Background: My training for this tanked.
When I started training, I was employed at one place with no plans to leave. Then one of those once-in-a-lifetime job opportunities popped up. I applied and interviewed for the job. That was stressful. I got the job offer, and then had to resign from my other job of eleven years. That was also stressful.
Then as soon as the oppressive summer heat hits, I started feeling this very persistent pain and discomfort in my right IT band. I initially thought it was my shoes. New shoes seemed to do the trick. Then the pain would return. Sometimes at mile 4. Sometimes at mile 5. It was unpredictable.
I rolled, and I rolled, and I rolled. I screamed through the rolling. My IT band has issues.
Then I vacationed for a week in Washington, DC. Because of my IT band issues, I decided to NOT run in DC. Wise move considering that running in the DC humidity and heat would have really destroyed me.
The week off seemed to help. I continued rolling. And stretching. And stretching. The pain and discomfort seemed to be absent from many of my runs. My last eight miler featured NO problems.
Because of the injury and the stress, I skipped a few runs here and there. Or I made them easier.
It wasn't the best training cycle that I have done. Therefore, my goal was to finish.
Yes. Just to finish.
I knew that I didn't have a PR in me. I didn't train to PR. I trained to maintain my running in the summer so that when marathon training starts, I'm ready. Plus, I wanted to baby the IT band.
Alarm Failure: Oh my goodness. My alarm went off, but I didn't hear it because the ringer was turned down. Stupid smart phone user.
I woke up 37 minutes before I had to catch the bus to the start.
It was a little stressful.
But I made it.
The Race: I didn't find the start area for the second half marathon to be particularly well-organized. I couldn't hear the announcer. The announcer didn't repeat anything.
This meant that I didn't start with my wave. Oops.
Whatever. I hurt no one.
The first six miles of the second half marathon is in the Golden Gate Park. Slight hills. Repeated often. I knew that the park featured the most uphill portions. I wanted to make sure that I didn't go out too hard. I actually kept telling myself to take it easy and run my own race. I even thought, "This isn't a race." I really didn't want to hurt myself. I was clearly mentally out of the race.
The park dragged. I really wasn't enjoying myself that much. I was so glad to get out of the park and onto Haight Street. A bicyclist trailing a sound system provided the right music to make the race fun.
Then some painful downhill. I don't like running downhill on steep grades. Scary and it hurts. But I survived.
And then around mile 7.5, the familiar IT band discomfort popped up. Then disappeared. Then reappeared. It wasn't persistent, nor was it particularly strong. But it was enough to disappoint and discourage me.
I finished with a time of 2:25:24. Better than I expected, honestly. Maybe better than I deserved. It was actually my fastest half time for a race in San Francisco.
Because I have now ran both halves of the entire San Francisco Marathon, I got a fancy Half It All Medal. It spins.
Afterward: Strangely, this bad performance is motivating. I felt like this was my worse race, but it wasn't my worst time. I wonder how I could have done had I actually been able to train well. I feel strangely compelled to do more hill work in my training.
But I know that I need to work on that IT band first.
More precisely I run for cake, tarts, avocados, solitude, and podcasts; but that would have been too lengthy a title.
Showing posts with label race report. Show all posts
Showing posts with label race report. Show all posts
29 July 2012
28 May 2012
I had lots of fun STORMing THE CASTLE
Yesterday I ran my very, very, very first 5K race. It was called STORM THE CASTLE. Best name for a race. Ever.
I love how I started with half marathons and marathons before trying out 10K and 5K races. I wonder if this is normal, or if it is as backwards as it feels.
The course ran through the Castle Air Museum. Therefore, this race marked the first time that the number of parked aircraft I passed outnumbered the number of parked automobiles.
Since I've never raced a 5K before, I wasn't sure what to expect for pacing. I have run tempo runs that have been longer than 3 miles before, so I should not have been perplexed. But I never can seem to get a handle on my opening pace. I always plan for a reasonable opening pace, but I just simply need to face the truth.
The truth is that I just don't know what a reasonable opening pace is for me. I'm still figuring all of this out. I'm sure that I will still be figuring all of this out in another five years. I ended up running a 8'44" pace for the first five minutes. What? The plan was a 9'45" to open and then progressively speed up. That clearly didn't happen. I distinctly remember feeling like I was running pretty slow because of all the faster runners. But I wasn't running slow for me. 8'44" is like my 400 interval speed on a good day. But it didn't feel hard during the race. Perspective, I suppose.
About two miles in I lined up with the woman who would later edge me out by 1.8 seconds to claim first place in our age group. Fairly soon we passed a teenage boy. This teenage boy didn't seem to like that because whenever we pulled ahead he would surge ahead and then fade a little. This would repeat.
