Filed under: Longest Run Ever | Tags: Boston Marathon, good day, healing, Heartbreak Hill, hills, Inspiration, long run, marathon, nerves, running routes, struggle
I’m sorry. It’s been…almost a month. No updates, no nothing. It’s not that I forgot, it’s that I’ve been a bit overwhelmed. Combine peak marathon training with 10-hour shifts, gigs, and the sudden re-emergence of late-night phone calls, and you get one exhausted girl.
Today’s my first day off in about a week. I have homemade chicken soup simmering on the stove, I’ve got my taxes done, I’ve got my bills paid, and as of Sunday, I’ve checked off my first eighteen-miler.
My friend’s boyfriend drove us to Framingham at 6:30 this past Sunday, five miles into the Boston Marathon course. It was the first time I’d ever done anything like that, and it was a very disconcerting feeling. As the car left the city and began to meander into the suburbs, and then onto tree-lined roads, and a half hour went by and we were still driving, I began to get very nervous. I began to realize that we were far, far away from home, and we were about to be stranded there, with nothing but a couple of Gu’s, a couple of water bottles, and our own feet, and that the only way to get back home was to RUN THERE.
It was a profoundly scary moment.
And then it ended, because we started running, and it was sunny, gorgeous, and three weeks out from the Boston Marathon, and everyone was outside, everyone was running, and there was this amazing sense of community and accomplishment and self-satisfaction. Little kids sat at tables, giving out little cups of free lemonade. The local running stores and shoe companies had set up tents where you could grab a water or a Gatorade. People opened their doors to runners who needed a quick bathroom break. Some of them even gave out doggie treats for those who were running with their pets. There was hardly any traffic, and the few drivers that came by honked friendly greetings and waved.
This was not to say that the run wasn’t challenging. The Boston Marathon is a famous race for more than one reason, and one of those reasons is that the course is NOT easy. The hills are frequent, gaining in intensity as you draw near to the infamous Heartbreak Hill, a slow and steady grind that comes after two steeper hills, when your energy is drained, your glycemic index is rock bottom, and you’re just ready to be done running. We scaled it and survived it, though, and I feel more than prepared for the Pig. It will be hilly in Cincinnati, but nothing like this.
I was very unprepared, as usual, for what that kind of running did to my body. I worked a busy day at the store, and by 4 PM I was so tired and weary that I actually wanted to cry – not because I was sad, but because I felt that crying would be a nice way to relax and let off a little bit of steam. I took an ice bath, but I still had to lean all my weight on the railings when walking up and down the stairs. In the middle of the night, I woke up feeling so awful that I didn’t know what to do. I couldn’t even identify what was wrong. There was no actual spot that hurt; I just felt incredibly strange. I mechanically went to the kitchen, spotted a banana in the corner, and snarfed it down. It was one of the most delicious things I had ever tasted. I went into the bathroom, popped four advil into my mouth, drank a full glass of water, and slept like a stone. I woke up the next morning and felt fine.
This weekend I have a fourteen-miler, which sounds like peanuts to me at this point, and the following weekend I will be running twenty miles. TWENTY MILES. And my friend will be running the Boston Marathon the next day, so I will have to do it alone.
It will be my last Longest Run Ever before the Flying Pig Marathon.
Filed under: Inspiration, races | Tags: endorphins, good day, half marathon, hills, Inspiration, marathon, nerves, races, running, slow
I love what happens after a race, after a hot shower and a good meal, how the body and the mind wilt into beautiful relaxation, for once in harmony with one another, basking in accomplishment. I’m back home from Hyannis, in scrubs and an old college sweatshirt, barefoot, lying back on my soft bed as I type this. I pushed myself today, and it paid off.
Everyone was expecting a windy, rainy day, but the weather was just fine, clear and cold and even a little sunny. The course was pleasant, filled with rolling hills and the salt smell of the ocean. I kept a steady ten-minute-mile pace through the whole race, which is slow for most but a pretty big deal for me.
As with Disney, I’ll list a few memorable things below:
- Nerves. Nerves like whoah. I was running with a bunch of people from work, all of whom are very fast. Though I love working at a running store, it has given me a slight speed complex. A sub-two-hour half marathon is peanuts to most of them, and I struggled to crank out a 2:10 (edit: coolrunning says 2:11.41 – rats) today. I’m proud of my race time, and they don’t judge me, but it did make me a bit self conscious at the race start.
- The view of the sea. I loved the salt air, swinging into my face as I rounded a curve. If I ever doubt God, the sea squelches that doubt. It is alive, frightening, beautiful, peaceful.
- The new runners. I stuck around in the cold (it was absolutely frigid, honestly – when you’ve finished a big race, your body temperature plummets like a stone) to see some of the other finishers. I saw two people grab each others’ hands as they crossed the finish line. There was an overweight man who, as he crossed the finish, had such a look of fierce, proud determination on his face that it gave me chills. Two girls did cartwheels as they finished.
- My friend Mandy, who woke up before 6 AM and rode in the car for 1.5 hours each way, just to cheer for me and her friend. Soon I need to devote an entry to how amazing my friends are.
Now begins the steady grind to May. The Flying Pig is nine weeks away. We kick up the miles and the intensity starting this week. I’ve got one more 5K before the marathon, but from now on, it’s go-time.
