I make 26.2 Look Good

Brightroom posted the photos from the Nike Women’s Marathon the other day, and let me tell you, there were some winners in my group. And by winners, I mean epic failures.  But, because I have no shame, I will share some of them with you.

Here we are crossing the finish line. This one isn’t actually terrible, I kind of like it, but I don’t think I ordered this one.

It’s hard to tell from the thumbnail but the look on my face is a combination of joy/pain/tears

This one is even better, my arms look stupid, my face looks like I’m about to die.

I actually ordered this one, because I think it’s hilarious and very typical Catherine. Here I am laughing like an idiot. This was early on in the run, possibly still on Embarcadero.

Power walking like a champ! 

Insane smile.

This is the one I did order, I think…they all start to blend together.

So, they’re not all terrible, in fact I guess now that I’m looking at them all here they aren’t half bad.  I do wish there was a slightly better one of me actually crossing the finish line, but I’ll take it! Next time, I won’t wear so much crap. I could have left the Camelbak and been fine, even though it really came in handy carrying all the Gu and our phones.

Nike Women’s Marathon – Race Recap

To see my recap of our experience at the Nike Women’s Marathon Expo go here

The night before the race, I laid out everything I would need for the morning. Even though the race didn’t start as early as others (7am start time) we wanted to be well rested and good to go in the morning.

Camelbak, iPod, bib, Garmin, knee brace, hat, Spibelt full of Shotblocks and tylenol. We woke up at 5am to have enough time to eat and get to the race by 6am so we’d have plenty of time to use the restroom, and find our pace group. When we were up and dressed, we each ate a peanut butter sandwich, and my dad drove us to the start area.

Remember my disappointment in the organization of the Expotique? Yeah, that carries over to the start area as well.  Nike set up the start area in Union Square where the Expo was held.  The corrals were supposed to be easy to find along the street, but sadly, Janna and I never found our corral. We hopped in with the 11:00-11:59 group because even after walking up and down the street we never found the 12:00 group. While there were plenty of port-a-potties, the lines were insane.  We didn’t check bags, so I can’t really comment on that other than the signage around the area was not sufficient as no one seemed to know where the bag check was.  There was a huge amount of gridlock trying to get into the corrals, as people were simply crowding in the intersections between the potties and the bag checks.  There were no volunteers helping to direct people, so everyone was just crammed against each other, not moving.   When we were finally able to push our way through there was tons of space within the actual corrals.  We ended up starting near the pace leader for a 5:10 marathon (the pacers were all wearing pink and had special hats as well as signs which looked really helpful) and hoped to stay with her as long as possible.

The race started on time, which was great, and getting to the starting line didn’t seem much more difficult than the other two races we’ve done, but it was at this time we started to notice, as full marathon participants, we were outnumbered.  It seemed like the half marathoners took up a HUGE portion of the participants.

Once we crossed the start line, the first mile was downhill, which while nice meant that our starting pace was too fast, and it was difficult to slow down.  We tried our best to avoid zig zagging around people, in order to save our energy, but of course, there was some necessary bobbing and weaving.  The first water station was NOT prepared for runners.  I was wearing my Camelbak so I didn’t stop, but Janna said none of the cups were ready to go when the runners got there.  Granted, our group crossed the start line about 24 minutes after 7:00am but still.  The first part of the course went along the Embarcadero which was really nice. The weather was perfect, a bit overcast and cool, so running along the water was refreshing.  Plus, there were great views of the bay.  We kept going along the Embarcadero past Fisherman’s Warf and then up the first hill which wasn’t too bad.  Janna and I were able to run up the hill with no problems, this brought us around to pass just below Ghirardelli Square before turning to go up hill number two.  This hill also wasn’t too terrible, and it meant there was a nice downhill into the Safeway Cheer Zone, which was by far the most energetic cheer zone on the course.

From here we went through the Marina which was gorgeous, and then past Chrissy Field which had amazing views of The Golden Gate Bridge. Here’s where things started to kind of get crowded.  People were stopping to take pictures which is great for them, but a pain in the ass if you’re behind them.  We had to make a potty break just before the first really big hill at Fort Mason, and we waited for a good amount of time in line which was a bummer.  The next bummer comes when we tried to get up the hill at Fort Mason. Yes, it’s a HILL, but it wasn’t as terrible as we were expecting.  However, I was never able to keep a good rhythm getting around all the slow ass walkers and people who decided to just stop right in the middle of the road.  I get it, hills are tough, but seriously? You signed up for a race in SAN FRANCISCO. Janna was able to find a pocket and get around people, but I got stuck attempting to power walk the hill.  We stopped off to the side after we got down the hill to take a picture in front of Alcatraz and then kept on trucking.

