How can you possibly ever put into words the entire epic-ness
that is one of the single greatest moments of your life? I feel like the past
two years have all lead me to this exact place, this exact moment, that exact
single experience of true bliss. The
earth, the moon, the stars and the sun all aligned perfectly to provide me the
coolest 2 hours 10 minutes of my life. Funny how I find such bliss and
happiness in the solitude of running.
I should start by saying that on the Saturday before the
half I had a really awesome 5k run. My feet felt light, and my body felt
capable and ready. I was just going to run. And in the end resulted in my
fastest 5k time to day. I think I finished at like 28 minutes 30 seconds or
around there. Bottom line is I managed a 9:20 minute pace which is great for
me. So I was already feeling amazing.
Then we spent the rest of the day in Santa Cruz on the beach boardwalk and it
was wonderful and amazing and I was just so happy.
Based off of my 5k running secretly I wondered if it was
possible to have a great half time. Chris kept saying things like, maybe you’ll
PR. I laughed at him. The truth is my PR was set last February. Back when I was running a lot more than I
have been. It was 2 hours 11 minutes and
like 44 seconds or something like that. I never came close to that again. After that,
my time started to creep up and up. I quit caring as much. Times went to about
2 hours 18 minutes, and then they shifted to about 2 hours 28 minutes. I just
couldn’t muster much desire to push myself. Not really sure why. Last weekend I actually ran a 2 hour 19
minute half and I was excited about that. It never occurred to me I could ever
come close to PR’ing again. In fact I honestly truly thought I’d never ever see
a PR again in my life. I just wasn’t at that speed.
It was hot. Like hotter than I think anyone expected. I was
really nervous about the heat and apparently so were the event organizers
because they sent out an email the day before telling us all how to prepare for
the heat and all the precautions they were going to take on course to help us
runners. Let me tell you I did not feel like running. Before we started I was
completely unsure how I was going to feel.
But then a funny thing ususally happens. I start running, and somehow
after a couple minutes, once my heart rate elevates and then levels out, I feel
great. So I ran. And I kept checking my watch telling me my pace. After all
things had settled out I was running consistently at a 9:35-9:40 pace. But more
importantly I felt good, and this was a comfortable pace for me so I thought I
might be able to keep running this for a while.
I had a lot of inner dialogue going on. Somewhere around
mile 3 when I looked down and saw my pace and knew I felt good, I actually
starting visualizing what it might be like to finish the race with a PR. What
it would actually mean today, on that particular day of all days, October 5, my
true official 2 year WW anniversary. And for no reason I wanted to cry. I felt
pride. And excitement. That maybe, just maybe, I could PR. But I tried to not
get too far ahead of myself, considering it was only mile 3, and I had a lot of
miles left to go. I REALLY did. But I kept running and thinking. The first hour
was quite pleasant. The heat hadn’t picked up too much. It was warm, but
bearable. And because you never know exactly what you are going to get with
running, sometimes things strike you at odd times. And I guess because of the
whole idea of the anniversary of my recommitment, I started thinking about the
past.
I found myself thinking about my dad. It felt odd that suddenly
I felt overcome with feelings about my dad. I guess it’s because of his own
weight issues that I will always feel some sort of weird connection about
health surrounding my dad. I remember once we had a conversation about how he
swore it didn’t matter if you were healthy and active or overweight and
unhealthy because when it was your time, it was your time. He had a friend he
told me who was a marathon runner who dropped dead of a heart attack at the age
of like 40 something. In hindsight these were the excuses he told himself to
make himself feel better about his own life and I guess that is okay. That is what he needed. But deep down, I know
he was hurting.
And then I was thinking about how sad it is that my dad
never got to see this, to see me, living this life. In my trip down memory lane
I had this moment of clarity where I thought, it is so sad that my dad never
got to see me become that athlete that I am today. And then I paused on the
word athlete. And then I went, yes, you know what, Emily… you ARE an athlete.
You have become a full-fledged athlete and your dad would be proud. I am sure
he never thought he’d have an athlete daughter and yet, here I am. And in the
midst of all of this inner dialogue I wanted to burst into tears. And then as clear as day I envisioned myself
crossing that finish line with a PR and how it would feel to accomplish
something so special today and I just kept running.
