I feel like there might just be certain people in this world
born crazy. Or at least with that certain extra little something inside them
that drives them beyond what a normal person would think rational. I have
always know that I was a certain kind of passionate crazy. I have always known
that while I am just what I am and I can’t apologize for it, that truthfully
few people will ever understand my drive.
Hell, even I don’t get it sometimes.
But fortunately for me I have found an equally insane person in Chris
who gets it and goes with me. That was
probably part of the attraction from the start. We both recognized the same
insanity in each other. While it can
make for turmoil at times, it also helps us understand and go with things. I would probably would not come up with quite
so many hair brained plans if I didn’t have a partner in crime. It wouldn’t be
as much fun.
So this is where we are at today. I am sore. I ran a
marathon yesterday and it was vastly, crazy different than the first one. Almost night and day difference. I had expectations going in of what I
“should” be able to do if conditions were right. That meant pace/timing
etc. I also had fears that having run a marathon
exactly 2 weeks prior that this would end up messing with my timing and pace.
That somehow I wouldn’t be fully prepared to run it. Perhaps I will always forever have
trepidation about running 26.2 miles. It
is a very long way after all.
We met the people at the expo on Saturday and they were
lovely people. So thankfully that all went down very nicely. I was nervous Saturday night. Not actually
about running 26.2 miles, but suddenly slightly nervous because what if I
couldn’t run it at a 4 hour 30 minute pace as I had claimed I could. What if part of that 5 hour finish time was
simply because that is how long it was going to take me to run a marathon? Maybe I was delusional you see. I didn’t worry too much about it. In fact
considering that I was running a full marathon the next morning you’d think I might actually be more nervous
than I actually was. I didn’t put as
much thought into my prep for it and I was kind of like, ah, let’s just do
it.
So we arrived fairly early Sunday morning which was
good. We lined up. Lots of people.
Thousands really. The half and the full started together and ran part of the
same course. As soon as our corral
finally made its way to the start and the buzzer sounded I immediately felt
great, but also immediately felt like I couldn’t move. So many people, I was not running nearly as
fast as I wanted. Frustrating but also maybe fine because it was a slight
forced pacer in the beginning to allow my body to warm up. So the first 2 miles were SLOW because of all
the people. Then we hit a hill and I forced myself up it pretty well. Then mile
3 was pretty much all downhill and my legs took off. This is also about the
time the heard started to separate and I could move freely. Mile 3 was amazing fast and I felt the
momentum after that. I ran GREAT! I was
running a 9:30 minute mile pace for lots of miles. I got this I thought. But secretly I knew this was too fast. But I didn’t care. The air felt amazing. It was beyond perfect
marathon running weather. The air was so
crisp and clean. Thank you Oregon for
being beautiful. I had forgotten how
much I truly love and appreciate being an Oregonian. Beautiful fresh air!
The first 10-12 miles were blissful. I loved every second of
them. I was flying. And I thought boy if
I was running a half marathon this thing would feel fabulous and I’d almost be
done. I was also expecting more hills
than there proved to be in the first half of the marathon. This is fabulous I
thought. My body is a beast and it’s holding up great. Of course it’s easy to think and feel this 10
miles into a 26 mile run.
So somewhere around the 13 mile mark, about halfway, I
started to notice slight issues with things. Like for some reason it felt like
my pants were chaffing around my waist. Weird. This has NEVER happened, not a
single time in all the runs I’ve ever done. And I’ve run half marathons in
these pants before. That’s interesting.
And at about mile 13 I noticed and realized that a big blister was forming on
my baby pinky toe on my left foot. Nothing one can do about that at mile 13 of
a full marathon. I knew it was forming
and that by the end it was going to be a full sized gigantic blister. I ran
on.
My overall pace was solidly at 9:40 minute miles all the way
until mile 16 when we came upon a fairly significant hill. I was still feeling okay at this point and
running solid. I “ran” up the hill as much as one can actually run up hills. At
the top of the hill I was greeted to a fabulous view from a gorgeous bridge. Of
course at this point my overall pace had begun to slip just a little. Hills.
