Monday, December 31, 2012

December Lessons

December's goal was straight training...no tapers... no races... JUST DO IT.  USAT's National Challenge Competition NCC really motivated me because "time" was eliminated in this competition.  I definitely put in the miles so I thought I really had a chance to kick some ass, even if slowly ! hahaha just so happens that Women's 45-49 AG is fiercely competitive and it is taking all my strength to stay in the top 10 but I am hanging in there, so that's my goal instead of a podium finish at the end of February! All month I worked on cadence and steady pace and thinking about technique.  I'm starting to see an improvement in my time now at the end of December.  For example, I swam in 58 degree water for 1.2 miles to mimic Oceanside conditions and finished in 40:23 which is 13 minutes faster than last year! I almost doubled my monthly mileage compared to November by breaking over 700 miles total distance! Although I really love the motivation initiated by NCC, I'm really looking forward to my next race January 5!

Total Swim Miles 40267 YDs = 22.88 miles ; AVG Wk 9235 yds = 5.25 miles
Total Bike Miles 581.67 ; AVG wk 124.40 mi
Total Run Miles 102.42 ; AVG wk 21.06 mi
Avg Weekly Hours 16.34 hours
Total Duration 75:30 hours
Total Distance 706.96 miles

I did have a major interruption this month so I'm glad I didn't have any races.  I had to learn to juggle constant interruptions around my training. We survived an eviction process at our rental property.  It was the worst experience ever in the 12 yrs we have owned the property. We learned the SD courts could care less about the landlord and the tenants have all the rights to live in your home for as long as possible.  It is absurd how paperwork can take weeks and get screwed up.  We were very lucky in that while the wife was in jail overnight, the husband helped me move them out of the house into portable storage units.  It took me all night until 4:30am and Marcus was out of state but it worked, because he signed a transfer of possession and I changed the locks immediately in the morning.  I've spent the 2nd half of December working with contractors to repair the property and finally as of today, it is ready for sale and looks amazing...Let's hope we have a little luck and it sells fast.  It will go on the market Jan 4 and I hope this chapter closes very soon!

My second interruption although quite a different experience is our new red/white Boston Terrier, Ruby. We have 2 cats and 1 dog who are not very happy with the 5 lb bundle of energy.  Ruby arrived Dec 24 and has stolen all our hearts immediately.  The adult kids are home so the entire family is raising and training this little new born pup.  She is very smart, already fetching and returning balls, and is very attentive and self-entertaining.  She terrorizes Caramello who is 8 yrs old but we hope in time they will become friends and soon Caramello will return to an active lifestyle rather than just a furry rug since his brother passed away almost 2 yrs ago. Hopefully Ruby will become my running partner but for now, walking with Caramello is the current work-in-progress!


Big Dogs Don't BONK! Lovin' the Hammergel package!

I like being a furry rug! WHY ME???

Seriously... leave me alone Squirt!

OMG now we have to WALK together too??

Ruby Red is our little gem!
So, I trained hard in December and hope 2013 will show it as I jump into a new age group division 50-54s on Jan 1, 2013! YIPEEEE! Those 45+ women are amazing, competititive, and exhausting to keep up with!

Sunday, December 2, 2012

November 2nd Half Lessons Learned


My journey to Earth moon status in the Half Fanatics running club continued in November.  After completing 3 halfs in 8 days in Santa Barbara, Malibu and Fountain Valley, I had a short week to recover and fit in tri training per my 70.3 schedule for week 2.

I was able to squeeze in 42 out of the required 50 easy bike miles over 3 days but not a swim.  I decided I usually swim double the distance required on a weekly basis so taking a week off wasn't going to matter much and I could make it up next week for recovery. I decided not to run at all after Fountain Valley until the triple halfs.  It worked well because I could tell my legs were fresh as soon as I started to run on Turkey Day 1.  I took my usual Sport Legs dosage to help manage lactic acid during each race and prepared my post race Recoverite drink for immediate protein for muscle repair. I wore my CW-X compression tights every day and wore calf compressions otherwise.