We pushed and pushed until the end. I crossed the finish line at right after she did and spent the next two minutes trying to prevent myself from vomiting! Yes! I feel like a real runner now.
I stuck around for awards and discovered that I earned 2nd in my age group and 5th overall for the women! A humble 27:25 for my debut in the 5K. That equates to an 8'49" pace. I'll take it. This is totally a personal record for me. I can't think of another time when I've run about 3 miles at that pace.
Now I'm hungry for an even faster 5K time.
25 March 2012
Oakland Running Festival: Half Marathon Race Report
How I Ended Up Here
The Oakland Running Festival offered a 50% off registration with my San Francisco Half Marathon goodie bag. I normally try to avoid buying things simply because they are on sale. I jumped at the chance and registered for a half marathon for only $35.
What I Saw From My Hotel Window on the 18th Floor
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An actual view of SOMETHING.
|
Since the half marathon didn't start until 9:15 (utterly late for a half-marathon), I was hanging in my hotel room and could see the marathon runners who started at 7:30 make their way down Broadway and then turn around to head back the other direction. One runner didn't get the memo to make the u-turn. I think she started late. She ran off the course and past our hotel INTO TRAFFIC. I kept watching to see when she would realize that she was off course and come back up Broadway. She eventually headed back up STILL RUNNING IN THE STREET WITH TRAFFIC. Holy hell, woman! Get off of the street. I saw her ask a volunteer who finally put her on track.
Good grief.
What I Learned About Oakland From Running Oakland
1. People really hate their mayor. When she was introduced the runners (many of whom were local) booed her.
2. Raider Nation is loud. Very loud.
3. There is a place called The Crucible. And it looks amazing. Fire!
4. Lake Merritt is pretty. I wish I lived near a place with a lake to run around.
5. A few residents were mad about street closures. But the majority of Oakland residents were so kind and encouraging.
How I Fared
About 3/4 of a mile into the race, the 4,000 runners are still pretty bunched up. An Oakland Running Festival volunteer froggered his way across the street thick with runners. I nearly hit him. I may have turned my head and called him a name. In fact, I'm sure of it. This is so unlike me. He must have really, really, really, really deserved it.
I hit my pace and went into cruise control mode for the rest of the race. I'm shocked at how even my splits were.
For the first time in my running career (odd word, but can't think of a substitute), I didn't listen to music or podcasts while running. I tuned into all the conversations around me, yet I can't recall a single one that I eavesdropped on.
Finished in 2:13:10. Definitely hit my A goal which was to break 2:15. I'd have to look it up to be sure, but I think that this is a 3:58 PR from Big Sur Half Marathon 2010. I really need to be better about recording stuff down like that.
Overall Assessment
I'm not a fan of such a late start for a half marathon. I'm not a fan of the Marriott host hotel who didn't give me a late check out, but then I discovered on Facebook that they granted other runners a late check out. I'm not a fan of weak corralling and people sardined into the start area.
However, the course itself was nice, and I have to admit that the half marathoners seemed to merge easily with the marathoners. Of course, I don't know how the marathoners felt about the merge, but it seemed okay.
I'm not sure that I will be back next year for this one. It depends on my goals and running schedule for next year. It is definitely not a must run race, but it is also definitely not one to avoid at all costs.
I'm not a fan of such a late start for a half marathon. I'm not a fan of the Marriott host hotel who didn't give me a late check out, but then I discovered on Facebook that they granted other runners a late check out. I'm not a fan of weak corralling and people sardined into the start area.
However, the course itself was nice, and I have to admit that the half marathoners seemed to merge easily with the marathoners. Of course, I don't know how the marathoners felt about the merge, but it seemed okay.
I'm not sure that I will be back next year for this one. It depends on my goals and running schedule for next year. It is definitely not a must run race, but it is also definitely not one to avoid at all costs.
11 March 2012
Hornitos-Indian Gulch 10 Mile Race
Last night I decided to go out and do this run. I needed to run ten miles anyway. I thought that I could practice hitting race pace.
Of course the race coincided with Daylight Savings Time going into effect. I woke up at 5 am which is really like 4 am to drink my coffee and do my reading. But after the 3 am wake up for Big Sur, this doesn't faze me.
In the early morning, I posted this on Facebook: Heading out shortly for a ten mile race in the foothills. I have a FANTASTIC chance of being last since only very serious runners will drive out to Hornitos.
Finally got dressed and did a triple check that I had everything. I'm on the road when I realized that I hadn't eaten anything. Fortunately for me, I realized this before I left town and was able to find a Starbucks for a scone. With scone in hand and with music on the radio, I left the city limits and started my drive to the middle of nowhere.
