Very good video.
Thank you for your kind words, I'm glad you enjoyed the video. Good luck with your training!
I live in Las Vegas where in the summer I hike at around 2500 meters in our surrounding mountains. I then hike up another 600 or so meters in the actual hike. Thank you for explaining why I want to die after ten minutes but then go on and feel great. Makes sense!!!
I bet that's a beautiful place to go hiking! Thanks for the comment.
Thanks for this!! I recently started training for military service, I’ve got a year to prepare and I’ve always been terrible with running.
I’m starting my running training tomorrow so I wanted to educate myself on why running is so difficult for me, and I think I got my answer.
Thanks again!
How’s it been?
what you describe is similar to what i found. i’m 62.
my first K is terrible, breathing not right, knee pain, general discomfort.
if i battle through for approximately 1k at about 6min/k then stop and rest, standing still for about 2 minutes, then start my planned run, everything is good.
the aches & pains disappear and breathing is fine.
I’m so glad to hear that I’m not alone. I thought I was out of shape and there was something seriously wrong with me.😅😅😅
even i was thinking the same untill i watched this
I'm not overweight, dont smoke and i cant even run for over a minute, after that is seems impossible to continue any longer.
Tried couch to 5k and couldn't even do that
Honestly? Go to to a doctor, that is not normal. The first 10 minutes being a "struggle" certainly is nothing like "impossible to continue".
@@X85283 thanks for the feedback, I'm not even exaggerating. I tried slowing down but it was literally just above walking pace and that was just boring.
After about 40 seconds I start blowing really heavy and my lungs are killing me. It REALLY pisses me off
@@X85283 Plenty of people don’t have good cardiovascular health. That doesn’t mean he has an illness.
@@MaskOfCinderYeah
You can mitigate steady state by doing pushups or situps before you run.
I searched this up because I just got back from the gym- I have been running for a year and love to do a 5k on the treadmill a few times a week, but EVERY time, I almost give up during the first mile. I hate it- but I know it’s gonna get better every time and it does! I can coast easy after that. I didn’t know why…thanks for explaining!
That is true, my first two mile is the hardest, once I pass that, it’s like it catch the wind and the mileage after that is a smooth ride out
For a while I thought it was just me! I started running about 12 months ago and I would struggle with my breathing and chest burn for the first 10-15 mins....so much so that I'd be on the verge of stopping. I though it was a combo of a few things wrong with me. I'm 60 years old and I was obese nearly all my life until up to 7 years ago. I ended up having a heart attack and I had open heart surgery. I turned my life around since then. During surgery, part of your lower lungs get incapacitated. I thought it maybe a combination of the effects of the surgery had on my heart and lungs and also that my former 80 a day smoking habit had taken its toll on me. On top of that, I had to consider my age and fitness levels too.
Although they probably have some bearing on things....I think now that they weren't as big an effect as I thought they were. Thats because I don't suffer now like I used to and its a result of a few modifications that I was ignorant about.
I found that I had bad posture, a poor breathing technique, id dive into the first mile too hard, and I would also dive in cold. So I practised getting my posture right, my upper body to relax, and learned how to breath properly. Then I learned to pull the reigns back on that 1st mile and take it handy until everything got warmed up or got up to speed and over that hump. And speaking of warm up which I used to ignore....I now think that it is the most critical 5-7 minutes of time that you can spend on yourself especially if you are an older runner with a body that has been abused most of its life. I do some dynamic exercises for upper body, glutes, quads, hams and I pay double attention on calfs which I had bother with in the past with too. I round it off with a minute or two of air squats and jumping jacks to elevate the heart rate before I start. I don't spend all day on it....usually about 5-7 mins and its the best 5-7 mins that I could spend. All these combined has made a huge difference for that first mile or to get over that hump and also for the rest of the run too.
That is really inspiring. I hope your running is still going well and your heart health is improving. Will start including upper body exercises in my warm ups as well. The breathing techniques helped me improve too. So glad not to get a cold throat and gasping now.
Congratulations to you, and thank you for sharing your story!
Quite a comeback story. 80 cigarettes? Wow! That's 4 packs a day. That's 5 cigarettes every hour for 16 hours.
@@joelouden6592 Yep...I was a chain smoker and could do 4-6 an hour. Sometimes i light up one after the other. Its also over a quarter of a million cigarettes consumed in the 20 years that I smoked. I'm lucky to be still alive to tell the tale and most grateful that I haven't smoked in years and I'm free of them. Financially I couldn't afford it anyway. The price of them has over tripled in my country since I've stopped. Then you have the hassle in where to smoke...in my day you could smoke in cafes, pubs, restaurants ect....you can't smoke anywhere now.
I don’t have any advice but just wanted to say this is so awesome!!! I’m so glad you turned your life around from obesity and 80 cigs a day! At 60, please make sure to always just let someone know when you’re going running though (I do this even at only 25 because you never know). If you don’t have anyone else in your life, I would even volunteer because it’s so important.
