Sunday, January 31, 2010

What Do Running Shoes Actually Do?

In his blog post, Looking at Pronation, Cushioning, Motion Control and Barefoot Running, Steve Magness challenges some strongly-rooted assumptions about the benefits of running shoes and puts forth his opinion that the current categories used for running shoes -- cushioning, neutral, stability, and motion control -- should be rethought and replaced based on what really happens in a runner's stride.

Magness surveys several research studies that tried to look at the real relationship between impact forces, shoe correction, and injuries. The thing that struck me the most was Magness' contention that shoes, or at least the wrong shoes, interfere with the body's natural adaptation to forces.

The human body is an incredible organism. Judaism and Christianity have long acknowledged that fact. The writer of Psalms said: ...I am fearfully and wonderfully made... (Psalm 139:14, NIV)

Science agrees and Magness affirms that viewpoint:
we underestimate the human body! It’s an amazing thing, and we never give it the credit it deserves. The body adapts to the surface that it’s going to strike, if you give it a chance. The body adapts to both shoe and surface adjusting impact forces via changes joint stiffness, the way the foot strikes, and a concept called muscle tuning.
My take-away from the article? For now, at least, I have no intention of giving up my running shoes. Though I love going barefoot*, I've worn shoes while walking and running for 55+ years and suspect that my feet have adapted, for better or for worse. Besides, they are definitely not tough enough for Nairobi roads. However, I think I'll work on mimicking the style of running that the body seems to naturally use when running barefoot -- attempting to ensure footstrike beneath my body's center of gravity rather than out in front, shortening my stride length, and increasing my turnover rate.

Provocative article. What do you think? Would a change in your stride or you shoes make a difference in your running?

Run well, y'all,
Bob

*...barefoot... -- I like the dress code for my current office. Since I office in my house, I can and do go barefoot a lot. It's great. TCK's (third culture kids) in Africa are notorious for going barefoot whenever and wherever possible -- I'm not one but in that respect, I'd make a great TCK! :-D

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Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Opportunity knocks…but not always at the front door

Have you ever been waiting for an opportunity but found you were waiting at the wrong door? Great story and lesson here:

Opportunity knocks…but not always at the front door

Run well, y'all,
Bob

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Thursday, January 21, 2010

Everyday Life in Kenya


A good friend, Bert Yates, has posted, on Facebook, pictures of some common, colourful scenes in Kenya. Not sure if you can access them unless you're either a FB friend of Bert or myself.

Run well, y'all,
Bob

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Friday, January 15, 2010

Getting Back on Track

Well, if I run in the morning, I will have run about as much this week as in all of December. And, based on the last 4-5 years of running, this week has been a short mileage week.

The runs have been relatively short and slow, but I've been out there and building back my mileage:

Monday: 2.9 miles Pace: 9.43 mpm
Thurs: 4.1 miles Pace: 9.37 mpm
Friday: 3.3 miles Pace: 9.28 mpm
Saturday: Planning on 4 miles

I'm glad to be back on the road.

Run well, y'all,
Bob

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Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Look, Ma -- No Wires!

This has nothing to do with running but it's fascinating stuff.

My wife and I have said, many times, how much we wish someone would come up with a way to recharge stuff without having to have wires running everywhere. It's moved from Sci-Fi to real life. I had seen the PowerMat charging system for cell phones, etc, but the technology is moving ahead very quickly. The following was in a report of the CES (Consumer Electronics Show) from TidBITS (#1009, 11-Jan-10)

Finally, we come to the blender. It was a perfectly ordinary blender, sitting on a black box. It whirred like all blenders do. Then I noticed that there were no wires attached to the blender. It ran, like the toaster that sat next to it, on inductive power. There have been inductive power pads around for a while for charging low-power devices like cell phones, but blenders and toasters are orders of magnitude more thirsty for electricity.

The magic in the black box comes courtesy of Fulton Innovation's eCoupled technology, which uses magnetic induction to create a current in receiving devices. eCoupled electronics communicate with the black box to tell it how much power it needs. Electronic devices within range of the box which do not communicate with it are somehow left out of the induction field. When I expressed concern that other devices would burst into flames while the wireless power was active, the presenter turned on the blender, put his cell phone down next to it, and offered to let me make a call.

I can't say that I have an engineer's understanding of electricity, but I was under the impression that magnetic induction is an all-or-nothing sort of thing. Fulton has apparently managed to create a power supply which can feed kilowatts to intelligent devices, without affecting other electronics within range. I think he probably could have cloned a cat, á la Nikola Tesla in "The Prestige," and I wouldn't have been any more surprised by the demo.