Getting through the Presidio was another challenge, since there was a hill, a plateau, then another hill followed by a super steep downhill section.  The Presidio is gorgeous and everything was lush and green which was nice, but man. Steep downhill was not kind to my knees.  I stopped at mile 7 to take some tylenol. I saw the first bike medic along the course here who was helping someone ace bandage an ice pack to one of her knees.  I thought the idea of having medics on bikes along the route was brilliant. Too bad this guy had run out of ice packs.  Around this time we came through one of the Team in Training cheer sections which was great, and also heart wrenching.  The posters featuring sick kids and friends and family people had lost was both depressing and motivational at the same time.  Know so much money was going to a great cause felt really good.

The course was still really crowded all through the Sea Cliff area, where we hit another pretty big hill.  There were also fewer spectators, although the folks from Kaiser were handing out orange slices which was great.  Once we got into Golden Gate Park we had to make another bathroom stop. Janna used one of the real park bathrooms and I stretched. We had just crossed mile 11 and were still feeling pretty good.  We’d been maintaining a decent pace the entire time, so we were feeling pretty confident. I don’t really remember anything too exciting happening again until we split off from the half marathoners in Golden Gate Park. There was a HUGE cheering section as the half marathoners spilt off, and for us full marathoners?

 

NOTHING.

 

No, seriously. NOTHING at all.  In fact, there was a stretch of nearly 5 miles where there were no spectators and the only reason we knew we were still on the course was because we kept seeing mile markers. Let me tell you, after running for that long, to hit that long with nothing was a HUGE downer.  The volunteers seemed to be totally distracted, and most of them gave the impression that they couldn’t care less about the runners.  One guy was asleep in a lawn chair. We were joined by the half marathoners again very briefly before they headed toward their finish line.  Then, when we turned around and came out of the park onto The Great Highway, we began running into people crossing the street in hordes.  Keep in mind, we were just about to hit mile 17, so having to wait for people to cross the street in front of us, paying no mind to the runners still trying to finish the full marathon was really annoying.

As we were passing the mile 17 marker, we looked across the median at all the people coming up on the mile 25 marker.  Looking at Mile 25 from the other side of the road, just past mile 17 was kind of heartbreaking.  My knee was really starting to hurt at this point, and knowing just how close and yet so far the finish was really hit me hard.

Nike had several Power Song stations set up along the course, most of which were kind of “meh” for me.  You could only hear them a few yards before the station and then a few yards after but the station just before the finish line was playing “Eye of the Tiger” so Janna and I were singing as we passed that one. I had to start walk/running around mile 18 when my knee was finally starting to yell at me.  In fairness to my knee, I did tell it to “STFU” around mile 7, so it held out for another 10 miles before getting really annoyed.

Miles 19-23 were especially tough for me, heading around the loop of Lake Merced nearly killed me.  I knew it wasn’t THAT far really, but I also knew what landmarks we’d need to pass in order to get back to the Great Highway and onto the finish line area. Very few spectators along the last stretches of Great Highway and all around Lake Merced made this additionally challenging.  We did get some chocolate at mile 21 which was nice, but at that point I had emptied my Camelbak (I was also having some chaffing issues on my shoulder blade from the Camelbak) and was thirsty and hungry, and my Shotblocks and Gus weren’t doing much to help.  I started feeling a bit light headed around mile 21 and really had to walk almost all of the rest of the course.

It was around this point when grumblings started coming through the people around us that we might not finish in time to get our finisher necklaces or an official time.  This did not motivate me to move faster, it simply made me feel even more defeated and miserable.  We kept moving along as fast as I could go, power walking as much as possible.  Eventually just around Mile 24 we hooked up with a Team in Training coach and two runners who were struggling.  When a man on a motorcycle rode past and told us if we weren’t finished in 15 minutes we’d not only be pulled off the course but we would not be official finishers and we would not get our necklace.

Thankfully the TNT coach told us what was really going on.  She told us to ignore the asshole, and keep going. We’d already made it so far and we should be proud of ourselves.  She also told us we were ABSOLUTELY going to finish and get our necklaces and our official times.  We stuck with them until almost the very end where in the last three tenths of a mile Janna and I ran our little hearts out across the finish line.  Just before the finish line a TNT coach cheered us on saying “YOU’RE ABOUT TO FINISH! YOU ARE A MARATHONER!!”  I was nearly in tears.  Then, as we came up to the finish area I saw my parents and nearly started crying again.  My dad was jumping up and down and screaming for us, and my mom was waving like crazy.

