13/04/2026
This is the bit most people don’t want to hear.
It’s not a lack of effort. Most runners I see are trying hard. Probably too hard if anything. But that’s the problem. They rush the process, bring intensity in too early, turn every run into something it shouldn’t be, and end up training off ego instead of actually building fitness.
There’s this constant feeling of needing to prove something. Run a bit faster, push a bit harder, squeeze more out of the week. It feels productive, but it’s not. You’re just stacking fatigue on top of fatigue and calling it progress.
Then a couple months in it all starts to show. You’re tired all the time, little niggles start creeping in, sessions don’t feel great, and you’re not really improving. And instead of looking at the structure, people just accept it as part of running.
It’s not.
The difference is nearly always how the training is put together. The runners who actually improve aren’t smashing every session. They’re patient. They keep easy days easy, they recover properly, and they build things over time. Nothing fancy, just consistent and controlled.
It’s not sexy, but it works.
If you’ve been stuck in that cycle and you actually want to do it properly this time, comment RUN and I’ll send you the details.