It was a beautiful drive. It seemed like I was the only one traveling those back country roads into the foothills. I also had to stop when I crossed over the Merced River to take some pictures.
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| Merced River |
| Quiet and beautiful |
At this point, I'm glad that I came just because of the peacefulness of the drive. I realized that I need to take the Vespa out here one day for a getaway.
Hornitos Road led to the little ghost town. I got a prime parking spot, registered, and then returned to the warmth of my car to spy on the other runners getting ready. Lots of the quintessential serious upper middle class runner types.
The race director, in telling us about the course, prefaced his comments with "I know most of you have run this course." This concerned me because people who know me know how much I am uncomfortable with NOT knowing something. Luckily a friend was there and he told me that I couldn't get lost.
Then the race director presented a plaque to a couple who had run nearly all of the 36 running of this race. They were quite elderly; the gentleman had a cane. What warriors! I hope that I am still active in thirty years!
Finally we are off.
- We head out onto Hornitos Road. Lovely road. Nicely paved. Wide. Lots of room.
- At mile 1, the two milers turned around to head back. The crowed thins. I see kids and make a note to drag my boy out here next year.
- We turn onto Indian Gulch road. I'm horrified by the state of this road. Hilly and woefully potholed and cracked. I'm likely to injure myself. I glue my eyes to the ground and find the safest path.
- Around mile 2, I'm regretting my arm warmers because it feels too darn warm.
- Around mile 2.25, I realize my shoe is untied. Curses. I have to tie it. A blonde passes me who is probably in my age group. She looks late 30s.
- At mile 2.5, the five milers make their turn around and the crowd in ridiculously thinned. I'm caught up to the blonde. It is really just the two of us out there.
- Some man runner passes both me and the blonde; I care not. He is a man.
- The lead runner passed me right about when I hit 3.75 miles. He ended up winning in like 1:02. Fast.
- I start counting runners who are ahead of me.
- This counting reveals that there are 8 women ahead of me including the blonde.
- I pass the blonde at the five mile turn around.
- I pass the man who passed me earlier at the same turnaround.
- I pass no one else for the remainder of the race. And no one passes me.
- I count people behind me. I think I counted four of five. Smallest race ever.
- The entire way back I fight an incredible headwind. I hate life. I wish I had stayed in my flat little valley city.
- I finish in 1:44:45 ish. A little slower than my half-marathon goal pace, but not too much off. Considering my intense concentration on the bad road and fighting the wind and the hills, I think that I may be able to hit my goal in two weeks at the Oakland Running Festival.
Breakfasted at the post race shindig. I hoped that maybe being the 8th woman, I might have eeked out a 3rd place for my age group. No such luck. Oh well.
At least I wasn't last.
At least I didn't injure myself.
At least I feel more confident for Oakland.
At least I had cake waiting for me at home.
| The cake for which I ran |
12 February 2012
Honey Bun Run Race Report
I'm not sure if the name of this race is a nod to the upcoming Valentine's Day holiday. There were literal honey buns at the finish line. Little Debbie Honey Buns.
Poor choices in post-race food aside, it was a decent little run with enough volunteers and traffic cones to keep the automobiles away from the runners. I felt safe the entire run--which is more than I can say for the last race that I ran in Carmel with the old ladies driving between the runners in their metallic sedans.
I haven't looked at my watch data yet. I can't find online results anywhere. But my husband took a photo of me crossing the finish line around 59:31. I'll take it. Pace calculator says 9:34 pace. My speed work and tempo runs have been really working. That's nearly 7:30 faster than my last 10K.
This was meant to be a test at my half-marathon pace. I honestly felt very good during the race. I did not feel like I was pushing it too much. I wonder if I can run the next half marathon at the same pace. I might have a new A goal.
They also had a 1K for Kids. Adorable. My kid raced it. He said his tummy hurt afterward. I told him that meant he did it right.
Poor choices in post-race food aside, it was a decent little run with enough volunteers and traffic cones to keep the automobiles away from the runners. I felt safe the entire run--which is more than I can say for the last race that I ran in Carmel with the old ladies driving between the runners in their metallic sedans.
I haven't looked at my watch data yet. I can't find online results anywhere. But my husband took a photo of me crossing the finish line around 59:31. I'll take it. Pace calculator says 9:34 pace. My speed work and tempo runs have been really working. That's nearly 7:30 faster than my last 10K.
This was meant to be a test at my half-marathon pace. I honestly felt very good during the race. I did not feel like I was pushing it too much. I wonder if I can run the next half marathon at the same pace. I might have a new A goal.
They also had a 1K for Kids. Adorable. My kid raced it. He said his tummy hurt afterward. I told him that meant he did it right.