The Run Turkey Run triple event was in Carmichael, CA near Sacramento along the American River.  I had no idea how beautiful this area was and the colors were just gorgeous!  I ate pasta instead of turkey on Thanksgiving and Day 1 was a super success without any GI issues!  My legs felt fresh and loved my CW-X compression tights.  I took an icebath soon after the run to prepare for the next day. Race #4 was a complete success! Running 13.5 miles didn't bother me at all. I stayed with the 10 minute run/ 1 minute walk rhythm sporatically because I kept missing the alarm to walk and I felt really good too.
On Day 2, race #5, we ran the opposite direction along the American River.  It was a little more hilly but not as colorfully scenic.  I soon felt a lot of tightness in my lower back about midway through the run.  I usually use the jacuzzi before bed but our hotel didn't have one. I didn't realize how much this helped me relax.  I learned about leg drains after a long run to freshen the blood flow and it helped my back to lay flat on the ground immediately after the run.  However, I was thankful the race director gave me her room key to use her hotel's jacuzzi after Day 2.  I used a heating pad throughout the night to continue relaxing my back muscles as well.  Never again will I assume the hotel has a jacuzzi! So glad I brought all my "after run" gadgets for "just in case" scenarios.
 
 



leg drain for fresh blood flow!
Day 3, race #6, went much better than I expected.  My back had loosened up and Marcus joined me on my last half marathon. I stayed with the 10 minute run, 1 minute walk plan pretty close this time because I was definitely feeling extra weight in my legs. I recognized that I really enjoy running in cool weather because I can focus on the journey and the environment.  Overheating really takes the joy out of running for me and I don't see much of the journey when I'm cranky or pushing for speed so honestly I can't see myself racing in the Vineman series with the 90 degree heat during the run portion. My son joined our run with about 3 miles remaining and we arrived at the finishline to see 7 of Marcus's family members there to greet us! It was a great way to finish my journey to Earth status! On the way home, we were excited to see wild Turkey crossing the street! 


In total, I ran 40.37 miles in three days and 39.91 in the previous 8 days for a total of  80.28 miles during 6 halfs in 16 days.  I am happy that my brain has accepted that I really could run a full marathon again and survive without too much pain.  I just had such a bad experience running my first full marathon in 2011 that I needed something special to get me through that barrier and running 3 halfs in 3 days cured me! I also think finding the Galloway run/walk pattern that fits you best can really help recovery.
 
 
I think I've crossed over the 26.2 barrier now... thinking a full marathon is in the near future again.










Santa Barbara, Malibu, Fishbowl, RunTurkeyRun day 1, day 2, day 3

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

November Lessons Learned First Half

November is all about running for me.  It's about pushing my mental and physical limits and fighting for something that seems possible and yet not all that common. I have great respect for marathon runners and the ultra marathoners are more like aliens to me but it's all relative. I read a quote that made a lot of sense: " you are the average of the 5 people you spend the most time with"...so triathletes train for 4-5 different levels. Runners train for 4-5 levels.  It's that 5th level that seems so extreme to the outsider but yet so common to those that have completed the 4th level so often.  I think we athletes seek the next level of challenge to be "not so average".  My challenge is to run 6 halfs in 16 days - one double, one single, one triple half marathon race. This will get me to Earth, my 6th moon level, with the Half Fanatics.  There are 3000+ in the club and once past the 5th level, 6-10th gets to be pretty tough to achieve.  When I do achieve my goal, and others look at me like I'm nuts, of course I will just say... but what about those at level 7-10? what about the Marathon Maniacs that can run 6 FULL marathons in 16 days?  What about the Ultra Marathon runners 50+ miles per race?  There's always another level of achievement, but for me, I think this goal is about all my left foot can endure until surgery.  I will have to be careful not to injure myself and not push too hard because this is about the preparation, the journey, the finish, and not the PR. 

I look forward to wearing 6 medals + an extra for completing the triple. I am dedicating my goal/achievement to Sharon Chaix who is the strongest woman I know, and has been training by my side with breast cancer. I will wear a pink ribbon with her name so she will be with me every step of the way. When I feel weak, Sharon will be close to my heart pulling me forward as usual. I hope we both get to the end of this "race" with a clean bill of health and a big smile on our face! But first, I will start the month off with the last TCSD triclub race for 2012.

Nov 3: Fiesta Island Club Sprint Triathlon
All I can say is WOW thank you for the gorgeous weather!  and so sorry for the East coast : (  I PR.'d on all 3 legs of the race so my training was very apparent today.  I pushed as hard as I could especially on the bike but just couldn't hold 21mph for 12.5 miles.  I did hold it for at least 5 though so my average ended at 20.6.  My swim was 5 minutes faster than in October.  My run was steady 9:35 pace for 4 miles and I generally hover around 10 min/pace.  The temps were just amazing. My Sprint PR 1:32 (.42 mi swim/12.5 mi bike/4 mile run). Maybe I can break 1:30 next time!



