4am. My alarm sounded, but it didn't matter because I had already been up with a sick baby all night. And when I wasn't changing the vomit soaked crib sheets, I was staring in disbelief out the window at the torrential rain storm ensuing. My phone chimed with an awaited message from my running partner Mrs Silver.
Mrs. S: "Are we REALLY going to walk 13.1 miles in the rain?"
Sday: "I say, we gotta at try it. We'll regret it if we don't." " But if you don't want to, I understand. I'll go by myself."
Mrs. S: "If you're gonna do it, I'm gonna do it. I just wanted you to know it would be OK if you didn't want to."
Before I could comprehend the surrounding situation, there I was. The start line, nerves abundant, my stomach tying itself into a plethora of clove hitch knots. We tried to stay dry until the last possible minute wearing our heavy duty foul weather rain coats made to withstand hurricane force rain. Alas the start gun sounded and we ditched our coats into the truck that would carry our belongings to the finish line to be picked up... if we ever finished. The nerves settled as we slowly began to move foreword in a cattle herding like mannor. Thousands of people slowly swarmed around us as we moved across the start line and turned East toward the reservoir. The rain persisted relentlessly It was within the first mile that the last two inches of dry clothing was encroached by the soggy fibers surrounding it. There was no escape from the cold, fat rain. There was no escape from myself.
Slow and steady, very very slow and hardly steadily Mrs S. and I rounded off the first few miles along side the grey dreary reservoir. I watched as literal sheets of rain crossed over the vacant waters. I walked a lot, even though I was trying to walk the least amount possible. Walk, jog, walk, jog..... we continued across the damn. And finally the sweet relief of turning down the canyon. I needed every degree of decline the road ahead of me had to offer, flat terrain might has well been up hill because I was in such pitiful condition. The boost of energy that running down hill gave faded and Mrs. S and I began to separate.
We continued to leap frog past each other as we'd experience moments of numbness that allowed us to jog a little faster, only to tire out and require a rest. Mile 3 ---- Mile 4 ---- Mile 5 ---- Those numbers seemed so insufficient as I knew I wasn't even half way. To say I was waterlogged was an understatement. The skin on my fingers pruned so deeply they were colorless. The rain ever steady and the altitude of the canyon left my limbs so numb beyond function. I couldn't feel the buttons on my ipod to change the song, my shirt kept riding up but my hands were useless to grasp the fabric and readjust. The sensation of total numbness one feels after going to the dentist had overtaken my legs, and if I slowed down to walk the cold deepened the numbness. So we continued on.
Mile 6 and 7 were brutal and I questioned myself. I tried to hold focus on any part of the beautiful canyon to distract my mind from telling my body to stop. Hundreds and hundreds of people had now passed me, there were few left behind and I was discouraged. I used my teeth to open a caffeinated GU pack and I heaved it down with a few gulps of Gat0rade at the mile 7 aide station. I fumbled with my ipod until I found enough control in my fingers to press the button until a suitable song turned on off I went. Magic mile 8 and 9 felt incredible My body so numb I was actually able to run without pain, and my mind had finally remembered how to fight to keep running despite it's innermost voice suggesting it stop. I smiled, I looked around at my surroundings, I looked at my Garm1n watch and although my pace was something most would joke about... I felt it. I felt what it was like to run again. To really run. I shuffled along and the endorphines rippled through my body as I relished in my "runners high" for those two miles. "I'm finally running again!" I thought to myself.
Then mile 10 decided to show up, and with it - the lead marathon runner. He flew past me like weightless gazelle, his feet hardly spending more than a millisecond on the pavement before springing his body foreword. Three strides and he was gone. The words "Keep Running" on the back of his shirt were hardly in sight long enough to read. Yet they provided some sort of a twisted mental ploy because I realized "I'm not running. That's running. I'm just a fat girl shuffling along at a pace most humans can casually walk." And there it was, the endorphin rush dissolved, the rain stopped, and the temperature began to thaw my frozen core. The thawing process was painful, my nerves began to register the pain I was enduring with each jolting impact of my steps. The beautiful canyon now behind me as I entered the tunnel that passed under the road before heading into the lonely parkway along the river. Mrs S too far ahead for me to see. I was alone, and I had nothing left. I gave mile 9 everything I had.