04 December 2011
California International Marathon Race Report
Background
Essentially, I signed up for this race to avenge my performance at Big Sur earlier this year. Revenge running is awesome.
Training
I cleverly avoided any sort of training plan that had the word "mortals" in the title. I followed Hal Higdon's Intermediate I plan because it seems like the right progression for me at this time in my running life.
Even though the plan initially horrified me because I couldn't fathom doing it at all, I actually selected well. The plan fit well in my life, or I fit my life in the plan. It never overwhelmed but kept me busy and more importantly provided the right sorts of challenges for me.
I hope that I select well for my next plan. It's all about evolving, right?
Pre-Race
This was the first race that I had to drive up to the race without my husband. He had to work and was going to drive up to Sacramento after he got off work. My son was my traveling partner. Sacramento is a little less that two hours from my house. My son was bored about an hour away. Somehow I conned him into finding the letters of the alphabet in people's license plates, but he had to discover them in order. Surprisingly, it took us that hour just to get to the letter L.
The expo was an expo. What can I say? Fortunately, the Fleet Feet people were selling Honey Stingers. I was OUT and thought that I would have to stomach (literally and figuratively) Gu. I try to mix it up because I don't like too much of either.
Then I got ballsy. I drove to the MALL. Navigating the mall both in the parking lot and inside was only slightly easier than running the marathon. Only slightly. The mall was certainly more painful and more frustrating.
But the mall make my son happy because it had a LEGO store. (Insert booming angelic chorus aquÃ). And I got some Christmas shopping done! Bonus!
We got back to the hotel in time to discovered that my Garmin hates me. It had somehow chosen that day to commit electronic suicide. At least I had enough time to go out and buy a new one. I suppose that is the only bright side I could come up with. I had trained too hard and for too long to not have the support of my watch. I'm spoiled.
The time period between the discover of the Garmin suicide and the acquisition of the replacement was the most stressful time of the entire weekend. I just didn't know what to do. Eventually I caved in to just spending the money even though I hated it. But the stress dissipated. So money does buy temporary peace.
Before going to sleep, I decided on my goals. I know most people make these decision well in advance. I didn't quite now what to make my A goal. I was flirting with the idea of making my A goal merely a PR, but I decided to challenge myself.
A: Sub 5:00
B: PR (previous marathon time 5:24:xx)
C: Finish without injury
Race Day
My iPhone alarm went off at 4 am. This is largely unimportant since my internal alarm woke me up at 3:30 am.
I'm embarrassed to share this, but somehow I got into the very bad habit of eating PopTarts before long runs. I followed the cardinal rule of racing--don't change a damn thing--and had my PopTarts and coffee. (And obviously water!)
I followed my complicated layering plan well and was out of the door at 5:15 ready to catch my bus to the start line.
Everyone else in the hotel was doing the same thing so I had to wait a few minutes at the elevator with other runners who had already been waiting for five minutes themselves. Finally the chariot arrived and we were whisked down to the longest line of adults waiting to board yellow school buses that I have ever seen in my life.
The bus took us 26 miles away to the start. It seemed like it took forever to get there. I eavesdropped on the conversations. Lots of comments about bagels and Boston and bathrooms. But most of the conversation was about weather. Apparently the 2009 CIM temperatures were legendary.
We arrived. I disembarked the bus and walked to the longest line of port-a-potties that I have ever seen in my life. They were lined up at attention for what seemed like a half of a mile. I hardly had to wait at all. It was not what I am used to at all. Why is CIM the least expensive race that I have ever run YET it had the BEST organization and runner amenities?
It was damned cold. I waited until the last possible moment to take off my sweats. Once time ran out. I handed over my meager possessions to a volunteer, activated the hand warmers, and found the 5:10 pace group.
Then I set my Garmin's Virtual Partner to a 11:15 pace which translates to a sub 4:55 marathon. Crazy. Where did that come from?
Cue anthem. Cue wheelchair athletes. Cue elites. Cue the everymen and everywomen.
Race
And we're off!
MILES 1-4
I stuck with the 5:10 pace group for the first mile. Pacer wasn't running a 5:10 pace. He was running faster than a 4:55 pace. This confused me, but whatever. He actually started walking at the one mile mark. I wasn't going to put up with this, I went ahead. But when I had to take off my long sleeved shirt (why this took so long, I don't know) around mile 1.5, the 5:10 group caught up with me, so I rejoined them.
During this time, I was annoyed by a constant jingle-jangle. It sounded as if some runners wore a entire jewelry store's inventory on their wrists. It wasn't the sound of jangling keys. The pitch was higher. Like bangle bracelets. I quite seriously wanted to say something aloud. Who the hell would wear anything on a 26.2 mile footrace that made SO MUCH NOISE. For heaven's sake! I hated humanity briefly.
