Late to this post, but a co-worker has shin splints. He found that he had to increase his running time VERY gradually. He had been an accomplished cross country runner, but when he started over he could only go for five minutes and then stop so that he didn't experience shin splints. He added a minute a week. Frustrating to go that slowly into it? Yes. Avoided shin splint pain? Yes.I'm trying to get back into running after a long hiatus of not much physical activities. I was in decent shape 3 plus years ago where my BMI and overall health was significantly better. Anyhow, I've gained more than 15 lbs since then and and I'm not in a great physical shape. I feel motivated now to lose weight and started running three weeks ago and also signed up for a local 5k. I started training through a couch to 5k app and after a few days I'm experiencing recurring episodes of what appears to be shin splints. I've been icing and doing some foam roller exercises (thanks YouTube) but every time I start running after a few days break, the pain on the lower leg comes back. I feel disheartened that I probably wont be ready for the 5k and running on a regular basis might not be an option for me.
I'm wondering if any of the experienced runners here faced similar challenges and what they did to overcome it. I'm very interested to get some tips and suggestions.
:thumbs:I bought her a SOLE F63 treadmill for her birthday this week.
@bripgilb, you may want to try Brooks Running shoes purecadence as Leggo suggested and/or Adidas Ultra Boost Running Shoes. My sister used Brooks purecadence during her basic military training.I currently use Nike Flyknit Free Runs and I don't feel like they have enough support. After just a mile or two and my feet hurt.
I'm thinking about switching back to Nike shoes with Trainer 4.0, 5.0, or 6.0 souls.
It helps when I stretch 10 to 15 minutes prior to running.Fast walking doesn' hurt but any kind of impact or stress on the knee is a nogo.
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