We crossed the finish line running, and with smiles on our faces, and happily took our Tiffany Finisher necklace and our finisher T-shirts.

While I was disappointed with some of the organization of this race, I am SO proud of myself for finishing.  Even if it did take me 6:24:17.

Check back soon for some fun/unflattering/hilarious photos from my Brightroom bunch. HA!

Nike Women’s Marathon Weekend – Expo

I was a terrible blogger this weekend and didn’t take very many pictures, but I can still do my race weekend re-caps, right?

Friday I worked from 8-2:30 so I would have enough time to get home, finish packing and change before leaving for the airport. Janna and I got there early, so we hit up Gladstone’s in our terminal for an early dinner, and then got lucky and were able to get on an earlier flight up to San Francisco.

Saturday afternoon, Janna, my dad and I walked up to BART to head to the Nike Expotique. I know I’ve only been to two expos, but I have to say I found this one to be disappointing.  In fact, the disappointment in the organization of some of the parts of this weekend would continue.

The best part about the Expotique was that we didn’t have to wait in a very long line to get our bibs. Otherwise, it was kind of frustrating. One of the things I look forward to about expos is all the vendors, the samples, the things to check out.  Because this was hosted by Nike, they were really the only vendor.  There was a section for the Pom Wonderful people, a section for the Neutrogena people, for Paul Mitchell and Safeway (who had a place you could ride a bike to blend a smoothie) but in terms of gear, it was a complete Nike show.  There was a stage set up in the back of the tent where they had people touting the Nike GPS watch, a section for sports bra fittings and a section with a gait analysis that would then pair you with the best pair of Nike shoes.  There were some other smaller booths outside the tent area, but it was difficult to navigate them because the walkway was pretty narrow, and people were crowding around places.  I think the most frustrating part came when we realized we didn’t have t-shirts in our packets.  We had to ask three different people to learn that we got the t-shirts at the finish line.

Janna needed some socks, so we headed over to Niketown just across from the Expo tent, and it too was a madhouse.  I know one of Nike’s things is having Djs at events, but holy crap. It was like being in a club. Way too loud, and while the marathon gear was really cute, it was also REALLY expensive.  I’m taking $60+ for a sweatshirt.  Janna found some socks and we each purchased a NWM11 tank to wear during the race, but were kind of sad that the other items were so expensive.  They also had t-shirts for the half marathon that had a cool graphic 13.1  but nothing for the 26.2.

As we were leaving Niketown we discovered they had wrapped the side window of the store in all of the participants names.  We found our names and took pictures with them :) This was actually kind of a really nice touch, and one of the things I did like about their pre-race stuff.

After the expo and shopping we stopped at a restaurant to get some lunch.  We had pizza which was quite tasty, and then headed home.  Dinner on Saturday night was good old fashioned pasta, bread and salad.  It was tasty, filling and just what we needed.  We were both in bed early and ready to get a good night’s sleep for our big day!

Finisher!

After yesterday’s Nike Women’s Marathon, I can now officially say:

I AM A MARATHONER!

Full re-cap to follow :)

Why “Cutting Back,” Isn’t the Same as “Rest”

I wrote a while ago that I’d been having knee pain, and that I was pretty certain said knee pain was Runner’s Knee.  I emailed my doctor and she advised me to “rest,” ice, stretch and do strength training.  I was pretty good about the ice, and a little better about the stretch, and I’ve been doing more strength training, but the one thing I didn’t really follow, and seemingly have never really followed properly, was “REST.” Here’s the thing, I’m not really all that great at doing what I’m told.  Especially when I’m told something I don’t like. I am highly stubborn, but I try to be friendly about it. So, I will smile, and nod and tell the doctor,  “Yes, I understand, ok, rest….yes, yes, rest.”  But, in my head I will think “So….rest? Yeah, that doesn’t actually mean NO running….it just means less running!”

See, in my mind, “rest” could mean simply “cutting back!”  So, I wouldn’t run during the week, but I’d still attempt my long run on the weekends (I know, clearly I’m an idiot.) But, the knee pain wasn’t going away, and with last week’s acceptance into the Nike Women’s Marathon (yes, Marathon as in 26.2 miles,) in San Francisco this October, I realized I needed, to but it bluntly, not fuck around.  I’m just bein real real folks. I want to be fully healthy and ready to make those 26.2 miles my bitch.