Filed under: Training Runs | Tags: good day, hills, running, running routes
Last night’s six-miler was a doozy. I had a feeling I was getting myself into it while planning the route on G-Maps, but I wanted some new scenery. Constantly doing loops around Brighton is starting to get boring, but there aren’t a lot of options when you’re doing medium runs. It was a lovely night, an almost balmy thirty-six degrees – trust me, it’s been much colder than that for the past few weeks – without too much wind. I decided to run to Comm Ave and do a tiny chunk of the Boston Marathon course, then swing around into central Newton before heading home.
There is a reason the Boston Marathon is a respected race. I ran uphill for almost two miles before the ground finally began to slope downward, but it didn’t end there; Newton didn’t flatten out at all, and it wasn’t until I was a half mile from home that I felt I was running a straight course.
It wasn’t too bad running, though. I’ll have to watch my ankle closely, but it’s feeling ok even the morning after, so, you know, knock on wood. Honestly, it was a beautiful route, and it was exciting to see all the runners training for Boston alongside me. The scenery was lovely; Newton is filled with grand old homes and gorgeous quiet campuses. Even the stars were out, cold and glistening in a clear evening sky.
Filed under: Dealing, Inspiration, Uncategorized | Tags: dreams, endorphins, good day, half marathon, healing, Inspiration, long run, races, running, winter
Well, it wasn’t as warm as I would have liked in Florida, and I didn’t go as slow as I would have liked. I did, however, have a great time and a strong finish, about 2 hours and 12 minutes. Instead of writing a long-winded play-by-play, let me regale you with a list of memorable moments:
- I met a lot of other runners in the Orlando airport. My day job allows me to talk to runners all the time, but I’m continually gratified by the connection everyone has to one another. We might have been “racing,” but one got a sense that we were all in it together. I imagine that it might be different for the elite runners, just as an undertone of competition often runs through the friendships of some professional musicians, but I enjoyed the continuity and the shared sense of accomplishment.
- My friend’s family got a large hotel suite at one of the Disney World resorts. We cooked ourselves a nice big pasta dinner the night before the race, went to bed at 8 PM, and woke up at 3 AM for an early, frigid start.
- I don’t think I’ve ever been so cold in my life as I was before and after that race. That includes all the time I’ve spent in upstate New York and Boston. Instead of getting warm, tropical Florida, we got sleet that poured down on us all day. I may be used to running in the cold, but I’m certainly not used to standing in it, when all I’m wearing is a pair of thermal tights and a couple of top layers. Let me tell you, those things are only effective when you’re actually running. Even wrapped in a mylar blanket post-race, the cold and wet penetrated my bones so deeply that I couldn’t get rid of the chill until the next morning.
- The cold does make you run faster. Even doing 10:10 minute miles, I could have run faster – or farther.
- I wasn’t quite prepared for all the public urination. There must’ve been scores of porta-johns, but people were standing at the woodside practically every twenty feet before the start. Also notable was the unfortunate soul who gave everyone a full frontal underneath a street lamp in his haste to, erm, relieve himself. I guess it was an emergency.
- There were some great costumes, but two deserve acknowledgment: A)The woman who braved the twenty-degree weather, wind, and sleet in a tiny little Wonder Woman outfit, and B)The man with the custom CWX compression pants, the $200 kind, made with American Flag-patterned tech fabric.
- The race itself really was awesome. My friend said the cold might have driven away some spectators, but I didn’t notice. There were certainly plenty of people cheering, plenty of high school marching bands playing, and more than enough Disney characters to go around. Running through the parks in the dark was by far one of the coolest things I’ve ever done. To my surprise, I almost started crying when the fireworks burst into the sky to signify the start of the race. I couldn’t explain why, but I knew, as the wind and sleet whipped into my face, as I pulled my hat low over my ears, as the people around me began to walk faster, then to jog, and then to run, that I was doing something good and right, that I was privileged, that I had been given some great and wonderful gift.
I slept like a log that night. After seeing my friend off for the marathon, I dropped back to sleep for a couple of hours before the flight home, and then I had a dream.
I dreamed I was in a large house, a house I’d been before. In fact, I knew I had dreamed of this house more than once, perhaps multiple times. I walked in, and a friend of mine – at first it was the friend who was running with me, but then I wasn’t sure – had moved into a new room in the house. I walked in and it was enormous. It was painted a deep olive green, and it was full of angles decorated with thick ebony beams. White patterns were stenciled onto the walls. The room was old and lush. I exclaimed at its beauty and its size, as it seemed to keep going and going as I explored it. I would turn a corner and there would be more of it. There were multiple beds of all sizes, some small enough for children. I went into a bathroom, and it was strangely set up and not very clean. The toilet was behind a curtain in what looked like a bathtub. The bathtub itself was the size of a hot tub, a deep tank that you couldn’t get into unless you climbed down a ladder. I had memories of that tub from previous dreams of house.
I remembered that the last time I had been in this place, I had found a secret passageway that led up to an attic, and that part of the path led to the basement. I had explored these parts of the house in previous dreams. The attic was a little girl’s room, I remembered, small and unused, with a little bed and a doll. The basement was a series of long wooden steps that led into a catacomb of old stairs and tunnels and concrete. I decided to find the passageways again. I didn’t want to go to the basement, but I did want to see that attic room again.
The passages were closed. They had been built over with marble. I think it was a shower stall. I felt along it with my hands, knocking, hoping I could pull it apart, but I couldn’t. The surface was cold, and the marble was thick and strong. I knew I would never get to that little girl’s room again.