I’m very obese and yet can run up to 12.5 miles now without a break. I’m happy. I just started only a month ago running consistently so I’m hoping to have the same journey as you!!! I know it will be over soon. Your diet is number 1, and running number 2. I also smoke about 5 cigs a day but trying to end that.
Wishing you the best. God bless you and keep you on your healthy journey 🙏🏽
Thanks for the info., warming up before a run is the best way to address. I jog before a race. Not at my actual pace, but slow to get my muscles warmed up. This really helps. Used to just stretch only then run. I can feel the difference between the two. Once that first mile is done then the runners high kicks in and you can just go.
Thank you for this fantastic info. Should help on a 1.5 mile run that I have to do soon lol
Well said. This describes me to a T. I find that it takes a mile to mile and a half to reach a (somewhat) comfortable pace. Thanks and happy running!
Great video. subscribed. I really struggle for the first mile or two sometimes. This has explained very simply why.
Glad it was helpful!
Thank you for addressing this... very helpful...❤
Never knew that, it explains a lot. Thank you
You're welcome
I really thought i have health issues and couldn't reach my first my first mile.
After watching your video i think i know why.
I will give it a try again.
Thanks for the video. I have never really gave it much thought, but when you explain the physiology it makes sense.
I am no expert, and certainly I am no sprinter, I tend to start slow and build my pace gradually each mile. I think it's called running negative spits or something. It seems to work for me.
You're welcome. Yes, negative splits are when you are faster as you progress through your run. It's a popular way to race.
I’m 70. I require a one mile warmup before a race. Power walk to jog to run, pre-race. I definitely dislike this mile. Ugh.
its my 5th day of running. i can only run straight (slow) for 2minutes. then walk and run again. this is all i can manage for now.
Keep going. You got company....me
the funny thing is for me i tired to run on friday and well i noticed that during the whole run basically i felt like it was hard to breath and this was for about 30 min or so like i wanted to stop and at the end i honestly kind of regreted it. i regreted the whole run and wanted it to stop.
Thanks for explaining this
Happy to help
Great video, thank you so much!
Great video, very well explained.
Glad you enjoyed it!
I struggled getting up to running my first mile distance no walking no stopping. So I am going to put that down to effects you described. After I reached that I found running the remaining 0.8 miles to work seemed to arrive much quicker than I expected. I will put that down to the effects you described.
But I think there is also a psychological effect here that you have not described. Expectation of how long your body will need to perform for. I think your concious brain can sabotage you here. Only in that if it expects it will need to stop performing as you reach the distance you require it may start to signal your muscles, heart and lungs to begin doing less. I don't know that to be the case, just that every time I visualised a further distance on my journey that I must cover things became easier but the closer the next stage was things became harder, a lot harder. Almost as if my body was adapting to adapt to my brain expectations.
So my way of overcomming the first mile difficulties will be to warm up and improve my heart rate first, including my breathing and imagine a longer distance than I know I will run. Let's see where that takes me.
Comming back to this. I managed to run my first mile and made it to 1.8 miles. Next day after 1.8 miles caught a cold so waiting for that to clear before I get back to running.
Jokes on me. It doesn’t get easier after the first 10 mins
Lmfao
This makes a lotta sense. When I start out my brain is shouting STOP, STOP your not being chased by a wooly mamoth or bad guys why are you running? I find a somewhat energetic warm up helps with this; star jumps etc Thx for the insight
Running still sucks after 10 minutes. At 15, 20, 30, and 40 mins I'm even more miserable than at 5 minutes.
this was happening to me when I started returning to running after a couple years out...I need to push through the first mile, big mental block
Same 😢 I was breathing so heavily 😢
Love this video.
Should show it to more people.
It’s like my 5km parkruns.
Takes me a couple of kms to get into the zone.
Like the other day.
1st two kms were both 4:31 each and then I got faster for each one after that.
Tell me is it normal that not even a minute and my legs started to hurt?
IDK, I always do at least 0,5km walking to start and the run the first 10 minutes in zone 2 at the begining, then continue in z2 most of the time and sometimes do interwals or threshold.
I didn't know first mile being hard was a thing.
In my case it isn't my heart that feels funny but my head, it is like my brain isn't getting enough oxygen and I start to feel a bit faint and a little panicked because I usually run at night by myself and I know there's no one around to help me if I pass out but once I've caught my breath the first time which according to this video may actually be my circulatory system catching up I feel fine. I'm doing a Couch to 5k program and usually have a lot more energy once the thirty minutes or so is over than when I started, so much so that I will often run a few extra laps of the track just because it's fun and I feel good. Maybe I need a more vigorous warm up then the 5 minute brisk walk that the program specifies before I start jogging...
I am the opposite, when I start, I can run for 15 minutes, then I have to walk, then the minutes I can run keeps decreasing to around 2 minutes run time between walks
Hi DRFitness. Thank you for this, I thought I was slow at the start because I am mild asthmatic. At the end of your video you suggest to avoid O2 deficit before a race, go for a warm up jog 1st. Do you know the duration of the 'Steady State' ie how long before the event should I jog/run...