The pain increased and I could hardly run. Limping and frustrated, more and more marathoners passed. More and more half marathoners passed. The tempo of my walk now so sluggish that each mile was taking almost a quarter of an hour to complete. Mile 10-11-12 were as mentally as painful as they were physical. I caught up to my partner and she encouraged me to keep going. I tried to run a few steps at a time, 20 steps and then walk. Every few feet required a mental argument to "JUST TRY TO RUN A FEW MORE STEPS." More walking... a lot of limping and finally mile 12. One more to go. One simple mile I told myself, fifteen minutes! I tried again to jog and I physically couldn't.
I remember a sign a man was holding at the last corner before the straight away to the finish, it read "I've never been so proud of a complete stranger!" At that point I was trying so hard not to cry. I was a hot mess of emotion. I had gone 12.75 miles and I had never wanted to quit anything so bad in my life. I was literally hobbling down the center of the road - I was the least healthy person among thousands of people I had seen that day. People wearing shirts saying "I have cancer and there is hope" were faster than me. The self loathing hit an all time high and I didn't want a single one of those people lining the streets ahead to see me. I just wanted it to be over. Each block passed and that last mile lasted almost 20 minutes. One single city block left to finish and I couldn't bear to walk in front of all the spectators. So I hobbled, my right foot stung with the sensation of breaking bones each time I tried to push my body foreword. My left hamstring felt like a piece of string cheese shredding and pealing apart into oblivion. I stared at the ground because it was too embarrassing to look at those people in the face. They weren't sure if they should cheer or be as disgusted with me as I was, so we silently agreed to just avoid my awkward display of "finishing."
3:25:45 read the race clock. I stepped over the finish line and I sobbed and it felt so so good.
Racing has a weird way of forcing my brain to wander into the darkest, deepest corners of my mind and face my demons. (believe me, I use the term "racing" loosely. I'm referring to doing a really long hard distance or event that pushes your body harder than on a normal workout) Sometimes I have a hard time letting go of things that no longer serve me. And racing is one way that I had discovered how to dig deep enough to let go of those things at the finish lines. I let go and I cried, and then - I smiled. And the beast inside me stirred once again.
No more no-shows for this girl.
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Showing posts with label Race Recap. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Race Recap. Show all posts
Sunday, June 9, 2013
Wednesday, May 29, 2013
I'LL BE DAMNED...
Posted by
S.DAY
Want to know something depressing? I signed up for The Spudman (I like to call it the "sput-men") triathlon twice, and didn't show up... twice.
Depressing. I know.
Skip ahead to November 2012 and I had a free entry offered to me for the Ogden 1/2 marathon. "Sure!" I thought. I can totes train all winter for this bad boy and I'll be ready by May of 2013 for shizzle. So I bought me a treadmill on black friday. I was too chicken to use it for about a month. Then I finally did, and I was committed, every morning I hopped on that beast and watched an episode of the biggest loser while I calculated how many more weeks I had to race day. Then my kids got sick, over and over and over - for months. From January 2013 to April 2013, someone in this house was constantly sick. So I chose sleep over treadmilling each morning.
Skip ahead again to May 2013... two saturdays ago. It was race day. The universe had given me EVERY SINGLE opportunity to be a "NO SHOW" for my third race in a row. But I'll be damned if the emotional scare of a marathon bomber across the country a month prior, or a puking baby the night prior, or a downpour of rain the day of... was going to make me prove a failure - for the third time. So nothing was going to stop me from showing up at the start line, and crossing the finish line. I would use any means to accomplish the 13.1 mile difference between the two. And it sucked every drop of mental energy I had for three and a half hours, but I did it.
It's not a finish time to be proud of. It's rather humiliating actually. My results were pathetic. I think only a handful of the 3,500 racers finished after me. Like I could count on my fingers and toes the people that finished behind me. I've failed a lot in my life. At almost everything I've ever tried actually. And some day, I hope, after all these decades of failing and trying again... I hope to actually win. But with failure comes choice - and two weeks ago, at least I chose to show up.
And here's what happened......
(to be continued)
Depressing. I know.
Skip ahead to November 2012 and I had a free entry offered to me for the Ogden 1/2 marathon. "Sure!" I thought. I can totes train all winter for this bad boy and I'll be ready by May of 2013 for shizzle. So I bought me a treadmill on black friday. I was too chicken to use it for about a month. Then I finally did, and I was committed, every morning I hopped on that beast and watched an episode of the biggest loser while I calculated how many more weeks I had to race day. Then my kids got sick, over and over and over - for months. From January 2013 to April 2013, someone in this house was constantly sick. So I chose sleep over treadmilling each morning.
