Running Form (aka Room For Improvement)
Though I’m a frequent poster and lurker on a couple running forums, I’d call the Beginners forum at Running World my “home” forum, the one where I post the most. While it does cater to Beginners, many of the regulars have been running for years, some for decades, and the vibe is so cool, they stick around. It’s a wonderful, helpful and friendly bunch of people, several of whom I’ve met outside of the internet, in races around the area. Anyway, all this to say, I respect and feel great affection towards my fellow forumites.
But I do have a bone to pick with some of the advice given (or rather, not given) when it comes to running form.
Today, someone posted that they’d been running on a treadmill at the gym and a staff person approached them, saying they’d been watching this person kicking themselves when they run and that it was likely due to an imbalance caused by upper body tension. They spoke about a different way to hold your thumbs while running that helps relax the body. The poster was doubtful and very self-conscious, wanting to know what they should do about this advice.
The responses were, “ignore them”, “don’t worry about it” and even “this sounds like a case of someone who thinks they know more than they do” (that one’s my fave). Granted, the staffer’s advice was unsolicited, so yes, it would appear pretty rude, but my reply was “Great!…use it!” I suggested she ask this person to check her out so she could improve her form and run better. Why the hell wouldn’t you, if given the opportunity??
See, it’s like this: If you took up carpentry and you weren’t good at measuring, you’d end up with some very crooked tables. Would it be satisfying to make crooked tables forever? When, with just some particular attention paid to the task, your tables could be vastly improved, not to mention easier to make!
That’s what happens when you work on running form. With no real “work” - just some undivided attention paid your body - sizable bonuses can appear in speed, effort, comfort, and you end up looking damn good, besides! And that’s not even addressing injury reduction, where a simple change in stride can make a world of difference.
How do I know this? Early in the game, so I wouldn’t have to re-learn bad habits (because I am, admittedly, attracted to bad habits), I read books, articles and essays on running form and practiced what was preached; stopped overstriding, started mid-foot landing, stopped crossing my arms across my centerline, adjusted my arm swing to drive with my elbows, increased my foot-turnover (so the Elites run with a 180-beat cadence? Then I will, too!), stopped looking down at the ground, used my core, relaxed from my jaw to my toes and what did I get for my trouble? An instant speed increase and still no injuries to speak of (knock on wood, forever).
C’mon people, the fastest route between two points is a straight line, so take that straight line! Make your life easier!! Do what people before you have done. If you don’t have access to a coach (some running clubs are led by coaches), then read a book, scour the web, learn some simple tips and tricks that’ll make you a happier, faster, more elegant runner. There’s simply no reason not to.
Tags: running form, running improvement

December 6th, 2007 at 3:51 pm
Hi Flo:
I come over to your blog from a link in a comment of yours at RunnersWorld. Your writing style is as good as your running style! Please keep posting.
You have made substantial speed improvements, something I wish I could do. Your second to last paragraph above was especially interesting.
Whenever I push my 5k average pace very much below 8 min/mile I seem to get injured.
I should have started with some reading like you did.
Thanks for the inspiration,
Lee
December 6th, 2007 at 7:59 pm
Hey Lee, what a sweet guy you are! Thanks for such lovely commenting. Sorry to hear about your constant injuries, that would be extremely disheartening. But don’t despair, start investigating and hopefully you can pinpoint areas of improvement to entice your body to behave more favorably.
December 7th, 2007 at 5:03 pm
Hi Flo:
Most of the injuries are not running related, although some minor ones are. The three biggies are broken wrist from tangling my feet and falling off a pickup truck, long nasty cut on my hand from a utility knife, and some broken ribs from a bike crash. The last one meant two months as a couch potato.
Cheers, Lee