The last couple of days have been kind
of weird. I went out with my colleagues on Thursday, came home late
(but stone-cold sober, as I was the designated driver) and
sleep-deprived-zombied my way through a very strange, slow Friday. It
involved lots of delicious, sinfully rich chocolate cake. And, sadly, tears.
Thankfully, not mine.
My visit to the physiotherapist went so
much better than I had feared. When I described my latest troubles,
he attributed it to the runner's knee at first. But as I went on to
tell him where the pain was located and how it had come about, and
after he had examined me, he changed his mind. This was new. He
thought that it could be because I'm introducing too many new factors
to my training, on my first week of running after this injury. New
shoes, check. Interval training, check. The hamstring muscle has been
tense for months, and this together with the aforementioned factors
could have led to an inflammation in the tendon that joins the muscle
with the knee bone. NSAIDS, rest until Wednesday, stretching and
rehab were prescribed.
This is good news. My runner's knee had
nothing to do with this, and it's been quiet, so all is good on that
front. The inflammation in the hamstring muscle can be easily dealt
with, comparatively speaking. And I can try running on Wednesday. But
he made sure I understood the importance of taking it easy when I get
back to running again. Start with 12-15 minutes (alternating running
with walking), see how the body responds. If all's well, add a few
more minutes. Stick to the brick shoes until the knee is healed, then
introduce VFF (that engage more muscles) into the equation again. Find flat
surfaces to run on, walk up hills.
And now, for some yoga.
Underbart med bra nyheter!
ReplyDeleteSkynda långsamt nu. Du är snart tillbaka. Kroppen är så komplex.
Stort tack för orden hos mig.
Jag följer dig på bloglovin, men får aldrig upp då det kommer inlägg längre. Skumt! Nu har jag läst ikapp!
Ja, det verkar ha varit lite problem med RSS-feeden på sistone :-/
ReplyDelete