Mile 4? That was my bathroom stop. I envy the men who can simply go behind the port-a-potty or duck off the road and go. I'm guessing that I lost three minutes during Mile 4 waiting for a bathroom and using it. THREE MINUTES! I just checked Garmin. I think I lost 4:23! FOUR TWENTY THREE! That is the difference between my time and my moving time! My bladder hates me.
MILES 9-12
I eventually caught up to The Trojan and passed him. I then caught up to the 5:10 pace group and passed them. I had hit 11:25 average pace on my Garmin, the magic number that I needed to go sub 5:00. And I wanted to maintain that. So I did. I couldn't maintain my 11:25 with the 5:10 group.
While I was running, I remembered mile 10 of Big Sur and how I knew that I was in trouble then. Mile 10 of CIM was no big deal. I remember thinking that I would definitely have a PR for this race at mile 10 simply based on how good I was feeling. Clearly, catching up with and passing 5:10 helped me scale my pace back. I wisely slowed a bit.
MILES 13-16
I remember thinking to myself around mile 15 that the pain should be showing up within the next couple of miles. My right hip flexor or my right IT band sometimes bothers me at the end of a run longer than 15 miles. The feet can start hurting. I told myself after I hit mile 15 to NOT do the math of how many to go, to FOCUS one mile at a time, and to FOCUS on each song that came on the iPod. The iPod random shuffle gods were kind.
MILES 17-20
Mile 17 was slow because I walked while trying to move my Gu stash in my shorts pocket to the pouch on my handheld water bottle, it seemed to take an eternity to get them out. An eternity during which the 5:10 group made a reappearance.
Oh hell no.
Clearly, I got away from them. I didn't see them again for the remainder of the race. I just kept focusing on song lyrics and getting to the next mile marker.
One of my favorite moments from the race happened after I hit mile 19 and I passed two men walking. They appeared to be around my age. As I passed them, one of them said, "I'm stick and tired of being fucking passed all the time. We've been passed this entire race." Reader, I smiled. I smiled big at this point. My first smile of the race.
Mile Marker 20 was a brick wall that you ran through. I hit Mile 20 at 3:49:04. My fastest 20 miles ever.
At Big Sur I wanted to die at Mile 20. I had to fight to get a Gu down at this time at Big Sur. At CIM I breezed through with no problems.
My watch was still showing an 11:25/11:26 average pace. I realized at this point that I could finish sub 5:00 if I didn't allow my mind to mess with my heart. Suddenly, I felt pressure to perform. My A goal was possible. I've never hit my A goal before.
MILES 21-24
My friend Linda ran the 4th leg of the relay, the final 5.7 miles of the course. In her relay report, she called this part of the course where the devil lives. The last 10K of the marathon is a strange mental zone. I think that I just talked to myself over an over again to get through the pain. I reminded myself of some facts. Repeatedly.
Fact: I trained a lot.
Fact: Too many runs were early in the morning.
Fact: My husband has to put up with me at my most stressed pre-race.
Fact: I bought an emergency Garmin.
Fact: Sub 5:00 sounds somewhat respectable.
Fact: I can do this.
Fact: I have to do this.
Fact: Julie Moss finished her Ironman.
Fact: My internal governor LIES to me about my energy stores. I have energy.
Fact: Julie Moss got up and kept going.
Fact: It will feel awesome to hit an A goal.
Fact: I'm passing everyone.
Fact: Once you hit 24, you have to take your last Gu of 2011. NO MORE GU!
MILES 25-26.2
I told myself that I must not stop running because when I stopped at the last aid station to walk briefly while drinking the water, my legs objected. The pain of not running was intense. I forced myself to just keep going. Plus it felt pretty amazing to pass all of the fallen.
I had banked some time with miles 23 and 24 and my Garmin was reading an average pace like 11:21 which mathematically meant that with the way I was running, I would definitely finish sub 5. I realized this as a Snow Patrol (don't judge) song came on the iPod and when the lead singer sang, "This could be the very minute I'm aware I'm alive" and then later, "This is the straw, final straw." I attributed the lyrics of this song to my running experience at that particular moment. I know that that particular Snow Patrol song has NOTHING to do with what I was doing but I felt alive at that moment because I was going to reach my A goal. I was going to be what I wanted to become. And that was the final straw. I may have teared up a little.
The last portion of the race you go from 56th street all the way down to the Capitol. I thought that I would be turning on 12th street to get to the finish. I was wrong. It wasn't until 7th street that we turned. This was just a little bit of agony. Those five blocks took forever.
But then this happened.
I've never seen my family watching me finish a race. Never. This is the first time. This was right at the 26 mile marker. I only had .2 to go. My A goal was secure. I just needed to finish and be able to talk to my husband and our kid.