In preparation for Oceanside 70.3, I have scheduled one monthly brick(bike/run) challenge on the actual course.  Today was the 2nd brick with a 40mi bike & 6.5 mi run.  My goal is to increase the bike 5 miles and the run 1 mile each month up to March where the final brick will be 60/10. I will do my very best to run the entire run distance after the bike, even if it's a slow jog.  the brick portion of the race was definitely a weakness in my training last year so this is most important. Bricks are exhausting, time consuming, and they tend to hurt near the end so I've thrown in an extra hill to run up at the very end. Today was a complete success even though the legs were definitely showing resistance after the Sprint event the day before. 
 
Now looking forward to my 6 halfs with light runs, no bricks, and rest in between Nov 10 - 25. 
 
Nov 10 Santa Barbara Half  #1/6
The best part of the race was the emphasis on Veteran's Day.  All military wore special red shirts and the were two flyovers during the run and the final mile was lined in American Flags.  Volunteers passed out handheld small flags to all the runners to carry along the final mile.  It was a beautiful run with lots of spectators and energy. The one hill was barely a blip to me and I also decided to practice Galloway's run/walk method to help quicken my recovery.  I decided to run 10 minutes and walk 1 minute right from the start.  It worked well and I took an ice bath to prepare my legs for the next day's run.
 
Nov 11 Malibu Half #2/6
This race was a bit unorganized. The expo was out of the way and just a bib pickup.  Our shuttle from the hotel to the starting line got us to the race late but they all waited for us. The half was much hillier than I expected.  I knew there were 3 significant hills but didn't count on the many rollers down the Pacific Coast Hwy.  I ran this race 6 minutes slower than SB but my thighs were trashed.  I loved that we received a Malibu beach towel instead of a tshirt at the finishline. This race is all coastline and very scenic.  The beautiful distractions really helped the pain I was feeling.  Took another icebath after this race but it took a few days to recover anyway with some minor shin splints so luckily the remaining 4 halfs are relatively flat.
 
Nov 17 Fishbowl Half - Fountain Valley #3/6
This was a very small race for Caring SHOS charity supporting homeless and low income kids trying to live and stay in school.  I loved the cause and happily donated extra funds to support their mission.  We ran in Mile Square Regional Park.  It was 3 loops that passed quickly.  The park was well groomed with ponds and ducks and beautiful greens. My run was actually 13.5 miles and I felt pretty good.  At least the shin splints were gone so the pain was minimal but we still kept the 10/1 cadence.

 
Nov 18 - Volunteer for IronMan Arizona
We drove from Fountain Valley about 2 hours after the Fishbowl Half to Tempe Town Lake, AZ which took 6 hours.  It's tough sitting after running 13 miles but we arrived at a gorgeous Marriott Resort and went straight to the jacuzzi!  My IT bands were pretty tight after the drive and this really helped a lot. I had a few goals for IMAZ which were to view each leg personally and visualize myself in this race next year.  Volunteering for a shift during IMAZ gets you an advanced opportunity to buy a $675 entry for the following year.  It's about the only way to gain entry since it sells out to the general public in less than 10 minutes. 
 
We awoke early to watch the racers prepare for their 2.4 mile swim in Tempe Town Lake. I can't even describe the energy in the area but it was raw and exciting! there are two bridges the swimmers passed under twice so it gave a perfect view of the 2500 in the mass start. I did believe it wasn't as scary as I had thought.  Yes 2500 swimmers at once is scary but I did see space and some start near the back and others on the sideline.  I am so thankful for my experience with TikiSwim which has now helped me become a confident long distance swimmer.  Before September, I wasn't sure, but now I know I can handle this swim.  It also averages 64 degrees and my experience in Palm Springs and Oceanside with water at 55-58 degrees makes Tempe seems like bath water. I recognized at this moment just how important experience in similar situations can really help your brain "believe" anything is possible.  I could definitely visualize myself among this "mass" in my future.


 
 

 As daylight arose with a beautiful sunrise, it was amazing to see the organization of the transition area with color coded bags for gear to support each leg of the race all in numerical order and bikes perfectly aligned awaiting the swimmers.  The racers prepare 6 months to a year just as the ironman directors, coordinators and volunteers to support this massive and complicated event.  The magnitude of effort was so inspiring. 
Although the elite pros arrive about 48 minutes later, the best part is after 2 hours when you see the determination of the weakest give their last drop of energy to arrive before the cut off at 2:20. I will never forget those that ended their day as they arrived too late or those that shook violently from hypothermia and needed a blanket or wheelchair to get to the med tent.  The first late swimmer arrived at 2:20:12 and she fell to the floor in a fetal position when the race director said her day had ended with those extra 12 seconds.  She stared at the timer in shock and cried violently that her efforts were short.  It hurt me enough to know that I never wanted to experience the cut off.  I must BELIEVE in all 3 legs of the race before I signup for IMAZ.

