13/04/2026
What value do you put on your health?
This time of year always brings a noticeable shift.
Not just enquiries for coaching but a rise in messages from people preparing for half marathons and marathons and with that comes soreness, fatigue and sometimes injury.
Let’s be clear some of this is completely normal.
If you’ve trained consistently and progressed based on you for weeks and months, fatigue at this stage is expected. It’s part of the process.
But here’s the part that often gets missed:
Recovery now matters just as much as the training itself. Not that it didn't before but it needs attention now.
If you’re doing a long run, say on a Saturday, the rest of that day should be about recovery.
Yes, live your life but this isn’t the time to add in extra long walks, errands, or just keeping busy.
This is the phase where the work is done and the body needs to absorb it.
However, there’s another side to this.
Some of the plans I’ve reviewed recently haven’t been progressive.
They’ve gone from very little to a lot very quickly.
That’s not fatigue.
That’s overload.
And unfortunately, that’s where niggles and injuries start to appear.
I completely understand why people sign up to these events.
The reason behind it matters.
But it doesn’t change how we need to approach it now.
For many, I’ve adapted plans with one clear goal:
Get to the finish line safely.
That might mean:
Adjusting sessions week to week
Reducing volume
Introducing run/walk strategies
Prioritising recovery over ticking boxes
And yes sometimes it means doing less, not more.
A quick reality check:
Apps are great but they don’t know you.
They don’t know you’re injured, fatigued, or struggling.
So if you’ve been given a plan that’s been adapted for you it needs to be followed or look to adapt the generic plan.
If not, that’s absolutely ok.
Ownership sits with you.
I’ve also seen a lot of:
“I’m just going to push through anyway.”
And again—that’s your decision.
let’s not ignore this:
Every decision has a consequence.
At some point we have to ask:
Do I need to change the goal?
Is this now about completing, not competing?
Do I need to run/walk instead?
And for a small number of people the hardest conversation:
Should I even be on the start line?
Because sometimes pushing through could mean:
Weeks or months of rehab
Time away from training
longer-term setbacks
If you’re in pain, limping or unsure
Don’t rely on social media opinions.
Don’t guess.
Go and see a professional.
Get it assessed.
Put a plan in place and not just for race day, but for after it too.
Because one of the biggest gaps I see is this:
No recovery plan once the event is done.
I’m not here to hold you back.
I’m here to guide, support, an when needed challenge.
Because your health isn’t just about getting to the start line
It’s about what happens long after you cross the finish line.
At this point honesty is key and it might not be based on what we want to hear.
Please take care of yourself. I know I moan, nag and challenge but that is my job.