End with 5:02:59 on the clock, but a chip time of 4:58:11. This was kind of a big deal for me. It isn't faster than Oprah, but it is faster than many other celebrities like Eddie Van Halen's ex-wife Valerie Bertinelli, Katie Holmes and Mario Lopez.
Take that, Big Sur!
Post-Race
I had to drive home. The boy went in my husband's car, so I was able to drive home with only my thoughts and my playlists to keep me company. Sublime.
Once I got home and could check out my results, I realized that I ran negative splits. First half was 2:29:51, which makes the second half 2:28:20. Not a huge negative split, but MY FIRST EVER NEGATIVE SPLITS! And it was on a marathon!
Now
My quads hurt. It is difficult to get up from a seated position. This is probably why this race report is so long. I don't want to get up. It will hurt. However, I am running out of things to add, and I probably should go to sleep.
Essentially, I signed up for this race to avenge my performance at Big Sur earlier this year. Revenge running is awesome.
Training
I cleverly avoided any sort of training plan that had the word "mortals" in the title. I followed Hal Higdon's Intermediate I plan because it seems like the right progression for me at this time in my running life.
Even though the plan initially horrified me because I couldn't fathom doing it at all, I actually selected well. The plan fit well in my life, or I fit my life in the plan. It never overwhelmed but kept me busy and more importantly provided the right sorts of challenges for me.
I hope that I select well for my next plan. It's all about evolving, right?
Pre-Race
This was the first race that I had to drive up to the race without my husband. He had to work and was going to drive up to Sacramento after he got off work. My son was my traveling partner. Sacramento is a little less that two hours from my house. My son was bored about an hour away. Somehow I conned him into finding the letters of the alphabet in people's license plates, but he had to discover them in order. Surprisingly, it took us that hour just to get to the letter L.
The expo was an expo. What can I say? Fortunately, the Fleet Feet people were selling Honey Stingers. I was OUT and thought that I would have to stomach (literally and figuratively) Gu. I try to mix it up because I don't like too much of either.
Then I got ballsy. I drove to the MALL. Navigating the mall both in the parking lot and inside was only slightly easier than running the marathon. Only slightly. The mall was certainly more painful and more frustrating.
But the mall make my son happy because it had a LEGO store. (Insert booming angelic chorus aquÃ). And I got some Christmas shopping done! Bonus!
We got back to the hotel in time to discovered that my Garmin hates me. It had somehow chosen that day to commit electronic suicide. At least I had enough time to go out and buy a new one. I suppose that is the only bright side I could come up with. I had trained too hard and for too long to not have the support of my watch. I'm spoiled.
The time period between the discover of the Garmin suicide and the acquisition of the replacement was the most stressful time of the entire weekend. I just didn't know what to do. Eventually I caved in to just spending the money even though I hated it. But the stress dissipated. So money does buy temporary peace.
Before going to sleep, I decided on my goals. I know most people make these decision well in advance. I didn't quite now what to make my A goal. I was flirting with the idea of making my A goal merely a PR, but I decided to challenge myself.
A: Sub 5:00
B: PR (previous marathon time 5:24:xx)
C: Finish without injury
Race Day
My iPhone alarm went off at 4 am. This is largely unimportant since my internal alarm woke me up at 3:30 am.
I'm embarrassed to share this, but somehow I got into the very bad habit of eating PopTarts before long runs. I followed the cardinal rule of racing--don't change a damn thing--and had my PopTarts and coffee. (And obviously water!)
I followed my complicated layering plan well and was out of the door at 5:15 ready to catch my bus to the start line.
Everyone else in the hotel was doing the same thing so I had to wait a few minutes at the elevator with other runners who had already been waiting for five minutes themselves. Finally the chariot arrived and we were whisked down to the longest line of adults waiting to board yellow school buses that I have ever seen in my life.
The bus took us 26 miles away to the start. It seemed like it took forever to get there. I eavesdropped on the conversations. Lots of comments about bagels and Boston and bathrooms. But most of the conversation was about weather. Apparently the 2009 CIM temperatures were legendary.
We arrived. I disembarked the bus and walked to the longest line of port-a-potties that I have ever seen in my life. They were lined up at attention for what seemed like a half of a mile. I hardly had to wait at all. It was not what I am used to at all. Why is CIM the least expensive race that I have ever run YET it had the BEST organization and runner amenities?
It was damned cold. I waited until the last possible moment to take off my sweats. Once time ran out. I handed over my meager possessions to a volunteer, activated the hand warmers, and found the 5:10 pace group.
Then I set my Garmin's Virtual Partner to a 11:15 pace which translates to a sub 4:55 marathon. Crazy. Where did that come from?
