It’s common advice but worth repeating: to get the most out of your tough workouts, you need to keep your easy runs truly easy. This allows your body to recover instead of enduring unnecessary fatigue. However, many runners struggle with this concept for various reasons:
- They feel good and want to push harder
- They worry that easier running won’t keep them fit
- They don’t know how to quantify an appropriate “easy” effort
The first two issues come down to discipline and trusting the overall training process. But determining easy run pace can be confusing, especially with so much conflicting advice and technology to track intensity.
Use Your Breath as an “Easy” Indicator
As a coach, I tell runners that no matter what metrics you use, your breathing should be the ultimate gauge of effort on easy days. Here’s a simple check:
- You should be able to hold a conversation or monologue smoothly
- There shouldn’t be heavy breathing or panting
- As soon as you feel short of breath, back off the pace
The reason I prioritize breathing over pace or heart rate is that external factors affect your perceived effort—things like life stress, weather, fatigue, etc. So an “easy” pace one day could feel much tougher the next, even at the same speed. Judging effort by breathing keeps you honest, since it reflects your body’s real-time condition.
Some runners prefer using heart rate instead, which can work well too. But ultimately, your cardiovascular fitness isn’t the limiter; it’s the musculoskeletal system that actually gets injured. You could have a low heart rate while running relatively fast, but that doesn’t mean your legs and joints are ready for the impact.
With breathing, you get an “integrated” gauge of overall stress and fatigue without needing multiple sensors. It balances pace while allowing flexibility from day to day.
Additional Tips for Easy Running
A few additional pointers to ingrain that easy-run mentality:
- Go by feel, not numbers. Don’t become a slave to your GPS pace stats. The optimal easy pace will vary from day to day.
- Build slowly. Start conservatively and gradually settle into a sustainable rhythm.
- Master the walk break. Periodic walking breaks are underutilized for keeping runs easy! There is no shame in strategic walking.
- Find social runs. Running with a group inherently keeps the pace mellow. Enjoy some community miles!
Over time, an intuitive sense of ease will develop. You’ll feel what your body can handle day-in and day-out to promote recovery versus overstress.
Links to Related Articles
For more guidance on optimizing easy runs and overall training balance, check out these complementary McMillan articles:
Keeping easy days truly easy is challenging but pays huge dividends. Learn what light, refreshing running means for your body specifically. Get creative, be patient, and double down on discipline; your fitness will rapidly improve once you master this essential concept.