Skip ahead again to May 2013... two saturdays ago. It was race day. The universe had given me EVERY SINGLE opportunity to be a "NO SHOW" for my third race in a row. But I'll be damned if the emotional scare of a marathon bomber across the country a month prior, or a puking baby the night prior, or a downpour of rain the day of... was going to make me prove a failure - for the third time. So nothing was going to stop me from showing up at the start line, and crossing the finish line. I would use any means to accomplish the 13.1 mile difference between the two. And it sucked every drop of mental energy I had for three and a half hours, but I did it.
It's not a finish time to be proud of. It's rather humiliating actually. My results were pathetic. I think only a handful of the 3,500 racers finished after me. Like I could count on my fingers and toes the people that finished behind me. I've failed a lot in my life. At almost everything I've ever tried actually. And some day, I hope, after all these decades of failing and trying again... I hope to actually win. But with failure comes choice - and two weeks ago, at least I chose to show up.
And here's what happened......
(to be continued)
Thursday, May 16, 2013
FINDING ZION - Part 2
Posted by
S.DAY
My entire body drenched with sweat, while Kday's body began to shut down due to the cold. His body not expending any energy at the pace we were moving, mine however was on overdrive. Soon my shirt was wet from the large flood of tears that dripped from my cheeks to my neck.
"I'm so disgusted with myself."
"How could I have worked so hard, and fallen so far again."
"I'm so fat I can hardly ask my body to walk a simple 3.5 mile trail."
"I don't know how to change."
"I hate myself."
"Why have I let this happen? Again!"
I cried and I walked. Kday listened, he did his best to try to offer encouragement, but we came to an understanding "You'll never understand the way I feel right now." He said, "You're right." And then I just got down right mad. Mad at myself for being me. Every single detail of Me. I hated it and I wanted it to go away.
The beast stirred some more, the anger arousing the beast from it's deep slumber. I tried to pick up the pace and walk a little faster. I tried to jog a few steps. I kept going. We passed the haunted houses as the trail forked and we turned right to face the last half mile. The 1/2 mile from hell. I'd heard all the runners complaining about it, even the really fit runners. A 1/2 mile of torture lay ahead of me and I needed to face it alone. Time was ticking and the next runner on the team was already 20 minutes behind departure time because of my lack of ability to move quickly. I told Kday to leave me. I have to remind myself that I don't quit and I can do this. I can do it, just me.
I poured out my soul with each step up that 1/2 mile Purgatory. I let out the anger, the dissapointment, I cried out the rage and discouragement, the frustration, the pity, the pain. I cried as I walked upward, each step in the darkness as more people continued to pass me like a mountain goat near the summit. I continued to creep and moan and groan my way up that miserable finish. The tiki-torch lined finish in sight, Kday yelling my name. All I could feel was the desire to release all the negativity that was dragging me down as I climbed the hill. But really, I just felt un-worthy to cross that finish line. In humiliation I stepped across the line and hurried my way to the side of the course and I cried again.
The beast was awoken, but I'm still struggling to let it thrive inside me. I'm still struggling to let it out and let go of the self hate. Each time I try to run now, each step I take in a stride... the beast is beginning to overshadow the hate. And each time I meet me daily goal of eating healthy, it's one step farther from the place I was in. I'm still on the hunt to finding the Zion within.
Wednesday, May 15, 2013
FINDING ZION - Part 1
Posted by
S.DAY
Two weeks ago we packed up the Buca and the Piloted southbound. We were welcomed to Zion with perfect weather: warm enough to get sun burned, breezy enough not to feel hot. Anything above 70 degrees in my book is too darn hot. A breezy 68 was perfection for the entire weekend. I wasn't there to run as part of team: Come @ Me, I was merely there to manage the runners and camp to make certain all logistics ran smoothly and to ensure runners belly's were full and happy pre and post run.
I was mostly excited to spend a weekend with my best friend, Kday whom I've rarely seen around these parts lately. Work, church, and general stress has been eating up our time together and I was eager to leave that all behind. There are few things in life that a conversation around a campfire and under the starry night of Zion can't fix.
I watched as each runner headed out and struggled back into the finish area, I calculated run times, rest times, sleep breaks and potty breaks. I stood at the Start/Finish line with a lump in my throat as I watched each of my team members accomplished physical demands, and it stirred the sound slumber of the beast in me. I realized how easy it is to give up on my physical fitness when I haven't been around "the scene" in so many years. I can't believe it's been YEARS.
The beast in me stirred as night began to fall and I inhaled the cool dusk air. I had planned to run the shortest of distances with Kday and my calculations predicted a mid-night run around 2:30 am. I wouldn't have wanted it any other way. Running in the darkness is such a spiritual adventure, it's demanding and scary, it's peaceful and almost sacred.