Cue anthem. Cue wheelchair athletes. Cue elites. Cue the everymen and everywomen.
Race
And we're off!
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| SPOILER ALERT: I finished. I love maps of point to point races. It makes me feel powerful that I covered that distance. |
MILES 1-4
| 1 | 11:03.3 | 1.00 | 11:03 |
| 2 | 11:56.9 | 1.00 | 11:57 |
| 3 | 10:36.9 | 1.00 | 10:37 |
| 4 | 13:27.8 | 1.00 | 13:28 |
I stuck with the 5:10 pace group for the first mile. Pacer wasn't running a 5:10 pace. He was running faster than a 4:55 pace. This confused me, but whatever. He actually started walking at the one mile mark. I wasn't going to put up with this, I went ahead. But when I had to take off my long sleeved shirt (why this took so long, I don't know) around mile 1.5, the 5:10 group caught up with me, so I rejoined them.
During this time, I was annoyed by a constant jingle-jangle. It sounded as if some runners wore a entire jewelry store's inventory on their wrists. It wasn't the sound of jangling keys. The pitch was higher. Like bangle bracelets. I quite seriously wanted to say something aloud. Who the hell would wear anything on a 26.2 mile footrace that made SO MUCH NOISE. For heaven's sake! I hated humanity briefly.
Mile 4? That was my bathroom stop. I envy the men who can simply go behind the port-a-potty or duck off the road and go. I'm guessing that I lost three minutes during Mile 4 waiting for a bathroom and using it. THREE MINUTES! I just checked Garmin. I think I lost 4:23! FOUR TWENTY THREE! That is the difference between my time and my moving time! My bladder hates me.
That 5:10 pace team? GONE! Clearly 4:23 ahead of me at this point. Another dude from the group, I nicknamed him The Trojan because he wore a USC beanie on his head (BOO!), also hit the same bank of port-a-potties as me at the same time. He was about three people ahead of me in line. Obviously he finished first and ran off. I sighted him ahead in the distance, and make it my mission to slowly but surely catch The Trojan.
MILES 5-8
| 5 | 10:57.4 | 1.00 | 10:57 |
| 6 | 11:04.7 | 1.00 | 11:05 |
| 7 | 11:04.5 | 1.00 | 11:05 |
| 8 | 11:06.9 | 1.00 | 11:07 |
I didn't realize it at the time, but I ran these miles a bit too fast perhaps. I never really looked at the lap pace on my watch and really only paid attention to the average pace for the whole run, so I never truly realized that I was running too fast. Ignorance was probably helpful to me in this instance.
MILES 9-12
| 9 | 11:18.6 | 1.00 | 11:19 |
| 10 | 11:13.3 | 1.00 | 11:13 |
| 11 | 11:30.8 | 1.00 | 11:31 |
| 12 | 11:27.8 | 1.00 | 11:28 |
I eventually caught up to The Trojan and passed him. I then caught up to the 5:10 pace group and passed them. I had hit 11:25 average pace on my Garmin, the magic number that I needed to go sub 5:00. And I wanted to maintain that. So I did. I couldn't maintain my 11:25 with the 5:10 group.
While I was running, I remembered mile 10 of Big Sur and how I knew that I was in trouble then. Mile 10 of CIM was no big deal. I remember thinking that I would definitely have a PR for this race at mile 10 simply based on how good I was feeling. Clearly, catching up with and passing 5:10 helped me scale my pace back. I wisely slowed a bit.
MILES 13-16
| 13 | 11:25.9 | 1.00 | 11:26 |
| 14 | 11:17.6 | 1.00 | 11:18 |
| 15 | 11:46.7 | 1.00 | 11:47 |
| 16 | 11:17.3 | 1.00 | 11:17 |
I hit the half at 2:29:51. A sub 5:00 seemed out of my reach at this point because I never run negative splits no matter how hard I try. But I would do my best and hope. I wasn't terribly optimistic.
I remember thinking to myself around mile 15 that the pain should be showing up within the next couple of miles. My right hip flexor or my right IT band sometimes bothers me at the end of a run longer than 15 miles. The feet can start hurting. I told myself after I hit mile 15 to NOT do the math of how many to go, to FOCUS one mile at a time, and to FOCUS on each song that came on the iPod. The iPod random shuffle gods were kind.
MILES 17-20
| 17 | 11:59.6 | 1.00 | 12:00 |
| 18 | 11:23.4 | 1.00 | 11:23 |
| 19 | 11:08.5 | 1.00 | 11:08 |
| 20 | 11:16.6 | 1.00 | 11:17 |
Mile 17 was slow because I walked while trying to move my Gu stash in my shorts pocket to the pouch on my handheld water bottle, it seemed to take an eternity to get them out. An eternity during which the 5:10 group made a reappearance.
