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Protein is one of the most important nutrients for runners—especially injured runners.
It’s the raw material your body uses to repair, rebuild, and strengthen every tissue involved in running: muscles, tendons, ligaments, bones, joints, and cartilage.
If we want to heal injuries, build strength, or simply adapt better to training, we need to give our body the building supplies it depends on.
Why Protein Matters for Runners
Every time we run, lift, or train in any way, we create small amounts of micro-trauma in the tissues.
This is normal—and necessary. It’s how we stimulate the body to get stronger.
During sleep, the body:
- Repairs the micro-damage
- Super-compensates, making the tissue stronger than before
This is the training effect.
But this entire process depends on one thing:
Protein availability.
If there isn’t enough protein in the system, the body simply cannot complete the repair or strengthening process. This is why runners who under-eat protein often:
- Struggle to recover
- Stay stuck in injury cycles
- Fail to build strength
- Feel sore for longer
- Plateau in performance
A good analogy is a bridge in disrepair.
You can send all the builders you want—but if the supplies never arrive, the bridge won’t get fixed.
Your training is the “builder.”
Protein is the “supplies.”
How Much Protein Do Runners Need?
Scientifically, runners need 0.6–0.8 grams of protein per pound of bodyweight.
That’s accurate—but not practical in daily life.
So we use a much simpler method…
The Palm Method
Instead of tracking grams, just count palms.
- Aim for 3–6 palms of protein per day
- That’s 1–2 palms per meal
- A palm = the size of your palm (no fingers) of any protein-rich food
Examples include:
- Chicken, beef, turkey
- Eggs
- Beans and lentils
- Tofu
- Yogurt or cottage cheese
- Fish
- Protein shakes
This method is simple, visual, and extremely effective.
Step 1: Review Your Current Intake
Write down your usual:
- Breakfast
- Lunch
- Dinner
Then estimate how many palms of protein each meal contains.
Example:
- Breakfast: banana + toast → 0 palms
- Lunch: bean & lentil chili → 2 palms
- Dinner: lentil bolognese → 1 palm
Total = 3 palms per day
That’s the very bottom of the recommended range.
Your job is just to find your own starting point.
Step 2: Improve It
We’re not chasing perfection—just improvement.
Once you know where you are now, decide how you’ll increase it.
Example upgrade:
Breakfast
- Add a tofu bagel (1 palm)
- Add a protein shake (1 palm)→ Now breakfast has 2 palms
Lunch
- Already 2 palms→ Keep as-is
Dinner
- Add air-fried tofu (1 palm)→ Dinner becomes 2 palms
Now the whole day hits:
- 2 palms
- 2 palms
- 2 palms= 6 palms per day
That’s our ideal range.
Step 3: Track
Your habit this week is simple:
Eat 3–6 palms of protein per day.
Use the Performance Nutrition Habit Tracker to mark:
- ✓ if you hit your target
- X if you didn’t
No guilt.
No perfection.
Just awareness and steady improvement.
Key Reminders
- Don’t overhaul your diet
- Look for improvement, not perfection
- Small protein upgrades compound fast
- Adding a shake or a palm of tofu/meat/beans can radically improve recovery
Closing Thoughts
Protein is the building supply your body uses to:
- Recover
- Adapt
- Heal injuries
- Build strength
- Become more resilient
Find your starting point.
Make a small, realistic plan to improve it.
Follow it consistently this week.
That’s it.