*While I’m out…: Today, I’m excited to have a guest post from Carly from CarlyBananas! I love reading Carly’s blog — especially because she lives in the DC-area and I can often relate to many of her running stories. Plus, she’s hilarious — on the blog and in real life šŸ™‚ Check out the guest post below and be sure to add Carly to your regular reading list!
Iā€™ve had a bit of a tumultuous relationship with running latelyā€¦ so much so that I wrote it a break up letter back in November. I went from feeling like this about running:
To just totally resenting every run and disliking every mile.  But now that itā€™s been awhile, Iā€™m slowly making my way back to running and finding a method to make it easier on myself. Here are my top tips for getting back into running after a break ā€“ without making yourself crazy:
1.     Go easy. Think about your easy runs before you took a break and go easier and shorter.  My first few runs back have been quite slow and based totally on exertion and not time.  I didnā€™t wear my Garmin and I just turned on my Nike+ app and locked my phone screen and just put it in my pocket.  Think about breathing and feeling comfortable and donā€™t worry about time!
2.     Donā€™t worry about signing up for a goal race.  I know, itā€™s the opposite of what most people say when people start running: sign up for a race to motivate yourself.  But Iā€™ve found that the easiest way to re-burnout is to get right back into planning for a race and making sure Iā€™m covering a fixed number of miles.  This spring, I donā€™t have a goal race. If I find a race I want to do then Iā€™ll sign up and do it. It feels freeing to just run to run. 
3.     Try some new routes.  Like Ericka, Iā€™m lucky to live near some of the most gorgeous scenery in the country.
 Go and see something new on your runs.  If you live somewhere where thatā€™s not an option, try running your normal route in reverse or try running at a different time of day.  Even the smallest change in routine can make a run feel new and exciting.
4.     Try planning your runs in minutes.  When Iā€™m fortunate enough to go on a lunch run during the work day it a nice change to think of my run in terms of minutes.  It doesnā€™t matter how far I go or how fast Iā€™m running. I only have a fixed amount of time to run at lunch, usually around 45 minutes, and I want to make the most out of it.  As the time ticks by I wish I had more time to run before going back to work. It totally changes that ā€œOh, I need to run 3-4 milesā€ to ā€œYay, 45 minutes away from my desk!ā€
5.     Remember that this is a hobby. Sometimes I fall into the trap of taking running really seriously. But really, this is just my hobby and I will never be any level of a professional.  If a hobby starts becoming to stressful or not fun, itā€™s time to reevaluate.  A lot of people have really inspirational running mantrasā€¦mine is ā€œThis is your hobby and you love what youā€™re doing.ā€
Do you have any tips that I missed? Have you ever taken an extended break from running and then gotten back into it?
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