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Monday, 10 November 2025

From 15 cigarettes a day to 5k and my first parkrun

My couch to 5k training and a parkrun in 4 weeks.

So I decided I needed something to do for myself. Our daughter died in October 2024 from an ischemic bowel. She was disabled and the one thing she could do with total independence was to walk. She never complained because she couldn't verbalise or express herself and she has been my motivation to keep going when I hit a brick wall. 

I love walking and I completed the Ultimate 50 Challenge in the Chilterns in September, raising £850 and awareness for Bowel Research UK in memory of Stephanie. What I didn't consider when I signed up were the words 'Ultimate' and 'Challenge' and what they actually meant and I walked 25km/15 miles in 5 and a half hours with an elevation gain of 486ms. 

I decided to challenge myself further and to take up running and I started the couch to 5k on World Mental Health Day October 10th giving myself just 4 weeks to complete the 9 week program and be ready for my first 5k, a park run by November 8th.

I've not run since I was in school (1986) and I won the victrix ludorum where I competed in the 1500m and 800m in year 4 (now year 10) I ran in flip flops over the dunes in Durban in 2012 chasing the dog who was chasing a monkey, but I was over taken very quickly by the 13 year old who caught up with the dog, before I was half was up the first sand dune and more recently I ran for a train that had already left the station before I started running for it.

I committed to the parkrun with a friend before I started training, she is a volunteer and I knew once I told her I was going to do it, she wouldn't let me back out.

I know there are many of you who have been doing this for a long time, running marathons and thinking 'so what?' just remember, you started somewhere and I'm just sharing my journey.

I'm 54, I smoke 15 cigarettes a day and previous to starting this, I couldn't cough, sneeze or laugh without the risk of wetting myself, I've got a dodgy achilles, bad posture, nerve damage in my neck, suffer with chronic migraines and have a B12 and Vitamin D deficiency. Diagnosed with PTSD, grieving and mental health not good.

Each session is for 30 minutes and I each time I've been walking/running my distance has increased the time spent running.

Week 1 - 10th October 
  • Walk 5 mins 
  • Run 60 secs was so out of breath it hurt
  • Walk 90 secs struggled to get my breathing back
  • Repeat x 7
  • Walk 5 mins
I need to buy a sports bra. The only part of me that hurts is across my shoulder blades which is apparently due to poor posture.

I also injured myself moving bricks around the garden when the wheelbarrow fell on me taking a chunk out of my right ankle.

Week Two - 17th October 

A 6 mile walk up the Malvern Hills with an incline of just over 1000ft in the first 45 minutes 
  • Walk 5 mins
  • Run 90 Seconds
  • Walk 2 mins
  • Repeat 6 times
  • Walk 5 mins
I didn't quite get my timings/distance right and had an extra walk home

Wore leggings (I can understand now why women wear their active wear all day even for shopping, so comfy) I'd bought them when I worked with the European Golf and was 10kg heavier, spent the whole run/walk hoiking them up.
Ran to 'Eye of the Tiger' in my mind Sly and the cast were running behind me cheering me on, but at my speed, it was the cast at the age they are now.
  • 45 mins swimming.
  • Walk 5 mins
  • Run 90 Seconds
  • Walk 90 secs
  • Run 3 mins
  • Walk 3 mins
  • Run 3 mins
  • Walk 3 mins
  • Run 90 sec
  • Walk 90 secs
  • Walk 5 mins
Felt like day 1, out of breath, gasping to get breath back. Resisited the urge not to 'Walk like an Egyptian'

Now running as far as I'm walking each time, but my running speed is the same as my walking speed currently.

Week 3 24th October
  • Walk 5 mins
  • run 5 mins
  • walk 3 mins
  • run 5 mins
  • walk 3 mins
  • run 5 mins
  • walk 5 mins
I just couldn't run the 3rd full 5 minutes. I'm now running/walking in a straight line to the retail park where Peter is joining me for a coffee at the end of the session. However it has meant I haven't been doing the stretching exercises until I've got home about an hour later.

I bought a new sports bra. I took advice from an 80 year old on a sports bra in M&S she told me which had the best hold. I asked if ran much and she said no but any sudden movements and she could knock a small child over within 5ft if her boobs weren’t supported.

I repeated the run again on the Sunday and managed the third 5 minute run.
 
The runs are now getting longer and surprisingly I'm finding it getting easier and feeling so much more relaxed.
  • walk 5 mins
  • run 8 mins
  • walk 5 mins
  • run 8 mins
  • walk 5 mins
  • walk 5 mins
  • run 20 mins
  • walk 5 mins
I was absolutely shattered after the two 8 minute runs, so when faced with the 20 minute run I wasn't convinced I'd manage it. Not only did I manage the 20 minute run, but I also ran for 10 minutes then turned round and got back to my starting point in the 2nd 10 minutes. I felt really good after the run, not tired or out of breath. My pace hasn't improved even though I ran for 20 minutes and walked for 10, compared to when I started in week 1 when I was only running for 8 minutes during the 30 minute session.

Week 4 - 31st October

This week is a mixture of the above with a couple of 10 minute runs with 3 minute walks in between as well as longer runs of 20 and 25 minutes. I've run on Saturday, Monday, Wednesday and Thursday.

I had a bad run this week with a 5 minute warm up walk and a 12 minute run which was mostly uphill which I abandoned after getting out of breath so I returned to walking.

Week 5 - 8th November

Still on week 4 I did my longest run of distance and time on Thursday morning. 3.5k and 25mins of running. All on the flat and all on pavements. I've yet to test myself on grass/mud.

Friday night I drove to Monmouth after work to stay at my friends who has supported me via messaging and calls and love and laughter to get this far so I thought my first parkrun should be where she volunteers at. The parkrun on Saturday went really well. I managed to run the whole distance. I was really pleased with myself and proud of my achievement.


I really enjoyed the parkrun experience. I was apprehensive that I wouldn't as although I'm happy to mix and talk to other people, I don't really like joining in with things I've never done before. That's why I've enjoyed the couch to 5k. I hate the idea of having to drive somewhere, stress over parking, be somewhere at a set time, then worry I won't be able to grasp what I'm supposed to be doing or there are cliquey groups and I find myself alone not knowing what's going on. But my experience at parkrun couldn't have been different, although I was early and I hated the hanging around part.

The briefing was really good and instructions clear. I was introduced as a first timer and throughout the run not only did Kath, cheer me on, but there were volunteers on check points to keep us on route who were clapping, thumbs up and yelling words of encouragement. When I was lapped the other runners were great, with 'you've got this, you can do it' and several people stopped to chat to me afterwards, many who had come on their own, to say I'd done really well and for once I accepted the praise and said 'thank you'

My recovery went well also, with a walk around the town and a coffee to warm down, then I broke my 90 minute drive home up with visiting a couple of friends who have also started running recently for health benefits and home to a hot bath and an early night.

The following day was a rest day, but I did walk 1.5 miles home from the shops as advised online and I'm off for my next run on Monday as I start training for a 10k and another parkrun in Swindon next weekend.






1 comment:

  1. You have done amazingly well and it sounds like you have learned a lot throughout. I read this smiling, I am so proud of you! You are an amazing woman, whenever you set your mind to something you just get it done. xx

    ReplyDelete