Tuesday, March 31, 2015

IM 70.3 California 4th time is a charm?

IM California 2015 is my 7th half ironman and 4th time repeating this course.  I know it well and I know where I break down.  I am an Ironman now so I decided this year I would work on running speed and faster half ironmans instead of another full ironman. I gave up my Big Sur Marathon entry to focus on 70s and speed training.  I have worked hard on my climbing and my running speed since IMAZ with very little time off.  My swimming skills are about the level of a 4 year old compared to the life-time swimmers my age but sometimes I can have a good day and then something derails me and all the focus is gone again.  I do my workouts with intensity but understand that even if I improve in seconds per 100, some uncontrolled obstacle like current and elbows to the head amongst the mass of swimmers or a sudden cramp can throw all my hardwork as if it never happened.  Honestly it's not only that I swim slow, but I don't sight well either in the Oceanside race .  The route is shaped like a banana and the sun is blinding on the return. So this year, my swim goal was to figure out how to ONLY swim 1.2 miles!  I tried new approaches to tackle each discipline this year to try to break 6:30.  I had high expectations with all this  hay in the barn. 4th time is a charm, right? I'm ready.

 It was the first time I had raced with one transition for California 70.3, so receiving one bag instead of 4 made it feel like a new race!  I wondered how the bike route changed and how long the 2nd loop of the run would be since it still ended at the pier.  I realized we had to run up Breakwater street on the 2nd loop too.  There were enough changes to make it seem new for sure. I was still worrisome on race day but friends kept making me smile and laugh.

I didn't stay overnight in Oceanside at my parents house because it wasn't an available option this year so I had to add a 45 minute commute to my morning.  This meant rising at 3am but it wasn't a problem as I took my niteaid pill by 7pm and slept well.  I had my Osmo and Imodium at night and again in the morning with my standard oatmeal and banana but I couldn't eat the bagel this time.  I had coffee, 2 aspirin, 2 roctane pills, 2 salt pills and decided to bring the bagel to eat in transition.  It was never eaten so my morning calories were light at 360. Marcus bought the VIP pass so we had close parking and he was pampered all day with food and drink and the best viewing spots.  He somehow snuck into the transition area and took loads of TCSD pictures throughout the day with about 700 pictures total!  He captured a great day for everyone to see.  He was as tired as I was at the end of the day!





Once again the TCSD rack was placed at the very back by the swim exit which I find a disadvantage vs where my AG racks so I opted out of the team racks.  My AG was just past a tree and along the carpet edge so it was a good spot right in the middle of transition. I laid out all my stuff nice and organized (on the down wheel side!!!) and went to the bathroom.  When I returned, the bike next to me dumped all their crap on the up wheel side crowding my stuff and she was no where to be seen.  Whatever, let it go.  I did my walk around trying to notice the buoy placement in the dark water and then it was announced the water was 66.8 degrees.  That's the warmest it has been in my 4 years and now it's not neoprene sock legal which means a barefoot run for a 1/4 mile after the swim exit.  I'm never barefoot due to my foot surgeries because my foot pads are not even.  Barefoot = pain for me. More worrying followed...

 However the carpet looked good and there were places where there were two rows of carpet.  I would just have to be careful. Thankfully I added an old pair of regular socks to my check list and wore those while I was waiting in line to swim.  I was wave 15 with the 50s and 25 year olds!  wow they looked so young!  I started to get hungry while in line for my wave start at 7:23 so I did my ritual of eating a GU and drinking my water in line and then as it got close, poured the remaining water in my suit to reduce the water temp shock.  However the water temp felt great and my feet were comfortable.


