Monday, November 23, 2015

So one time at bandcamp... I fell off a bus

I wish I could post more often, but I'm going to try once a week.  Since I live in Michigan and we already have snow on the ground, I like doing my workouts and runs inside so I don't slip and fall.  I know they have traction aids, but I would find a way to fall and hurt myself.  If I do run outside, I'm extra careful.  I've broken my right ankle from bandcamp (embarrassing story there) and broken my left foot because I'm a klutz. Crutches suck!!!

My actual story: In high school we loaded our luggage to go to bandcamp on the school bus and jumped out the back at the emergency exit... well my ankle rolled when I landed and yeah I broke it.  When we arrived at bandcamp I told the people my ankle was hurting really badly and they just pushed me forward and asked the next person how they were.  I marched an entire day on my broken ankle and finally went to a chaperone for help.  We took my shoe and sock off and my ankle was about the size of a softball.  I felt so bad for my parents, they were going to go out to dinner and have a nice night out, instead they got a call that they needed to come pick me up.  When they arrived, my parents took me to the nearest doctor and got an x-ray.  It was a broken growth plate at my ankle and I would need crutches.  That was probably one of my worst summers.  When my mom was younger she broke her foot and had the old school cast so she knew what I was going through.  I sort of lucked out by having an air cast, I could have had a regular cast but I didn't want it.  I didn't care to have it signed, I was already annoyed I wouldn't be able to walk normally.  I could shower semi-normally just had to be careful and not put any weight on that foot.  My ankle did heal up and I think I was only on crutches for the first couple weeks of school.

Second broken bone story.  In college, I had my own room which was awesome and had a shared bathroom with a suitemate, luckily no one lived in the other room so it was all to myself!  I have my klutzy moments and I slipped on my backpack strap and fell funny.  I heard something pop and had trouble putting weight on my left foot.  I limped downstairs and drove myself to an urgent care nearby.  They took x-rays and said I had a Jones fracture (one of the worst fractures I could get).  The area has limited blood flow so it would take long to heal up.  I did luck out by a cancellation for a surgery so they had an opening within a week so they booked it for me.  For my surgery, they had to put a pin in my left foot which would help stabilize and heal up quicker.  I couldn't put any weight on my left foot so I lost a lot of muscle in that leg.  Again, I choose a sports cast so I could take it off when I showered, I just had to put a bag on my left foot so no water could get in.  My dad got me a shower chair so that helped a ton!  It took about 8 weeks I believe to heal up.  I used to have blog entries of my progress, I should have kept them.  I had an handicap pass, but MSU's campus is huge and even when I could park in a handicap spot, sometimes I still had a ways to crutch my way over.  It was a pain, but I'm proud I got through it.  My doctor told me I could get my pin removed in the future but I would have to be on crutches for a month and no running for a while so he said if it doesn't bother you, leave it be.  My pin doesn't set off the sensors, just have to let someone know its there if I have to get an MRI.  In the first year I only remember my pin hurting once or twice in the cold.  Sometimes I have issues while running, the majority time I don't even notice.  I focus on where my foot lands and that seems to help a lot.      


Anyways, back to running.  I gained some weight being on crutches and once I could walk again I started going to my college gym and would workout a few times a week.  I thought a 5K was impossible and too afraid to sign up for any.  I always thought you had to run fast and couldn't walk them.  I got to a point of being able to run for a half hour on the treadmill without stopping or slowing down (I never recorded my distance, only how many calories I burned SMH).  The silver lining of it all, I started to enjoy running.  I didn't consider myself a runner, I just knew I could run for longer than 5 minutes.  

From #RunChat the other day, I'm thankful for many things including family and friends, I'm also thankful I that I'm able to run.  I have coworkers/friends that have bad knees that can't run and wish they could.  When you are on crutches you appreciate just being able to walk normally.  I have no idea if I would have gotten into running if I didn't break my feet.  I'll just have to wonder.   

If you do run outside in the winter be careful and just go slower, you don't want to end up with crutches like me.  If a sidewalk is salted with no snow or ice I run outside occasionally, just have to layer up.  I started running in 2013 and I did run a Jingle Bell 5K and they cleared the course of snow and ice so I didn't have to worry about that.  I had my best time, still working on a new 5K PR. 

Right now my main goal is to not have any running injuries this year.  I have been mostly strength training and logging a few miles on the treadmill each week.  I'm started to look at races I would like to run next year.  I don't plan on running any more races this year, I considered a turkey trot, but I have to work on Thanksgiving this year.  Oh well I'm getting holiday pay so that helps.  I would like to tackle a full marathon next year and maybe if I keep writing it in my blog I'll keep working hard and sign up for one.  I've also been looking at training plans and run/walk strategies to complete one, I know its possible just hope the pin in my foot doesn't act up.  I'm excited what next year will bring!  

Happy Thanksgiving everyone if I don't write another entry later this week!     

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