Overall it was a pretty emotional race for me. 2 years to
the day. As I ran I thought about myself 2 years ago on this day, not even the
inkling of what was to come. I thought about the girl I was, at 220 pounds,
scared and afraid to live. The girl who believed she could be more. And I ran. And I just kept running, solidly
at the same pace and before I knew it 5 miles, 6 miles, 7 miles had passed. And
I thought that a PR was closer than ever. It was somehow, miraculously, within
my grasps. But it started to get HOT. And of course with the sun and running
comes a lot of dehydration and fear. Fear that I would tire out and or my body
would give out. But I was prepared. I kept drinking the water at every station
while I tried to run on. I did not want to slow down to drink because holy hell
I was on a PR pace.
In hindsight, at some point early on I think I had mentally
decided that I was going to have a PR, come hell or high water today and nothing
was going to stop me. I think half of running, actually more than half, is
mental. It’s simply being crazy enough to believe that you can. Knowing that my determination is stronger
than any physical force holding me down.
Around mile 9 I picked up a rock in my shoe, or the bottom
of my foot that I couldn’t shake loose. I didn’t want to stop, but I felt it
every step so I had to pull off to the side for a brief second to yank it out.
Turned out, it wasn’t a rock, but instead a giant shard of broken glass. Glad I
actually stopped to take care of that.
But getting going again is tough after you stop, even for only a few
seconds.
My speed started to slow down. I kept telling myself as long
as I can keep my average pace under 10 minute miles I will be on track to PR. I
knew as long as I was 2 hours 10 minute something I would have bettered my old
PR. But secretly I was being greedy and wanted under 2 hours 10 minutes. I was
so close. But it got HARD. It got HOT. And mile 11 was all mental. Just keep
running. Mile 11 might have bene the hardest mile of them all. Simply because
it was close to done, but not close enough. Mile 12 was better because once I
hit 12.1; every step made it less than a mile to the finish. Somehow knowing
you just have a mile to go is glorious.
I was probably moving at a snail’s pace, but in all
actuality it was still around a 10 minute mile pace. It just felt like an
eternity. The seconds ticked on. We rounded a corner and I saw the finish line
in the distance. 2 tenths of a mile to
go and I knew I had a shot at the less than 2 hours 10 minute mark. I saw my
watch and saw it tick over to 2 hours 9 minutes and I saw the finish line and I
sprinted. I was like Fuck it, just RUN… muster up every single ounce of crazy
you have left and finish in less than 2 hours 10 minutes. And I sprinted like
my life depended on it. And I crossed that line under the 2 hour 20 minute mark
and pretty much almost immediately had to fight back the tears. The tears of
joy and happiness. Sure, to the average person my time wasn’t that impressive
or great, certainly nothing life altering, but for me it was the symbol of
everything I have been thru the past 2 years and I literally wiped the tears
from my face.
I cannot describe in words what it felt like in those couple
moments after crossing the line and having a PR, when you had no idea you had
that inside of you. The pride I felt.
The concept of setting a goal early on and not letting it go, finishing what
you started. BEST FEELING EVER. Seriously one of the single coolest moments of
my entire life. This is what running
does for me. It gives me something
nothing else possibly can. It is my sanity. My health. My happiness. My
release. My sense of self. That moment is going to be hard to ever top. I might
have other PR’s in my life. I might not. Doesn’t really matter. But having that
PR on my 2 year anniversary to the day, while in San Jose, living this amazing
life that I could never have imagined. That is magical. That is what this is
all about anyway.
And to give you an idea of how crappy the heat might have
been. Chris was on track to PR himself, he might have been running too fast
honestly, because around mile 8 he passed out. I wasn’t around him, but apparently
he passed out into the bushes and he woken up by other people around him
offering him water and helping him. SCARY stuff. He walked after that, and did
not PR, but still had a great finish time despite passing out. I am glad I didn’t
see if because it would have freaked me out big time. Also so incredibly
grateful there were people around willing to stop their own runs to help him
out. Runners are good people.
That race is a memory I will treasure forever, and that
really is the point of all this after all.
2 comments:
What an awesome race recap & what a way to celebrate 2 years! I love your hair! It looks amazing.
Congratulations on your PR! You are amazing and I have loved following your progress over the years. You are very inspiring. Your hair looks absolutely gorgeous! :)
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