I swam comfortably following the buoys out of the harbor.  Only once did a swimmer swim over me and she was light and way off course which made me giggle a little.  I just kept swimming without interruption to the 2nd red bouy.  Suddenly it seemed choppy which is normal so close to the ocean.  I felt like I lost a lot of speed here though but kept heading to the rock jetty as my experienced swimmers told me to do and soon the next red buoy was in sight right in front of me.  For the first time I wasn't lost in the harbor swim!  I turned toward the sun and just to the left was the big building which I had never seen before!  I never saw a buoy on my left until there were only a couple left to pass and then as I wanted to increase my speed, I started to kick harder and suddenly my right calf cramped hard.  It did this on my last OWS with no explanation so I knew I had to point and flex to get it to release which completely disrupted my swim rhythm. I kept swimming the best I could until it released.  I saw a lot of racers to my left but I just sighted the tall building the entire return and it took me just along the pier dock straight into the ramp exit.  it was the easiest swim I had completed and the first race that I had swam with a cramp.  The good news was that I was happy that my yardage was close to 1.2 although still a little over.  Then I noticed my swim time was slower as well, by at least 5 minutes so yea I sighted well, but I swam 5 minutes slower. That's a lot :(  I didn't let it get to me like in the past.  I really just wanted a great run.  I would just make it up by running faster.  I just let it go because ANYTHING IS POSSIBLE.

My swim-bike transition was 6 minutes as planned.  I exited without a problem and took off with a plan to not hammer the bike course. I wanted to save it for the run. I had pinned my number to my shirt and wore it under my wetsuit so I didn't fight with the race belt.  I only wore arm sun sleeves in my wetsuit and not calf compressions because it seemed to affect my circulation in the past.   I had my front bottle with 400 cals of Carbo Pro and 210 cals of IM Perform. I ate two half pieces of banana along the course and drank water between slurps of calorie water.  I prepared for the first hill with two puffs of my inhaler so I could breathe easier and I did fine.  I didn't have to serpentine climb the hill and my breathing and HR was under control.  I just went up and over with relief.  The other hills were tolerable too.  The new requirement to stay under 25 mph on dead man's curve was a distraction for sure.  The no pass zone suddenly appeared and a slow rider was in front of me going 18mph and I reminded her it was a 25 limit which promptly caused her to brake and I flew past her.  Sorry, I've never done that before but I didn't want to lose any more speed because then the required 25 mph timing section arrived for about 1/2 mile and I stared at my garmin the entire turn while trying to be under 25 and I ended up at 24.11 mph!  That's pretty close to 25 and I would have been disqualified had I passed that speed.


Nothing unusual happened for the rest of the course except I got bored on the long stretches while trying to hold lower power and a slower speed. By mile 40, I started getting a neck and shoulder cramp making aero positioning very uncomfortable. I also felt that same twinge in my right rib start to pinch. Finally mile 45 arrived and the 10 miles of head winds were in my face.  As always, I eat one GU here to prepare for the run. The headwind seemed stronger this year to me. It was awesome to roll back into the harbor without climbing Surfrider to get to transition BUT we had to cycle the same long chute we had run during the swim and that just totally sucked.  My speed dropped again as another rider in front of me didn't want to pedal along this narrow path.  I saw my final bike time was 11 minutes slower than the last 2 years. But that's ok because my normalized power was within range so I would have a great run, right?

I got to my stuff (including my cooling towel which is a life saver for hot runs) and swapped it all out for run gear within 4 minutes and took off at a slower pace to get my legs ready and just as I started up the small overpass hill, my left thigh cramped badly.  It stopped me in my tracks and I grabbed onto the fence while trying to massage the muscle to let go. I limped along for a bit and the pain subsided within a mile.  I didn't panic about my pace because I had a water bottle with 200 cals of carbo pro to drink.  I took 2 aspirin and 2 salt pills during the recovery mile.  Very soon after the cramp subsided, my right rib started to pinch again. This pain became a sharp knife pain for the next 12 miles of jogging.  My legs seemed heavy but not in pain.  I wasn't hot because the aid stations had ice water and ice and kept my cooling towel always fresh.  My legs were just not cooperating and the knife in my side made me feel like I was running off center. I faked my smiles for the camera but each time I saw my Chiro Doc on the run, I knew that he knew, I was hurting and the entire body was pulling on the right.