Kday and I headed out with headlamps in place and nerves to be settled with the slow dusty path ahead of us. I ran for as long as I could, in silence, gingerly stepping across rocks and the dusty riveted trail. It was probably less than 5 minutes into the run when my lungs and my legs needed a break. Disgusting. I tried to be positive and whispered a quick "sorry Kev, I'm just so slow" and tried to continue to run/walk as quickly as I could. I used as much physical energy as I could to continue moving my feet, and I exhausted my mental energy attempting to stay positive. Time passed more slowly than my feet were passing over path. I slowed, and I slowed, and before I knew it... I was barely walking. I had no more apologies I had no more words of encouragement What felt like hundreds of runners had passed us in the night as I crept along the trail next to my best friend, a snail in the night - with a long journey ahead.
To be continued....
Monday, April 18, 2011
SENSATIONALLY PROFOUND
Posted by
S.DAY
I woke up to rain, unexpectedly, and I was 20 minutes late picking Becky up because I couldn't decide what to wear with the sudden weather change. Finally we make it onto the freeway and my stomach was in knots until we slid into our parking spot perfectly near the start line. At which point my stomach began to churn with more nerves and the restless need to stand in line for 40 minutes to utilize a rancid port' a potty. One that had been used by well over 1,000 nervous runners before me. Sick.
We stroll up to the start line with literally 5 seconds to spare as they count down the gun start. I slipped on the our new custom tether and we reassured each other that we could totally handle this race.
We were off and running all the while enjoying a little light conversation about Becky's husband going shirtless through airport security when I checked our pace. I had told Kday to meet us at Sugarhouse park at around the 1 hour mark and I quickly realized that I had way underestimated our pace. I tried to take advantage of the down hill areas in the beginning of the course, so Becky and I were humming right along at a 10 min flat pace. For us, that's smokin. So when we made it to mile 4.5 at Sugarhouse in 40 minutes the worry that Kday would miss us became a reality. I spent the next two miles worrying that he might wait around too long at the park and miss the finish. I slammed a Roctane Gu down and I was feeling superb. Until mile 7, at which point I started to bonk and by mile 9 at Liberty park I was doing everything possible not to lose my cookies. At this point my chest felt like 5,000 lbs and my vision was starting to become blurry and splotchy -yikes... talk about the blind leading the blind!
It became a necessity to slow our pace down to about a 12 min mile which really had me discouraged. We had been 2 min/mile faster than I had expected and I really wanted to keep that pace up if possible. My heart thought it possible by my body performance was rapidly waning. I knew another Roctane would feel awesome but I also knew that I wouldn't be able to keep it down long enough to benefit from it. So we slowed for a bit until my stomach settled and I caught my breath.
Then the state street hill from hell began. Our plan of attack was to focus on making it to one stop light at a time. Our pace still slower than before, around 11:45 min mile... we ever so steadily pushed ourselves up this piddly little hill that feels like K2 after 11 miles of running. My vision was still hit and miss of a blurry mess but I we just kept running. Right at the peak of the hill before we turned on to South Temple - Becky said, "do you want to walk?" I laughed with what little breath I had to spare and said "Becky, you know I don't walk during races... besides, we didn't run all this way to walk at mile 12." She smiled (probably much against her will) and agreed with me. Poor thing probably knew she had no choice :)
By this point she was practically dragging my fat keister down So. Temple and I was totally blown. My legs had no juice left and my emotions were all over the place.
I started to cry. Shizzle sticks, what else is new? I would cry for about 3 seconds and then try to muster more strength and pull myself together. Then the tears would come again for a matter of seconds before the cycle repeated itself. Becky said, "I wish I had something inspirational to say but..." I said, "I know. I need to stop crying and just run." I picked up the tempo again because I told Becky we needed to finish under a 12 min mile. So we rounded the corner in front of the Union Station and finally arrived to the entrance of the Gateway. The streets were lined with cheering spectators and although I was prepared for the crowds, I had no idea just how much their applause would affect me. I couldn't keep it together for one more second. I started crying as I felt like every single person there was encouraging me to finish the race strong. My body awareness was completely forgotten and without effort we sprinted through the cobblestone path to the finish.
| This is where I almost ate it :) |
At one point near the beginning of the race I looked up ahead... and down the road for at least a mile in front of us were bobbing heads filling the street. Runners, shoulder to shoulder flooding down the beautiful roads of Utah, and behind me for a mile the same view. It was such a profound moment to realize the grandiosity of the phenomenon I was a part of. I tried to describe the incredible view and sensation to Becky but I was at a loss for words. Eleven thousand racers all together at this point before the marathon and half marathon course split up. It was sensationally profound.
| Each other's hero. |
Monday, April 11, 2011
EMMANUEL
Posted by
S.DAY
Saturday morning I awoke to fluffy white snowflakes drifting around my world. Spring was blanketed by winter once again. The weather wouldn't be a factor in my race on this day, the cause was too great.