But I was still under a 10 minute mile pace.
I ran on. Mile 17, Mile 18. I
started to think, hmm… this hurts more than last time. Stupid chafing. Stupid
toe. Stupid quads on fire. I ran on.
Mile 19. Mile 20. This is
AWESOME. Yes, more painful for sure, but awesome. This is EXACTLY what I
thought running a marathon would feel like. Hard, intense, satisfying. Did I
mention hard? Why does this hurt so much?
Mile 20 something, I am still under a 10 minute mile pace. But why aren’t I done already. You seriously
want me to run another 6.2 miles, that’s like over an hour. Oh GOD, I have to
run another hour. What the HELL…. Mile
21. This blows. But I’m still at less than 10 minute mile pace. No way I am
going to keep this long term.
Math. Lots of math in my head on an exhausted body. Kept
running numbers over and over. Again and again.
Can I still get a sub 4:30 marathon time if I slow down a bunch because
I knew the slowdown was coming. Mile 22.
Pace was 9:58 minute miles but I was no longer a 10 minute mile pace. It was more
like 11 minute miles. I knew eventually it would tick over. Mile 22.5 I held on to exactly 10:00 minute
mile pace. A little after mile 22.5 it turned over to a 10:01 pace. Sigh.
Everything was hurting at this point. It was more like foot shuffling. I seriously
felt like I was just barely moving my feet. But I was still around 11 minute
miles so I was in fact running. But it sucked.
Mile 23. Okay only 3 miles to go. Just a 5k. More math. If I
run 11 minute miles I will finish at x time. Blah, blah blah. Everything is on
fire. Why is this hurting so much more
than the last time? Maybe because I’m really running. I’m running a decent pace
for a long period of time. This hurts. This sucks. Oh, there’s the mile 24 sign.
How did it take me like forever to get to this sign? Oh God. Somewhere post
mile 24 I hit a wall. I literally thought I was going to throw up right there.
I had to slow down. I wanted to vomit so badly. My stomach was turning. The
pain in my quads was practically unbearable.
The adorning supporters all along the side of the road now seemed like a
sad reminder of the fact that I could barely move instead of motivating me it
felt like I was a disappointment. Oh body, just run. I tried to will myself to run. Mile 24-25 was brutal. I swear it felt like
an eternity. I was miserable and felt sick. And pain. I tried to run. I swear
time stood still, and yet it was an 11:47 minute mile. Still not horrible. For
this point in the race. I had a moment at Mile 24 where I was like, this feels
so horrible, why the hell did I want to do this? Maybe I will be good if I
never ever run another marathon again. Maybe after I finish this, I’m good.
Maybe I don’t need to do this anymore. I already proved I could. Maybe I’m just done.
Mile 25. Okay, only 1.2 to go. And yet I almost wanted to
cry. This was the wall. This was the pain. I saw the 4:25 pace group go by me
and I had nothing left in my legs to try and keep with them. There goes
4:25. I tried to run on. Mile 25 was awful. This was the home stretch and
there were literally hundreds of people lining the streets. And I had to walk
for a second and then shuffle by. Mile
26 was my slowest mile, 12:01. But I still think that was primarily ran. I came
into the finish chute and I tried to tell myself no matter how much pain you
are in, just run! Just finish. Even if it’s the slowest run of your life, just
run. It was slow. But I crossed the line and got my medal and saw my time. 4:28
something on my watch which would later be officially confirmed as 4:28:33 and
I was happy. And I stood for a moment in the finishers chute relieved. And
proud.
This was in fact what I was expecting from a marathon. This
was the feeling I was thinking I would have all along. The feeling of
satisfaction. Of knowing that I “ran” a marathon. I pretty much ran all of it.
I walked a few moments in the last 2 miles. But I’d say probably honestly
combined like a quarter of a mile tops.
So I ran pretty much 26 miles straight. That is what I’m calling a
success. That is running a marathon. I don’t think you can finish a marathon in
4:28 and not pretty much run the whole thing. I had a moment standing post
finish line looking over at all the hoopla going on around me and I almost got
teary. I just did it. Sub 4:30 marathon.
