As the days get longer and warmer, many head outdoors for workouts. But many people wonder why, after starting an outdoor jogging routine, they develop shin splints or knee pain shortly after.
Running’s “Terrible Toos” are often the leading culprit and cause of most running injuries.
It’s easy to imagine how this can happen. You wake up and decide today is the day you’re going to start your new training program. You lace up your Nikes and head out the door. Your ego dictates that a run-walk is for wimps, and if you’re gonna go out for just one minute, why even go at all? So three or four minutes later, you’re finished and feeling proud. Tomorrow you do the same. Maybe you follow this program a few more times. And then a week or two later, you start to experience those nagging aches and pains common to many new runners. You decide the pain is not worth it, and your short-lived running career is over.
Consider this: With each running stride, your body is forced to absorb impact forces as great as three times your body weight. So, if you weigh 150 pounds, imagine 450 pounds of force pounding through your body with each foot strike. You can imagine that over the course of a four-mile run, the amount of force the body absorbs is tremendous.