Doc, can I lay down RIGHT NOW for an alignment??
 I can't explain what happened over those 12 miles except there was a lot of begging going on to try to go faster.  I demanded that I run up the short steep ramps and Wisconsin because I promised myself that I would not walk them this year and then the glutes and hamstrings disagreed.  Each mile, my watch would remind me of my slow pace even though I thought I was actually running. By mile 11, I saw my total finish time goal had passed and it blew the wind out of my sails.  This was another ruined run making mile 12 a death jog.  I was disappointed in everything.  Holding back led to a slower race, not a better run for me so the formula is very perplexing to me.  It makes logical sense, but I can't execute the plan.

After reviewing some statistics, my normalized power and average power rates are not close and they should be.  This means my cycling efforts are not steady, but I thought they were.  How do you fix something that you can't feel is wrong? This leads to fatigued legs for the run. Yes I understand the logic but where's the improvement in my run when I hold back?  Just like I thought a controlled swim would give me better technique and a smoother faster swim result but it didn't.


I jogged through the finish chute feeling unworthy and embarrassed and draped myself over my Ironsister Elva.  My friend Dave helped me find a chair and reunite with Marcus. I was so sad. Dave asked if I wanted the finisher's food.  EWWW. It always smells horrible to me and can send me into dry heaves if I'm too close. Marcus handed me my favorite cookie instead - snickerdoodles always make me smile!




I just wanted to find my chiropractor who also raced and he cracked my neck and then said he would see me Sunday for a complete realignment. I wasn't holding my head up straight. I got a body massage for 30 minutes in the Ironman village, trying to get the knife out of my side but it didn't help much. I'd have to get a 90 minute massage tomorrow. We went home and I soaked in Epsom salt, ate chicken soup, and took muscle relaxers and went to bed very disappointed.  I'm still disappointed and wonder if I should stop setting goals since I can't seem to achieve them.  At this point, it seems just finishing shouldn't be the only goal I can meet.

The next day, I read about others who had mechanical problems and physical problems too.  Misery loves company so at least I wasn't alone. I'm not the only one that worked really hard for disappointing results.  It still stings but somehow I will get back out there trying to find my 6:30 result.  I have no plans to repeat Oceanside again.  My next 70.3 will be a new course in Victoria, British Columbia on June 14 so it will be exciting from beginning to end!  Maybe I won't set a finishing time goal in the future. 

At the end of the day, I still have my bragging rights for a lifetime. I. AM. IRONMOM. and I am a finisher again today.




Monday, March 30, 2015

March Madness - pre Oceanside 70.3

March Madness was a rollercoaster ride!  I had to intertwine my final training days for my 4th Oceanside 70.3 race and try to PR my 3rd 5k in 2015 and a half marathon, and be strong for my daughter's "wedding of the century" filling my house with lots of parties and people for two weeks.

March always starts off with open water swimming which I found surprisingly uncomfortable.  I just kept hanging in there until the wetsuit feeling was ok and I could swim without stopping.  I guess I just got really used to the pool since I swam more than in the past so it just felt really different. I just kept going back to bonita cove and the water was warmer than I expected which was comforting.  I wondered if it would be this warm at the end of the month for Oceanside 70.3






My first race was San Diego Half Marathon. Last year, I was fresh off of foot surgery with about 4 months of gradual increased training and virtually no hill training but I managed to barely PR by seconds of the previous year's time of 2:05.  I trained well for this half and tried to execute a plan so that I would have more in the tank for Washington hill. I held 9 min pace first 3 miles, next 5 included the little overpass bridge in Liberty station and Noel (5% 1/4mi) which hurt my overall pace by not reaching my planned 8:45 avg. then as I ran down hill, my pace was perfectly in sync to run into a passing trolley, so I had to stop  but not for too long, however, it was a momentum stopper.  Overall I compared my year over year results:  2014 vs 2015 :  Washington Hill .75 mi:  12:18 pace vs 11:22 pace and my last 2 downhill miles: 8:56 vs 8:41 both with calf cramps.  For some reason, running down hill will cause a leg cramp but I just have to run through it until it releases.  My finish times were 2:05 vs 2:01 so maybe next year I will be even stronger running up hill and break the 2 hour mark.
SD Half Finishers downtown

I had to take an extra day off work on Friday to squeeze in my last big training day for Oceanside 70.3 and it was one of the hottest day's of the year!  Jim, Marcus and I ran 5 miles, biked 40 miles, ran 5 miles to top off our Oceanside training.  I chose a new route but unfortunately it didn't push me too hard because there were too many stop lights.  My runs felt too easy.  Marcus and I drank every bottle we had that day!

