Everything about the process of training is inherently inspiring and aspirational. It is all positive, and with each step of the process we get the opportunity to make a conscious decision to move forward.
Overcoming a running injury is inherently negative. It just feels like damage control mode. Running injuries feel more about digging yourself out of a hole, and less about accomplishing something significant.
Every over training injury is unique and can have a unique healing timeline. But it all depends upon what you do.
How can you make the mental shift between a coaches plan a doctor’s plan?
Today on the Doc On The Run Podcast were talking about two perspectives for recovering runners.
Running From Fat to Fit with Nick
Injured runners need the full solution
Is an MRI best way to check for a tendon tear in a runner?
I think I tore my plantar fascia. Can I run this weekend?
If you PR with an injury, the injury happened for you and not to you
How soon can I run after 5th Metatarsal Fracture Surgery?
How can a bone stress reaction turn into malunion from running?
Treating Injuries is fast but treating runners is slow
How does a displaced fracture heal naturally without medical treatment?
Should I run with a pad for plantar plate sprain?
When will insurance pay for a bone stimulator to help my metatarsal fracture?
2 Ingredients for recovering from any overtraining injury faster
The 3 biggest mistake runners make with ankle sprains
3 steps every injured runner is missing
Do I recommend ankle braces for runners?
Will I be able to run after a ruptured Achilles Tendon?
Are calcified Achilles tendons more prone to rupture in runners?
Ask for an hour and tell your doctor you need more time because you are a runner
Capsulitis vs. Plantar Plate Sprain. What is the difference?
Plantar Plate Imaging: MRI vs. Ultrasound
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