MOTHERS WITHOUT BORDERS and Give 'em 5 for children in Zambia.
Becky and I ran the 5K together and the weather held off for the exact 35 min it took us to complete the race. As soon as we crossed the line, the snow began to fall again. Each of us ran for a child in Zambia, their photo and story written on our number tag.
This race event was one of the BEST events I've participated in. It will be an annual race and the cost is low with 100% of the proceeds going to Zambia to build homes. They were extremely organized, great hype and excitement at the start/finish line which included an archway of ballons, and rediculous amounts of delicious food after the 5K race. If you'd like to participate in donating to this awesome cause you can go HERE. And you better believe we'll be running again next year!
Mother's Without Borders was founded in response to the devastation being caused by the HIV/AIDS pandemic. They address the needs of orphaned and abandoned children in a holist manner. The provide safe shelter, food, education, and access to caring adults who mentor, encourage, and love.
MOTHERS WITHOUT BORDERS and Give 'em 5 for children in Zambia.
Becky and I ran the 5K together and the weather held off for the exact 35 min it took us to complete the race. As soon as we crossed the line, the snow began to fall again. Each of us ran for a child in Zambia, their photo and story written on our number tag.
Emmanuel was the young boy whom I ran for on Saturday, here is his story:
"When Emmanuel was young, both of his parents died. He, along with his older brother Charles and his younger sister Exhilda, were brought by relatives to live with their grandfather. Unfortunately, this was not a safe environment for any of the children especially Exhilda. The home was filthy and the grandfather abused Exhilda. To add to these horrible circumstances, the children had to walk 3 miles every day to Bwafano (a charitable organization) where they were given their only meal. In 2006, Emmanuel, Charles and Exhilda came to the Mother's Without Borders Children's Resource Center to live. Emmanuel is now 8 years old and in grade 2. He is almost unrecognizable to those who met in in 2006. He is outgoing and loves to have fun - at times to the point of being mischievous. He is the youngest in his grade, but he is extremely clever."This race event was one of the BEST events I've participated in. It will be an annual race and the cost is low with 100% of the proceeds going to Zambia to build homes. They were extremely organized, great hype and excitement at the start/finish line which included an archway of ballons, and rediculous amounts of delicious food after the 5K race. If you'd like to participate in donating to this awesome cause you can go HERE. And you better believe we'll be running again next year!
Mother's Without Borders was founded in response to the devastation being caused by the HIV/AIDS pandemic. They address the needs of orphaned and abandoned children in a holist manner. The provide safe shelter, food, education, and access to caring adults who mentor, encourage, and love.
Friday, January 21, 2011
13.1
Posted by
S.DAY
Here goes nothin! Heading down the road to sunny southern Utah. Some MUCHO needed sun, R&R, and.... oh ya - to run my butt off. I'm too short on time to explain my excitement on racing with Becky. You'll catch the DL on that later. I'm honored. Simple as that.
I'm battling the beginning of a cold- Zicam, Cold Eeez, and OJ are my treatment plan. Otherwise, wish me sweet loads of luck cuz I'm gonna need it. I'd love to update you on my new blog asap... however, I need a break. So see you with race recap, pics and a swiggity sweet face lifted blog on Monday - or Tuesday. We'll see.
Peace Out
"Run like you stole something."
I'm battling the beginning of a cold- Zicam, Cold Eeez, and OJ are my treatment plan. Otherwise, wish me sweet loads of luck cuz I'm gonna need it. I'd love to update you on my new blog asap... however, I need a break. So see you with race recap, pics and a swiggity sweet face lifted blog on Monday - or Tuesday. We'll see.
Peace Out
"Run like you stole something."
Sunday, September 26, 2010
TEAM MUD FLAPS
Posted by
S.DAY
WE RAN (well, I walked butt load)
WE SLID
WE CLIMBED
WE SLOSHED
WE CRAWLED
WE TACKLED
WE SWAM
WE CONQUERED
Utah's first mud run 10K "Dirty Dash"
This was the dirtiest I've ever been...
and also the most fun I've had in a LONG time!
