A Few Thoughts on Consistency in Running

this runner is working on her consistency

There is no secret ingredient to success in running. There is no pill you can take or button you can push that will suddenly turn you into the next Mo Farah or Jim Walmsley. Good equipment helps, but no shoe will take you from a four-hour marathon to Boston overnight. So what separates successful runners from just-average runners who can’t seem to make any progress?


I used to be a pretty terrible runner. I would go days, sometimes weeks, without running and still expect to perform well. This had disastrous effects on my fitness, my times, and my morale. What changed? After a long period of struggling on and off with running I decided to change my approach. I shifted from looking at each day separately to looking at the week holistically. Instead of worrying too much about what one workout was going to be I focused on eliminating gaps in my training program. I went from running twice a week at 90 percent to running five times a week at 60 or 70 percent. I saw drastic improvements in my fitness. Over the course of several months my average 5-mile run time dropped seven minutes. My heartrate was lower across the board. Eventually I PR’d my marathon by almost an hour.

The importance of consistency in running has been on my mind the last few weeks as we begin a new year and people start trying (again) to make significant changes in their lives with various resolutions and plans for improvement. Unfortunately, in most cases, these commitments don’t last past January. What is the common thread among people who cancel their gym memberships or stop running after just a few weeks? More often than not, they struggle to remain consistent.

If you follow any elite or sub-elite runners on Strava they often differ drastically in the sorts of workouts they do and the distances and paces they run. But one constant among all of them is that they run consistently and rarely miss a day of training. I’ve often heard it expressed that if you aren’t improving then you’re backsliding. If you aren’t getting faster, you’re getting slower. While it isn’t exactly that simple, the general idea still applies to running. When you skip a day of training that isn’t a planned rest day you start to lose the progress you’ve already made. If this happens infrequently, you probably won’t notice an adverse effect on your fitness. If, however, these start to build up and suddenly you realize you haven’t run in a week, your next workout will be noticeably more difficult than the last time you ran.

The best way that I’ve found to combat struggles with consistency in running is to change my mindset with regard to perfection in workouts. One of the easiest excuses to skip a run is “it’s not ideal.” This can apply to the weather, the time, or nearly any other factor. The truth may be that it’s too rainy or cold outside to run your fastest 5k. There might not be enough time to run for an hour. It’s easy to look at these facts and decide just to wait until tomorrow. But while there may not be time to run for an hour, there might be time to run for twenty minutes. And a slower 5k workout is better than no workout.

At the end of the day, we have to be okay with modifying our workouts instead of canceling them. Most of us are not running at an elite level and our training plans are not so finely tuned that any adjustment to the program has drastic effects. More so, it is about changing our mindsets and overcoming the voice that tells us its okay not to run today. As Seth James DeMoor put it recently, all it takes sometimes is just turning the doorknob.

What are some ways you fight complacency in running? How do you remain consistent? If you struggle with consistency in running what are some ways that you can improve through modification or motivation?

Published by Matt Golembeski

Matt is the creator of Just Matt Running (JMR) and lead writer at the JMR Blog. He enjoys a good threshold workout during the week and long runs on Saturdays followed by a tasty recovery shake and a nap. He loves interacting with other like-minded individuals and is passionate about helping others reach their potential. In his spare time, he writes for the Just Matt Gaming blog and is working (slowly) on his first novel.