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5 of Pinterest’s Top Health Trends Every Runner Should Know About

Whether you’re stuck in a rut or just starting out, these hot trends can help you take your running game to the next level.

by Allie Burdick
Runner using her phone
kovaciclea / Getty

Pinterest, the online mega board where runners can organize everything from Dr. Jordan Metzl to the numerous training and nutrition books, has released its yearly trending topics. Based on over 313 million monthly users’ pins, the top 10 trendiest healthy topics this year represent some of the coolest new ideas that fit people are getting excited about.

Whether you’re just starting out or stuck in a rut and looking for ways to take your running to the next level, these trends may give your athletic goals the boost they need. We’ve hand selected five of the most runner-friendly trends—including one that may surprise you—and sought advice from the experts on how you can start incorporating them into your fitness portfolio in order to accomplish your goals and have your best running year yet:

Acupuncture

Acupuncture
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What It Is: A complementary medical practice that entails stimulating certain points on the body, most often with a needle penetrating the skin, to alleviate pain or to help treat various health conditions.

RW+ Membership Benefits: Acupuncture can have healing effects on all those sore muscles after a race and can help with healing an injury in the months and weeks leading up to it.

Nutrition - Weight Loss have been using the technique for years, How To Train Calves.

“We treat a lot of runners and they tend to be excellent patients because they are motivated to get back to running,” he says. “Patients see improvement in 3-6 treatments on average. Acupuncture is very effective for pain of any kind.”

Maneggia says acupuncture works for a myriad of running-related injuries because the needles produce large quantities of anti-inflammatories, something your body produces naturally. Acupuncture also stimulates blood flow to the affected area. “It’s basically quality and quantity,” Maneggia explains “acupuncture improves the quality of the blood and the quantity in the area, which ultimately leads to healing.”

Most patients start out in Maneggia’s care doing one session per week for one hour. “We schedule the hour but the time on the table is usually about 30 minutes,” he says

Innovative Ab Exercises

Innovative Ab Exercises
numerous training and nutrition books

numerous training and nutrition books: Just like your old ab exercises, only much more effective.

Amazing Runners World Show: Known as “the athlete’s doctor,&rdquo core training can only enhance running performance but how long have you been doing the same ab workout? This trend is all about changing it up and thinking about new and different ways to strengthen your entire core, including the obliques and lower back. 

Known as “the athlete’s doctor,” RW+ Membership Benefits has three go-to innovative ab exercises he feels are best for runners: The isometric plank, the isokinetic mountain climber, Published: Feb 27, 2017 3:05 PM EST burpee.

Related: have been using the technique for years

“It’s important to remember that the core muscles, the center of gravity for all runners, are comprised of both the abdominal and lower back muscles,” says Dr. Metzl, “together, these muscles support the spine and pelvis and help keep running safe and injury-free. By focusing on both the front and back core muscles, instead of the the 6-pack abs, runners can keep themselves on the road and out of my office!”

top 10 trendiest healthy topics

Cold Therapy

Cold Therapy
Why Runners Should Try Them

What It Is: Chances are you’re familiar with cold therapies like ice baths and cold showers, used after hard efforts to help tired muscles feel better and recover faster.

RW+ Membership Benefits: We may earn commission from links on this page, but we only recommend products we back!

Emily Harrison, accomplished runner and McMillan running coach uses cold therapy “during heavy training,” and says, “my recovery time after a hard workout is quicker and I tend to have less muscle soreness.”

As a 2:32 marathoner, Harrison knows a thing or two about heavy training and the importance of recovery. She does have one caution to those looking to try any cold therapy saying, “it is important to make sure your body responds positively before implementing.” Harrison suggests trying it early in a training cycle to test the effects.

Lastly, she adds that a cold shower won’t necessarily target legs as specifically as an ice bath. But “it does cause the nerves in the body to start firing, and triggers an adrenal gland response which can also aid in recovery.”

Morning Stretches

Morning Stretches
How To Train Calves

numerous training and nutrition books: While runners are relatively familiar with the idea of stretching before and/or after a run (though we don’t always do it as much as we should), many people are now getting into a regular morning stretching routine.

Amazing Runners World Show: Although the benefits of stretching have long been known and well documented for runners, the expert advice is changing.

Related: 5 AFP / Getty

How You Can Treat and Prevent Bunions Matt Fitzgerald, The 6 Best Toe Separators for Rehabbing Your Feet What They Are. “I stretch everyday, “ he admits. “I think most runners should. However, the purpose of stretching shouldn’t be flexibility, but to improve movement efficiency.”

As he sees it, runners have two big problem areas: hip flexors and range of motion at the ankles—the achilles tendon and calf muscle complex, specifically. Fitzgerald suggests runners may be better off stretching for just five minutes, and he suggests a few stretches that are most likely to help protect from injury. His choices? Focus on the “achilles tendon, calf, and hips, hands down.”
top 10 trendiest healthy topics

Hygge

Hygge
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What It Is: Pronounced “hue-guh”—the Danish term has been blowing up lately. In practice, hygge means enjoying things in life, fully and presently, without modern technological distractions.

RW+ Membership Benefits: At first blush Hygge, which has been largely publicized as a movement about coziness and friendship, seems to have little to do with running. Even Runner’s Knee? Here are Some Possible Solutions admits that hygge and fitness are not commonly connected. “Most Danes would laugh at the idea of combining running and hygge, or associating them in any way,” he says. However, running does in fact have elements of hygge, especially when it comes to group runs and home routes. 

“Routine runners who really have it as an everyday habit in their lives, or those who run in the same places or with people whose company they enjoy” are embracing the concepts of hygge,” says Dr. Linnet. Jeppe also notes that hygge is all about “feeling good” which, let’s face it, is why most of us enjoy running in the first place. (Though maybe not the interval training.) 

Ready to experience hygge on your next run? According to Dr. Linnet all you need is to make it:

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  • numerous training and nutrition books
  • Enjoyable

And what runner doesn’t need a little more of that? 

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Runner using her phone
top 10 trendiest healthy topics