Common implementation of ubiquitous wireless power would completely change our relationship with technology. Picture a laptop with a battery that never runs down, because it's constantly being charged. There isn't a single electrical device that couldn't benefit from this technology, and many would be transformed by it.

I can't say whether Fulton will be the company that succeeds in bringing inductive charging to the mass market, but it was immediately clear to me that this technology is the future.

Here are some web links to additional information. The Wikipedia article on inductive charging talks about the development of proximity transmission of electricity (versus the device having to actually be in contact with the power source as is the case with the Powermat and the above blender):

eCoupled Wireless Housing
Powermat
Wikipedia Article on Inductive (wireless) Charging
Wikipedia Article on Wireless Energy Transfer

The techie/gadget-loving/geeky side of me sort of wishes I had gotten the Powermat. :-D This is really cool.

Run well, y'all,
Bob

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Monday, January 11, 2010

Clawing My Way Back

One of my reoccurring dreams has to do with running. I wish it was about running with some of the great East African runners and feeling good. But, it's usually an exhausting dream where I'm trying to run up a long, steep hill that's usually deep sand. Instead of running, I'm barely moving forward, digging my hands into the sand and pulling myself uphill.

Well, I think that's how my running is going to feel for the next couple of months. Due to a variety of reasons (travel, an odd injury, boredom with my routes, a cold), I've only run 6 times since 21 November with this morning's run being the first in 3 weeks. I'm not completely starting over but at 55 years old, I think I lose fitness more quickly than ever and it will take me longer to get it back. But, I'm committed to getting it back.

My goals:
• Get back to 100+ miles per month
• Run a half marathon in Nairobi in October
• Lose 20 pounds

There I've said it -- here goes. This morning's run was only 2.94 miles at a pace of 9:42 mpm -- SSD (short, slow distance). I'll bump up my mileage slowly and see what happens.

Have you ever come back from a running slump? Any advice?

BTW, if you want to listen to a running podcast by a regular guy, check out Ashland (VA) Dave's Running in the Center of the Universe

Run well, y'all,
Bob

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5 Comments:

Blogger Christina said...

Not as much of a slump but I've had to take a couple months off from an injury. Take it easy on the way back adding in mileage slowly. I try and follow the 10% rule except for when coming from 0. You could add cross training to help improve your conditioning without actually running.

Monday, January 11, 2010 7:48:00 AM EST  
Blogger Shilingi-Moja said...

Thanks, Christina. The 10% rule was what I had in mind, so I appreciate the confirmation. I've missed the running and really want to get back up to speed.

Monday, January 11, 2010 9:35:00 AM EST  
OpenID runningbecauseican said...

The 10 percent rule is generally good. That being said, you will not want to force yourself to get back to 100 miles a month too quickly. Cross training will help with your fitness, although I have found that nothing can replace running!

Tuesday, January 12, 2010 9:06:00 AM EST  
OpenID milebymile said...

I'm coming back slowly myself--or trying to make myself come back slowly--from some nagging pain that showed up before my half in November. I think it's finally beginning to dawn on me that it might take some real rest--not just some "look at that low mileage, I only ran 25 miles this week" stuff. Here's to both of us getting our health up and our pounds down (mine went up as soon as my training slowed down).

Sunday, January 24, 2010 3:52:00 PM EST  
Blogger Shilingi-Moja said...

I've really cut back on my miles. Well, truth be told, it wasn't as much a conscious decision as a necessity. Saturday, I only ran 2.1 miles -- I can't remember the last time I ran that short. And, it looks like my mileage today will be a fat "0".

Sunday, January 24, 2010 9:09:00 PM EST  

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Saturday, January 09, 2010

Cost of Running: Shoes

the Ringmaster, who blogs at Mile by Mile, posted an interesting blog the other day. She talked about the shoes she had used during 2009 and had figured out her cost per mile for shoes. As much as I like numbers, that is one calculation I hadn't done.

So, I went back and ran the numbers for all the shoes for which I've tracked miles over the last 3+ years. Interesting. In that time I've run in and retired 6 pair of running shoes. I currently have 2 active pair. My average cost per mile was $0.134 per mile. Some other stats that caught my attention:
Most expensive: Brooks Adrenaline GTS7 (2007)
$99.75, 454 miles - $0.22/mi
Least expensive: Etonic Jepara SC 1 (2008)
$72.00, 714.4 miles - $0.10/mi
Longest lasting: Etonic Jepara SC 2 (2008)
$93.00, 817.7 miles - $0.11/mi
During 2009, I used 4 pair of running shoes. One pair, Brooks Adrenaline ASR, was a pair that I bought at the end of 2005 for cold, wet runs. When Richmond, VA had 9+ inches of snow in March 2009, I dug out these shoes for 2 or 3 runs to keep my feet as warm and dry as possible. I would not have wanted to run on dry pavement or for very far with those shoes as they were worn out -- but, they kept me drier than other shoes would have done.