I would suggest doing your warm up in the 30 mins prior to the race start and allow no more than 10 minutes between warm up and race start, you don't want to 'cool down' in the gap between warm up and race start. I normally jog for 15 mins, dynamic stretches for 10 mins, then 5 mins of checking my laces, checking my garmin, going over my strategy in my head......then bang goes the gun....
@@DynamicRunningFitness thanks man. i guess if there is too may people around and no room to dynamically swing my leg in ab/adduction etc or if i'm try to look cool. i can do stationary voluntary muscle contractions or little jogging on the spot for the 10mins. thank you once again
@@FFTAlexander Squats and jumps from squat might help. Hip exercises as well. Just thinking of on the spot exercises rather than large area exercises.
I can walk 10 miles but can’t run a 1/4 mile. I’m too out of breath after 1 minute.
You are probably running at a fast pace try slowing down for example 10minutes per mile
I just started running and after a month I finally ran a full 30 minutes without stopping which is around 4 miles
For me that is 3.1 miles
No way xD what is your run schedule look like? I just started and I’m having difficult time. My run time 17min per mile, I had to walk a lot
Mine was 12 or 14 minutes per miles , means i run slow or just kittle faster than walk @@Alisrovi
Congrat, hope i can do the same in the future.
I find running outside a little more tough than the treadmill. I have shorter strides and harder breathing. Ran a mile but it was tough. Had a 4 months off from running. So out of shape I think.
Nice. I always thought it’s just me
I can't run 2 miles non stop without feeling like I'm dying and I NEVER recover or get better. However I ran the St Jude half marathon non stop though my knees and legs were heavily damaged can someone explain this. I think all the other runners there was someone giving me strength
I never get out if that uncomfortable staff
If i feel light headed does that mean i should stop? I don't want to pass out in the street
Try and slow your pace down don't concentrate on distance or speed that comes over time..
Best advice is every time u breathe count 4 steps and breath out
So I use my left leg as soon as it hits the floor I count
Left 1 right 2 left 3 right 4 breath even if your pace is no much faster then walking get rhythm down in your breathing don't kill yourself love yourself and remember your part of the 1% out there hope this helps x
I just feel too heavy to start running (I'm 55kg 163cm)
As if I'm carrying a 100kg weight on my whole body...
And then I would feel out of breath
Every night I go for a mile and my personal best was 8:56 and 3 days later I’m now getting 9:15 I don’t know what to do sir.
Just run faster
Bc ur muscles are tired so u went slower and u waited 3 days
You need to rest. Try running every other day. Max 4 times a week. 😊
That's interesting. I always noticed my best runs were after lifting. Does the body have an adjustment period for each muscle or is it a systemic change?
im in the same spot. i do high rep calisthenics; running after a session yields the best results
Excellent info my skanky brethren 👍
Yep 👍🏻 hate it !!
Yea the 1st mile is awful!!!! I usually run 2 to 3mi and every time that 1st mile makes me think i cant do it!
Oh so my problem is stopping after 1 mile … got it 😂 I never got to that high level steady state
The fact today i will have to run for 10 Minutes today for P.E its a test....
After a few minutes.. I can’t run for 10 seconds without wanting to stop and I can’t run 30 seconds without being out of breath.. how do I start
if first time starting don't run...just walk slowly....that is it...i have that experience also..if you people are heart pastions don't do...that...🤔🤔🤔
Are you a heart patient
I just can’t push myself through that oxygen deficit, how do I just keep going and not give up?
You got the answer. Just keep going. It’s all mental.
First 10 minutes? I'm two weeks in and I'm still gasping after each session. Have to stop at least three times. I'm 32 and I feel like I'm going to have a heart attack.
That means you are starting your run too fast. You need to start really slow for the first 2km. Maybe a 6:20 or 6:25 minutes per kilometer and then slowly increase your pace maybe to 6 minutes per km for the next 2 km and then you will start feeling good about the run then it is up to whether you want to go more faster or you want to stick to 6 minutes per km speed.
I do 12-13km runs every morning and this is what helps me.
Trust me even if I feel tired at 4 or 5km I know one thing and it is really true, running is most easiest at 7th and 8th km so I tell myself to keep pushing because around7 km it will all be alright. And from 7-13 km this is the case for me it is the most easiest and fun part of running.
It is day 35 since I started running.
Every time they tell me there's pizza on the table is when I start running to the table
Does age influence how long this oxygen defiance last?
Why my heart rate very high on first mile?
it like 150 bpm, after awhile it will drop to 130bpm.
That's not a very high heart rate
Nah for me it's after 15minutes till like 35 that i feel like imma drop ☠️
Uh... warm up anyone?
Check your iron levels
The awkward first km
“Well… no” lol
I can't jog one minute .
. .