I ran a marathon. But almost
instantly I was taken back to the reality at hand, the burning of my quads and
calves. The hunger that was psychotically prevalent. I wanted to eat
everything. EVERYTHING. Oddly absent was the feeling of wanting to vomit. Yes, I got sick at mile 24 but that went away
the moment I stopped running. And oddly I never felt the urge again. Post Maui
I threw up for an hour straight almost. Guessing it was heat related mostly.
Because instead of feeling sick, I felt like I hadn’t eaten in days.
I made my way thru the finishers corral where I found a
place to sit down and call Chris. He had finished the marathon in 4:17:51 so
about 10 minutes ahead of me. Ironically he finished Maui about 10 minutes
ahead of me as well so apparently this is spread. Right around 10 minutes. We drove home and stopped at the grocery
store where all I wanted to do was EAT. Everything. And that is exactly what I
did. No joke pretty sure I ate like 10,000 calories post run but I didn’t care.
I just kept wanting to eat and eat. And sleep.
Eat. Sleep. Eat. Sleep.
Actually running 26.2 miles is vastly different than a half
marathon. Aside from being double the distance it is really like triple the
amount of work and wear and tear. It’s like the marathon is broken into 3
parts. Mile 1-13.1 (the half) Mile 13.1- Mile 20 (manageable) Mile 20-26.2 (the
real struggle and race) All 3 parts are
equally hard. Seriously. As hard as the first 13.1 miles is, no doubt the final
6.2 is just as brutal. You could almost say it is 1-13.1, 13.1-21, and
21-26.2. Honestly the last 5 miles are
as difficult and painful as the first 2 parts are. It’s the last 5 that challenge your mental
fortitude and desire. It’s the last 5 miles that make you a marathoner. It’s
how you handle the pressure when there is an ache in your legs and a sincere
desire to quit. It’s the last 5 that
determine who you really are. For the most part I passed. I still have some
growing to do but I passed. 4:28:22. I passed.
In the end my overall results were as such:
Overall: 2498 out of 5550 (top 45% of ALL participants)
Female: 966 out of 2841 (Top 34% of ALL females)
Women 35-39: 171 out of 453 (Top 37% of ALL comparable aged
women)
I am very pleased with these results. Honestly to be in the
top half of all categories is amazing and top 34% or almost 1/3 of all females,
well that’s kickass! Considering I don’t really consider myself a runner
working on speed.
So I had that moment of this shit is HARD. REALLY hard.
Running 26.2 miles is not easy. It’s painful and it hurts and maybe I don’t
need to ever do it again. But that
feeling quickly passed. Actually even as soon as I had the thought while
running I thought, no. Of course you are doing this again. That’s where my crazy comes into play.
There is absolutely no feeling quite like crossing the
finish line of a marathon. For a few brief moments everything else fades away
and I feel like I accomplished something so remarkable. And the feeling of satisfaction
and pride. It’s priceless. Yes these
marathons come with a price tag but the reward is priceless. I am a freaking marathoner. It hurts. It’s
painful. It’s torturous and it’s glorious. It’s amazing. It’s magical. It’s
worth all the suffering.
I knew I had a sub 4:30 in me and I’m glad I had the
opportunity to confirm that. Yeah me!
Now time to figure out what’s next.
1 comment:
Hey, it's great reading this post. I'm seriously trying to sort out the crazy drive to do things I'm not entirely sure are sane or possible... You see I am looking into a mud run in about 8 months... and serious training because well my body is a wreck.
I just finished off my first 5k (a color run that I posted about on my foolsfitness.blogspot.com blog)
It's a weird drive thing. I'm glad to see you posting about you working out and trying to figure it all out. Maybe we just sort of got to run with it (no pun intended)
For me and the 5k (remember 5k but a guy over 330 lbs) in training I actually ran till I bled at times. But people with obsession and drive beyond reason are the only real kind I think that make big differences in the world. Right?
Well keep me in your prayers please as I figure out how to do a mud run at foolsfitness - alan
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