So, as of right now, I am working on the rest part. For example, today, I did some strength training and elliptical because it doesn’t bother my knee.  Then, I came home, did some push ups and ate ice cream.  I don’t know what’s going on, but I have been a sweet tooth monster lately, and I’m hoping it’s just hormonal, because I also ate cheesy bread for dinner and was so incredibly happy about it.

I’m going to be real, real with you right now too, last week, at work, was hellacious.  It was probably one of the worst weeks I’ve had at work in a while, and spending my evenings and this weekend tearing through The Mortal Instruments series (Don’t hate! I have been reading YA lit like no one’s business,) was super therapeutic, and exactly what I needed.

More real real, I just got my T.C.R.G. exam pack in the mail today, and I am freeeeeaked out. The jig part of my Jig and Jog is like an Irish jig, and studying for the T.C.R.G. exam is almost as scary to me as preparing to run 26.2 miles.  I plan on getting more into the process and you know, explaining what the hell all this means in the near future, but it’s a pretty big deal for me, and it’s going to be a lot of work.  Also, yes, that is a scratch on my neck (Bits is in heat AGAIN,) and I really do look that tired and crazy today. Yay Monday!  But, in fairness, I am making a really weird face. I don’t always look like this….only you know….most of the time. ;) I promise I clean up well.

See! Don’t mind the margarita….

Well, until next time folks, which I promise won’t be nearly as long as last time ;)

 

Running the She Runs LA 10k

Yesterday was a frustrating day for me in my professional life, so I was definitely looking forward to working out some anger during my She Runs LA 10k.  It was tough, and because our treadmills have an hour stopping point, my iPod didn’t record my workout correctly, but I did it!  I have to be honest, with my knees the way they’ve been feeling lately, I wasn’t sure I’d be able to finish the 6.2 miles, and while it did take me an hour and 45 minutes to do so, I finished.  By mile two, my left knee was hurting, which I knew wasn’t good, especially since 6 miles felt so far away when I looked at the treadmill and saw I still had 4.2 to go.

I have to admit, at one point, I questioned the intelligence of getting ready to train for a full 26.2 miles while I was struggling to finish 6.  The truth is, 26.2 miles terrifies me.  It’s intense, and the Nike Women’s Marathon course is very hilly. It will be beautiful as long as the weather cooperates, but the hills are described as a “welcome challenge,” which to me is a nice way of saying they will be “handing your ass to you.”

However, I have an advantage in that I know what I need to do, I know I need to train on hills, so I’ll just have to find some hills that comparable to those in San Francisco, and work my ass off. I also know I probably need to take some time off of running to rest my knees before I begin rigorous training.  There will be lots of ice.

Thankfully, I felt great after the run mentally, if not physically.  I then went home, made dinner for myself and friends, had a big glass of wine and half a carrot cake cupcake.  It was excellent.

Tonight, Janna and I are going to the She Runs LA party downtown.  I’m pretty excited, I think it will be fun!

In other news, I got my first issue of Runner’s World in the mail today.  Hurray!

I was up at 5:30 this morning to be at work for a board meeting, so I’m going to lounge and read a bit before I need to do some cleaning and then I’ll be off to the par-tay! I’ll fill you all in on the events of the evening ;)

 

Don’t Worry! Maybe It Won’t Happen!

On Monday, I got an email from the Disney Half Marathon people saying basically, sorry, you didn’t make it from the waitlist!  I was really, really disappointed.  I had my heart set on running the Disney half again this year, but, apparently it sold out in only a few weeks.  Crazy!

About an hour after that email, I got an email from the Nike Women’s Marathon people.  So, one of my running buddies and I each put our names in for the random drawing to see if we can register.  We’ll see what happens, we should know in the next few weeks.  I’m not going to lie, I am terrified. It’s not just a full marathon, it’s a full marathon in San Francisco, and the course map elevation is scary. Obviously, there are LOTS of hills.  REALLY BIG hills. I’m really, and truly afraid I won’t be able to finish. But, as my subject line says, Don’t Worry! Maybe It Won’t Happen!

See?!! Check out that elevation map at the bottom. WTF?!

The good news, is there are 27 weeks until the Nike Women’s marathon, and, if we don’t get in to that race either, as an absolute last ditch effort to get into Disney we could try and squeeze in with a charity (if there are any spaces left.)

What scares you? Would you ever do the thing that scares you most?

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