I really couldn't get a good feeling about the bike route.  I knew it was relatively flat but still 112 miles is a long way.  We brought our bikes in case we had enough time on Monday to ride one of the three loops before we left but again the best part was cheering in the last stragglers trying to make the 8:10 course time limit or 10:30 total time swim+bike. I imagined myself in a headwind struggling against mother nature and although today's weather was exceptional, it was the desert and in other years, the weather had been hell on the bike. I watched the clock and yelled for the cyclists to hurry to beat the clock.  I just can't imagine after 2.4 miles of swimming and 112 miles of cycling to arrive seconds after 10:30 to have my timing chip taken from me and be told my day was over...it would crush me... I walked away sad for this cyclist and decided I had some doubt on surviving without considerable pain like my previous 116 mile bike ride.  He was 17 seconds late.

 
I have incredible pain in my neck and shoulders during long bike rides and I'm very insecure in my physical ability to endure the pain AND run a marathon.  OMG "light bulb on" I have only run one marathon and never ran more than 13 miles after just 56 miles of cycling.  I have NO experience with longer distances so how do I know if I can get through it? I could be on a bike for 7 hours and then face a marathon?...wow.
 
So now it's time to watch the runners make 3 loops of 8+ miles each as far as possible in the daylight hours until darkness arrives by 6pm. Darkness means it gets much colder and the crowds thin out.  So I now know that getting through the bike as quickly as possible means there will be more time to run with the crowd's energy and this is magic fuel ... fuel...do I know how to manage nutrition for a 15 - 17 hour day?  wow no way... I have barely dialed it in for my ONE 70.3 race.  I have a lot to learn about nutrition to help me through the longest athletic day of my life.  I recognized quickly the importance of spectators as I screamed a name that I saw on the racer's bib. This personal cheering fed these runners like magic.  They looked like zombies until they heard their name called out in encouragement.  They gently smiled or gave a thumb's up in appreciation and I knew that it was important to be in a large race with a lot of spectators for a full ironman.  I would likely crumble if I didn't have spectator support.  I realized 3 loops might be a little boring but it makes it easier and exciting for spectators so they stay longer.  This is critical for the racer.
 










 
So my head is filled with IMAZ reflections at this point and eventually the day winds down to the 15th hour. This will likely be MY hour in the race or atleast I hope I don't need all 17 hours!  I can't imagine completing it any faster.  So I watch my triclub friends similar to my fitness level nearly throw themselves down the finisher's chute. Most are full of smiles and some are teary-eyed while others are visibly stiff and limping as the crowd goes wild for their amazing accomplishment. There are no words to describe when Mike Reilly announces YOU ARE AN IRONMAN and a family of strangers cheer for you like you are their best friend.  I want that feeling; I want to hear my name too.
 



Wednesday, October 31, 2012

October 2nd Half Lessons

October 2nd Half:
Brookline MA
My 2nd half of October started with a mini vacation to Boston and New York... it was hard to take a break but looking back it was worth it and the perfect time.  I ran/jogged around Brookline for 5 miles just taking in the most beautiful Fall scenery.  I think I had forgotten what autumn leaves looked like because I could just stop and stare and ooohhh and aaahhh repetitively! So wish I had taken a picture of the baby boston terrier so happy to be on his puppy run!
 
 
We visited the World Trade Center and Memorial and ran 5 miles around Central park and went to the ballet in NY. The crisp air was incredible and the scenario made me want to run laps forever... ok jog and take pictures! Sometimes running really slow can be a really special experience because you really SEE what you are passing.  I love destination runs!
 
New World Trade Center

9/11 Memorial

Central Park NY

Central Park NY
Upon our return, Saturday, Oct 20, I decided to set my base for my monthly Oceanside brick ride/run. I showed some friends the course as we biked from the pier out and back to Camp Pendleton for 40 miles in the misty rain (very similar to race day conditions 2012). I made up a 5.5 mile run route to cover the majority of the first loop of the race. We included the difficult sections of the run which are the ramps up and down the pier, running up Wisconsin, and then the dreaded concrete hill from Morse to Eaton. I hate this section because it is like you are in a tunnel of concrete with garage doors on one side and a beige concrete wall on the other side while running on an incline.  UGH! but I will train to love this route since I plan to extend the distance once a month. My ironman goal is to try my very best to run this entire 13.1 route March 30, 2013!
 