I wore out a pair of Etonic Jepara SC 2's that I had started wearing at the end of Oct 2008. I used those until June 2009 and had 817.7 miles on them. Then I started using a pair of Etonic Jepara SC 1's. When the rainy season started in Kenya in October, the SC 1's became my mud-run shoes and I added in a pair of Etonic Jepara SC 2's for drier runs. The SC 1's now have 504.6 miles and the SC 2's have a measly 62 miles.

Enough stats for now.

Run well, y'all,
Bob

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7 Comments:

Blogger Andrew is getting fit said...

Yeah, it gets pretty pricey with shoes!

Sunday, January 10, 2010 11:37:00 AM EST  
Blogger Shilingi-Moja said...

Definitely the most expensive piece of gear that I get for running. Still, at US$0.13 per mile for the running life and then using them for every day wear and then grubbing, it's not too bad.

Good luck on your twenty-ten weight loss goal.

Sunday, January 10, 2010 12:57:00 PM EST  
Blogger Christina said...

That's interesting. I haven't figured out my $ per mile before. I'll have to see if I have the costs to figure it. I run in my shoes until about 400 miles so my $ per mile is probably more than yours.

Monday, January 11, 2010 7:50:00 AM EST  
OpenID milebymile said...

Bob, I have to know--how can you put so many miles on your shoes? You must have much better form than I do, though, as we noted before, we could share shoe models because I wear the Adrenaline too. But I get no more than 300 miles (and sometimes much less) before my knees start feeling the asphalt. Are you running on softer surfaces, or is that just the pleasure of not being a rookie anymore?

Still learning from you!

Sunday, January 24, 2010 3:49:00 PM EST  
Blogger Shilingi-Moja said...

Karina -- I have no idea how I get so many miles. I don't think my form is particularly good, but I don't know -- I just run. I go by how my left knee feels. I had meniscus surgery about 5 years ago and when that knee starts hurting, it's time to retire those shoes.

I switched away from Brooks Adrenaline 3 years ago. I liked the weight (very light) and they always felt really good for the first few weeks. But, the cushioning didn't hold up for me -- they began to feel hard. When I found the Etonics, I never looked back. The bonus was a longer lasting shoe.

Sunday, January 24, 2010 8:58:00 PM EST  
OpenID milebymile said...

You must have been reading my mind--I just had to go shopping again and declined investing in the Adrenalines again. They're just not holding up for me anymore. I should have tried the Etonics but I'm always leery of trying something new--silly, huh? Maybe I'll at least go run a little in them at my running store. Anyway, for my second pair this time around I got Mizunos--I'll let you know how I do on the mileage.

Wednesday, January 27, 2010 2:57:00 PM EST  
Blogger Shilingi-Moja said...

Enjoy the Mizunos. I found them too soft for me but I'm on the upper end of "normal-weight" runner or the lower end (more likely at the moment) of bigger runner.

If you try the Etonics, just know that they are a little heavier than many shoes but I find the fit, cushioning, and endurance well worth the extra tiny bit of weight.

Monday, February 8, 2010 10:19:00 AM EST  

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Follow the Footprints

Living in another culture can be so interesting. Just before Christmas our daughter came home to spend Christmas with us in Kenya. I was in the US for a meeting when she arrived and before I returned, my wife and Stacey drove to the Kenya coast to visit some friends before we took a few days of vacation on the Indian Ocean coast. When I returned, I flew to Mombasa to meet up with them.

When I arrived at the Mombasa airport (Moi International Airport), we deplaned on the tarmac. As we headed to the terminal, the airport employee who was directing us told us to just follow the footprints and we would get to the right place. Sure enough....It was funny but effective.

Hmmmm. Life lesson here. If you follow the right footprints, you end up in the right place. Whose footprints are you following? (Joshua 24:15)

Run well, y'all,
Bob

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3 Comments:

Blogger Paul Merrill said...

Great parable! And also an illustration of the importance of effective communication in a country where the literacy rates may not be super high.

Monday, January 11, 2010 3:14:00 PM EST  
OpenID milebymile said...