Monday, August 23, 2010
DON'T YOU DARE GIVE UP
Posted by
S.DAY
Saturday's race was grueling.
I'll be the first to say I'm discouraged, more so now than I have been in a long time. And seriously disappointed in myself. It's been a few years since I've been stuck in such a doubtful mental existence. Two weeks ago I thought I was rocking this whole tri training thing. Yesterday kicked me in the teeth. It kicked me in the tooth that already felt kicked in from THIS POST. But don't you fret my pets! I'll pick myself back up by tomorrow. But I gotta process my bike race on Sat first.
The bike is my enemy. Food is my enemy. Hauling 15 lbs more this year than last - is my enemy.
I settled in on the bike and felt fine until I hit the false flats that seemed to suck the life out of my legs. I don't back down to a challenge, and I've never thought about crying during a race. Saturday - I almost cried. I debated quitting. With one swift twist of my foot I could clip out and stop dead in my tracks. I hung my head and and I actually thought about just plain and simple quitting. NEVER in my life have I thought about quitting a race.
I heard the voice of my sweet KDAY telling me "crying is only going to suck out energy that you need to go faster. So buck up and start pedaling." His dreamy voice was right. Instead of hanging my head this time, I bowed it and said a prayer. I asked the good Lord to help me finish this race. Help me to just keep going. Help me not to cry.
I said that I do TRI's because it's a challenge. I wasn't kidding. It's just never been this BIG of a challenge before. I'm ready now. It was the slap in the face that I needed to motivate me to reach my weight goals once and for all. I'm sick of hovering in the 150's and 160's. When I lost my weight before, I remember the moment that my dietitian told me, "Shannon, you have to be ready to let go of the weight. When you're ready to lose the weight your body will start to let it go." I'm ready. This weight goal has eluded me too damn long. Lets do this.
I've got new journey's ahead.
January 1, 2011: 140 LBS.
131 days to lose it.
Sunday, August 22, 2010
YOU WIN SOME -- YOU LOSE SOME
Posted by
S.DAY
JORDANELL TRI T1/T/2
Pre race nerves - but "thought" I was feeling confident in my training
Bike out - T1
Suffer-fest, last week I felt amazing on the bike. This week - I almost died
Bike IN
Run Out - T2
Finish Line - At least I beat the chick next to me.
Felt like shiz afterward. Can you tell by the look on my face!
Some cold water and a cute chika put a smile back on my face
I'm glad he still stands by me. Fat, less fat, win or lose. He's my favorite and motivates me to continue doing hard things. Even though I'm not very good at it.
My high hopes for yesterday's results were crushed about 1.5 min before I exited the swim and slowly made my way up the boat ramp. I felt great in the water and I thought the swim was going well. Until I checked my watch. Maybe that was a mistake. I was still a few hundred yards out from the swim exit and I was already 30 seconds past my goal split time. Dang it.
Feeling good though, I wrapped up the swim and hauled through T1- - or so I thought. It felt slick as snot. Wet suit off, no time to dry, just slid my tootsies into my bike shoes, helmet click, shades on, and I was off.
Then the whole thing went to hell in a hand-basket.
I thought I was ready for the bike this year. But the bike owned me. I had NO juice in the legs. I tried over and over to speed up my cadence and amp up the speed, but to no avail. My body denied my numerous attempts.
I finished the bike and hit the pavement running after what felt like another smooth transition. Numb feet for the first 2 miles only made me want to finish sooner. It was hot hot hot and thanks to the need to motivate a struggling runner next to me... I focused on helping her keep pace and we finished together. Well, I pulled in front of her just before the finish line - you don't think I'm going to "help her beat me."
I'm slow - but I'm not stupid. :)
THANKS FOR THE GOOD LUCK WISHES. I APPRECIATED IT. HOPE I DIDN'T LET YOU DOWN AS MUCH AS I LET MYSELF DOWN.
Friday, August 20, 2010
KEEP TRI'ing
Posted by
S.DAY
(nerves)
I TRI to do hard things
I TRI to face my fears
I TRI to push myself to do something I never thought I would have the physical ability to do
I TRI to lose weight
I TRI to make my heart happy
I TRI to fight against depression
I TRI to find the person inside that's dying to escape this body shape
I TRI to become the person I want to be
I TRI because I LOVE IT.
Why do YOU TRI?

























