Numbers, Graphs, and Charts are sorely lacking in my posts. Here
is a progress report for this year so far as reflected in the numbers. Get out
your graphing calculators, spreadsheets, databases, and reporting software.
Fire up that coffee maker and sink into that comfy imitation leather chair.
This is going to be one nail biter of an intense post. Try to contain your
excitement and enthusiasm for all of the potentially meaningful digits about to
be pixilated and presented to your eyeballs.
Seriously though, it won’t be that bad. I don’t keep track
of that much data presently.
Breakdown:
Until around April, I didn’t really keep track of when I ran,
times, distances, etc. very much. Since I decided to train for the Allstate13.1 Half Marathon in June, it was in April that I decided to be more diligent
in recording my progress in running. I made my best attempt to backtrack and
enter data from the previous months of the year based on what I had logged
through MapMyRun. Through this method of backtracking and recording new
information going forward, the numbers were logged into a spreadsheet to be
used as ‘the data’. These are their stories.
Year to date, 43.483333 Hours have been spent out in the world
at a medium to speedy trot resulting in 302.071592 Miles run thus far. Out of
58 Days of running, 10 have been races.
Pretty Chart of those races:
Number of Days Run:
‘Number of days run’ obviously increases as I trained for the
half and drops as soon as the half was completed for my nearly one week of rest
after the race. After resting I found that it took quite a bit to ease myself
back into running regularly and I slowly increased my miles again through June
to July.
Number of Miles Run:
‘Number of Miles Run’ is generally consistent with number of
days run; the more days run the more miles that week/month. The only time this
was not true was closer to the Allstate 13.1 Half Marathon when I ran more
distance over less time and then rested afterward.
Distance of Runs:
It appears that my typical mileage is around the 5+ mile
range with 3+ miles coming in a distant second and longer runs being more sporadic.
I would like to get back into running longer distances more often but even then
it still seems pretty logical that they would be far fewer in number than the
shorter runs that I can squeeze in during the week after a long day at the
office.
Summary:
It is nice to have numbers to look back on so I can analyze
trends over time, habits that have formed and should be encouraged, modified,
or broken, as well as just to look back over time (after I have been tracking
progress for a longer duration) as to how I trained when I was one age as
compared to another and whatever other factors life throws in along the way.
For instance how does vacation, a new job, longer/shorter hours, living
situation, relationship status, age, etc. all affect how I run? Only time will
tell and the numbers can help paint a picture for someone who prefers a ‘big
picture’ look at things (or for those who just can’t remember what they had for
dinner yesterday and prefer to write it all down).
Jennifer has to be raging with jealousy right now.
ReplyDeleteGreat graphs!
I see pie charts, what about cake charts?
Haha! Any time of day is a good time for Pie...charts. The cake charts are a lie anyway.
DeleteDeclan - My obsession is with Excel spreadsheets - not the charts that excel creates :-p
Delete