Oh hell no.
Clearly, I got away from them. I didn't see them again for the remainder of the race. I just kept focusing on song lyrics and getting to the next mile marker.
One of my favorite moments from the race happened after I hit mile 19 and I passed two men walking. They appeared to be around my age. As I passed them, one of them said, "I'm stick and tired of being fucking passed all the time. We've been passed this entire race." Reader, I smiled. I smiled big at this point. My first smile of the race.
Mile Marker 20 was a brick wall that you ran through. I hit Mile 20 at 3:49:04. My fastest 20 miles ever.
At Big Sur I wanted to die at Mile 20. I had to fight to get a Gu down at this time at Big Sur. At CIM I breezed through with no problems.
My watch was still showing an 11:25/11:26 average pace. I realized at this point that I could finish sub 5:00 if I didn't allow my mind to mess with my heart. Suddenly, I felt pressure to perform. My A goal was possible. I've never hit my A goal before.
MILES 21-24
| 21 | 11:23.1 | 1.00 | 11:23 |
| 22 | 11:34.8 | 1.00 | 11:35 |
| 23 | 11:09.9 | 1.00 | 11:10 |
| 24 | 11:02.9 | 1.00 | 11:03 |
My friend Linda ran the 4th leg of the relay, the final 5.7 miles of the course. In her relay report, she called this part of the course where the devil lives. The last 10K of the marathon is a strange mental zone. I think that I just talked to myself over an over again to get through the pain. I reminded myself of some facts. Repeatedly.
Fact: I trained a lot.
Fact: Too many runs were early in the morning.
Fact: My husband has to put up with me at my most stressed pre-race.
Fact: I bought an emergency Garmin.
Fact: Sub 5:00 sounds somewhat respectable.
Fact: I can do this.
Fact: I have to do this.
Fact: Julie Moss finished her Ironman.
Fact: My internal governor LIES to me about my energy stores. I have energy.
Fact: Julie Moss got up and kept going.
Fact: It will feel awesome to hit an A goal.
Fact: I'm passing everyone.
Fact: Once you hit 24, you have to take your last Gu of 2011. NO MORE GU!
MILES 25-26.2
| 25 | 10:56.6 | 1.00 | 10:57 |
| 26 | 10:32.6 | 1.00 | 10:33 |
| 27 | 3:14.7 | 0.33 | 9:53 |
I told myself that I must not stop running because when I stopped at the last aid station to walk briefly while drinking the water, my legs objected. The pain of not running was intense. I forced myself to just keep going. Plus it felt pretty amazing to pass all of the fallen.
I had banked some time with miles 23 and 24 and my Garmin was reading an average pace like 11:21 which mathematically meant that with the way I was running, I would definitely finish sub 5. I realized this as a Snow Patrol (don't judge) song came on the iPod and when the lead singer sang, "This could be the very minute I'm aware I'm alive" and then later, "This is the straw, final straw." I attributed the lyrics of this song to my running experience at that particular moment. I know that that particular Snow Patrol song has NOTHING to do with what I was doing but I felt alive at that moment because I was going to reach my A goal. I was going to be what I wanted to become. And that was the final straw. I may have teared up a little.
The last portion of the race you go from 56th street all the way down to the Capitol. I thought that I would be turning on 12th street to get to the finish. I was wrong. It wasn't until 7th street that we turned. This was just a little bit of agony. Those five blocks took forever.
But then this happened.
A nice surprise at Mile 26--my kid with a sign!
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I've never seen my family watching me finish a race. Never. This is the first time. This was right at the 26 mile marker. I only had .2 to go. My A goal was secure. I just needed to finish and be able to talk to my husband and our kid.
End with 5:02:59 on the clock, but a chip time of 4:58:11. This was kind of a big deal for me. It isn't faster than Oprah, but it is faster than many other celebrities like Eddie Van Halen's ex-wife Valerie Bertinelli, Katie Holmes and Mario Lopez.
Take that, Big Sur!
Finished! Complete with PR. 26:24 faster!
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Post-Race
I had to drive home. The boy went in my husband's car, so I was able to drive home with only my thoughts and my playlists to keep me company. Sublime.
Once I got home and could check out my results, I realized that I ran negative splits. First half was 2:29:51, which makes the second half 2:28:20. Not a huge negative split, but MY FIRST EVER NEGATIVE SPLITS! And it was on a marathon!
Now
My quads hurt. It is difficult to get up from a seated position. This is probably why this race report is so long. I don't want to get up. It will hurt. However, I am running out of things to add, and I probably should go to sleep.
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