Thanks for the visual. Good reminder . . . I aim to follow Christ and must not get distracted!

Wednesday, January 27, 2010 2:59:00 PM EST  
Blogger Shilingi-Moja said...

I thought it was a great visual both for communication and for the spiritual reminder.

Monday, February 8, 2010 10:21:00 AM EST  

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Friday, January 08, 2010

Why Do They Call It a "Dashboard"?

Earlier today, a co-worker was explaining a new online process for our personnel to use in accessing and tracking budget information. The new finance program, FE, uses an online dashboard. This co-worker did an excellent job of explaining how to use the process but then posed the question, Why do they call it a dashboard? I wish I knew. He quoted the definition from Wikipedia which only referenced the Dashboard module of the Macintosh operating system (OS X). Since I had struggled with the concept, I thought I might be of some help.

He said it helped him. So, perhaps, though not running related, this will help someone else. Here's my response to him:
More, I'm sure, than you want to know -- way more -- but when I saw the trailer on your note [his question and the Wikipedia definition], my geek side kicked in. This is a layman's understanding and may not be a technical explanation:

"Dashboard" was a confusing term when I first encountered it in computer usage. It helped me to think about the dashboard in a vehicle. It contains gauges or lights that give the driver information about the state of the vehicle -- speed, miles, RPM's, heat, fuel remaining. Newer or more expensive vehicles give even more information -- my daughter's Civic tells her when to change her oil; my mother-in-law's Buick shows her the air pressure in her tires and real time MPG. The dashboard also contains some "items" that are interactive, allowing the driver to control various aspects of the vehicle -- cruise control buttons, audio system controls, HVAC controls, One Star controls, etc.

In computer terms, dashboard is used in the same sense and it's used in a lot more instances than just the Mac OS X. For instance, web hosting sites use the term dashboard or control panel to talk about a web page where a user goes to get information about or to manage his/her account. The page will most often display icons that link to pages relating to various aspects of ones accounts. For instance, for the [regional] web site, my dashboard/control panel shows how much of my allotted disk space I've used, how many e-mail accounts I've set up, and icons for setting up e-mail accounts, setting up automatic forwarding, managing FTP sites, controlling filtering, managing files on the server, etc.

Every person who has a gmail account has a Google dashboard, that gives the user information about the overall account and allows him or her to manage settings for various accounts (Gmail, Calendar, Analytics, Blogger, Picasa Web Albums, Web History, etc.) under their Google account umbrella. Those who have a Blogger account (another Google "service") have a dashboard that shows all the blogs that one is managing and allows one to customize the appearance of the blog, manage settings, post/edit blog entries, etc.

In the Mac OS X, the dashboard is the virtual desktop that, when activated, shows mini-programs (widgets) that do various things. Though I can't recall the term that Microsoft uses, Vista has a similar functionality with some differences in implementation. On my Mac laptop, I have a bunch of those widgets installed: a program that shows the status of my battery, one that shows the status of my network connections and the heat output of various components of my laptop, one that gives baseball scores and division standings, one that shows the weather, one that shows keyboard shortcuts, one that will compute my running pace, etc. So, the concept is the same as Google or web hosting dashboards -- the dashboard contains programs that either give information or allow the user to manage various aspects of the computer.

Sounds like FE has adopted that usage of the term, dashboard. The dashboard is where the user gets information and manages, in this case, reports related to his/her finance account with the company.

Ahh. Forgive me. Now back to real work. :-D
There you have it. I hope that's helpful to someone. Now I really do need to get back to real work. I'd rather be running.

Run well, y'all,
Bob

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Thursday, January 07, 2010

Everyday Traffic in Nairobi

Great blog post from a Daily Nation (Nairobi) writer. This kind of traffic is not an occasional thing but an everyday occurrence. It starts about about 6:30 AM and continues until 9:00 PM or later. The only day it's not like this is Sunday. Now showing on Nairobi roads

Because of the crazy traffic, I have to run at 6:00 AM or put my life at the mercy of some of these people.

Run well, y'all,
Bob

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3 Comments:

Blogger Mark said...

That looks like craziness!

Thursday, January 7, 2010 1:02:00 PM EST  
Blogger Paul Merrill said...

Bless you brother.

I know Uhuru Highway. May God give you grace and mercy to deal with life in the big city.

Thursday, January 7, 2010 3:32:00 PM EST  
Blogger Shilingi-Moja said...

Mark -- it is crazy.

Paul -- I think that picture was taken near the Langata Rd round-about. That's not far from where your office was, right?

Friday, January 8, 2010 8:23:00 AM EST  

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