Saturday was the bridal shower and family started to arrive.  Everything worked out well for the party and Brianna got her fairytale bridal shower with lots of games and food and alcohol.  It was a beautiful day!

Bridal Shower
Monday, I had a 12 hour day helping my sister rescue a basset hound on my day off which was a heart warming experience.  Finally my sister picked Norman as her Nelson's new friend and the day was a success.

Stormin' Norman going to his forever home
Then it was back to work trying to squeeze 5 days into 2 days and I broke my back tooth which seems to be an annual event.  Now I had to  squeeze in a 3 hour dentist appointment and then pray the temporary crown would hold for 2 weeks and not become so painful that it would require a root canal like last year before race day.

rehearsal dinner family photo
Then we had a wedding rehearsal party and more family arriving.  I was working out at 5am to squeeze in my taper workouts and had a 2 hour EZ flat ride which totally threw my neck and shoulder into a cramp.  I always have shoulder and neck issues when riding in aero but this was more severe as I felt pulling contractions on my right side.  I saw my chiropractor and my sports med doctor for relief.  Sometimes my trapezius muscle contracts and won't let go so I get lidocaine injections for release.  This time it helped but I felt bruised and still tight but I was better and didn't think  I would have an issue by race day.  We cancelled aero rides and OWS so I could continue to heal.

a fairytale wedding
The wedding plans continued and it really was a perfect event.  I even wrote a speech and spoke in front of a crowd which is something I don't usually do but I felt I needed to express myself this day.  I never want to have regrets in my life.  Just Do It takes courage and I've learned that from my Ironman journey. My speech was well received and the day was full of tears and emotional release with wonderful memories and pictures for a lifetime.   However it was emotionally draining for sure.  I was excited to work on my running speed.


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wedding cake of the century



Two days after the wedding, I had the Hot Chocolate 5k run where I challenged Jim Murff to pace me to "my potential".  I am a conservative athlete, always holding back and I didn't realize that your 5k pace should not be close to your half marathon pace.  I thought I was giving my best but my coach was not convinced.  The only way I could think of changing my average 5k pace from 8:56 to 8:26 was to chase someone and not think about it.  HOLY MOLY I was shocked when I got my bib/confirmation corral info for Hot Choc5k! I've NEVER been placed in Corral A before!! This goal is too big for me.  My friend, Jim Murff is raising funds for his IMAZ charity Smile Train so I promised to donate $5 for every second he could pace me to improve my average pace. This 5k was also my hilliest to date which made it even more difficult for me.  Jim paced me perfectly and I did meet my goal!  Not only did I donate $145, but my coach matched the donation!  It was a great accomplishment and I am so grateful for Jim's support in achieving this goal. It was also during this race that I felt a twinge on my right side ribs during my run.  I thought for sure this was due to hill running and crossing my arms in a swinging motion.  This would pass, right?

Hot Chocolate 5k and 15k finishers


that's my shoe and elbow, not a spider monkey!
I went to the chiro on Monday and Dr. immediately noticed I was not holding my head straight. He aligned me but my body was resistant.  The next day I got lidocaine shots in my trapezius which cancelled out my aero bike ride and OWS swim.  It was an unexpected day off but this last week was about recovery so less was more at this point. I really took it easy to be as relaxed as possible for Ironman Oceanside.  It was my 4th effort to try to break 6:30.  Each time something would happen and my run would suffer.  My running was at a great peak and I felt great too.  I really wanted to meet my potential this time.  I had a plan very different than the past and it would require patience and trust and execution.  I would give it my best and stayed positive all the way to race day.  I was prepared to have the best race of my life if I could execute the plan.....Next up... the Race Day Blog.