Oct 21, 2012: SheROX volunteer and Swim Buddy
I've really enjoyed working with the Newbies preparing for SheROX Sprint and Supersprint. I set up a facebook page so we could exchange support and it became a big hit! the SheROX Mentor/Mentee group was led by Bobbie Solomon and she offered free clinics for 3 months prior to the race. I had so many races that I could only attend 2 clinics for the bike and run preview so I didn't feel super close to specific people but I knew the mentees appreciated the FB page which I religiously supported daily.
 
I did feel super appreciated at the course preview with all their questions and thank yous.  It was very rewarding for me. I was reminded quickly about my first triathlon and it brought back a lot of memories and helped me realize how much I have learned in the last year.  It felt great to offer advice and calm nerves! 
 
 On race day, it was drizzling rain but I arrived at 5am and was able to offer swim wave info and bodymarking and then was asked to be a swim buddy because there were not enough.  I've always considered myself a weak swimmer and never capable of being a swim buddy but I grabbed my gear and ran down to the dock just before the race began.  I really didn't know what to expect.  I was in a large group of males but a lady weeded through them all and looked at me with saucer eyes and asked "will you be my swim buddy? I said sure... Will you stay with me?... I said sure... No I mean stay on my right side the entire time?.. I said YES... (omg what have I gotten into?)"  This was the Sprint division..750 meters almost 1/2 mile so " you know how to swim right? oh yes in the pool" hmmm???
 
We get in .. umm put on your goggles... can you put your face in the water... can you reach out with your arms?... can you freestyle?...NO I can only doggy paddle!  WHAT?? In 15 minutes...we were almost at the end of the DOCK...maybe 100 yards?  I looked underwater and it was like she was on a unicycle - no forward motion.... I tried to teach her to swim with every trick and tip I knew... alas not much forward motion.  I know we are not supposed to touch them but this was going to take hours... so i grabbed her leg and thrust her forward repetitively to the first buoy...finally I said grab my ankle and you kick and I will pull.  I literally towed her for almost 1/2 a mile.  I started thinking...omg I don't think I have ever sweat during a swim before!  I thought maybe we should get a lifeguard, maybe we should cut through the middle... No way, I wasn't letting her quit because she was a fighter and I was going to fight for her finish.  It took all I had to get around the buoys with her in tow.  After the last one, I had her lock her leg and I pushed against her heel as hard as I could to get her going forward.  A lifeguard came by to rescue her and I said HELL NO not NOW!  SHE IS FINISHING!!!  I kept grabbing her thigh and pushing her heel forward until she touched ground... she almost made me cry with her exhileration!  she hugged me tight, I unzipped her wetsuit, and she was off to bike/run... I then swam another lap with a couple more newbies which thankfully was all verbal support.  I was starving at that point!
                                   
After the race, I saw her again.  She was with a group of her friends and apparently she had told them about our experience!  they all hugged me and said I had no idea what I had done for her.  She had quit last week and wasn't going to race. The swim was too hard but she knew she could bike/run.  After the swim she felt so amazing and it was the greatest experience ever... wow... volunteering was far more rewarding than I ever expected.  I'm so happy she was able to earn her SheROX medal racing the very best she could and going home a successful triathlete! I will forever remember Sri! Paying it forward is just priceless. :)
 
 
 
Oct 27 Awesome 80's 10k Fun Run
Running 8-13miles 3x a week has pretty much become a way of life for me so to pay to run a 10K really needs to offer something special. Well running with a bunch of crazies in costumes was pretty special!  Not to mention the BLING medal was spectacular (replica of a cassette tape) and running 2 loops of Fiesta Island made it totally worth it.  We decided to make this into a reverse brick event so after the 6 mile run, we rode 20 miles of hills in La Jolla.  The view from on top of Mt. Soledad is just breathtaking on a clear day!


 
October Workout Summary:
Swim 29,984 Y = 17 miles
Bike 438 miles
Run 102 miles
Total hours 65.5
Weekly Avg 16 hours
 
I focused on running a little more in October because of training for my November goal of running 6 halves in 16 days to attain EARTH 6-moon status with my Half Fanatics running club. I will also volunteer at Ironman Arizona to determine if next year's goal will be to achieve Ironman status or wait another year.  I have decided to postpone my foot surgery until after Half Ironman California March 30, 2012.  I just don't want to take a break in the middle of training and my footpad seems to be tolerating 13 miles ok but it definitely needs repair before I run a full marathon....maybe I need to focus on full marathons before full ironman... just not sure yet but I'm still excited to be part of the energy at IMAZ Nov 18, 2012!