Hi,
again. Yes, I admit freely that it’s
been a while. 4 months to be exact. I’ll be honest, generally I love writing my
blogs, as it makes some of you laugh, and helps some of you to realize that you
have the power to do absolutely anything you want to do. But back in September,
I got a small case of writer’s block and decided to skip a week. Then I skipped another. Etc.
You get the idea.
I’ll be
honest, you didn’t miss much. In fact,
for those who are new to my blog, let me sum up last year for you in one
paragraph. It started with my getting pneumonia,
then I hurt my Achilles Tendon and had my foot in a cast/boot for 6 weeks which
knocked me out of the New York City Half Marathon, the Brooklyn Half Marathon
and the New Jersey Marathon. I learned
that my health coach was an unethical dirtbag who would do anything for his own
personal gain, thus ending that relationship.
And then I ended my season by training diligently for 4 months for the
New York Marathon – which got cancelled.
Now, I did
run that marathon. I wasn’t trying to be
political, and get into a whole argument about whether Mayor Bloomberg did the
right or wrong thing. I had just trained
for over 4 months, logging over 550 training miles to prepare for a marathon
that got knocked off the schedule when Hurricane Sandy blew in and beat the
crap out of New York. Also, my training
partner, Karen, had raised over $4,000 for the Michael J. Fox Foundation, on
the promise to all of her donors that she would run. So, the day after the marathon was canceled
(or the day before it was supposed to occur), Karen and I decided we’d go do a
run in Central Park on “Marathon Day”.
Karen and me at mile 19 |
Karen wanted
to run a half marathon, I wanted to do the full, so we compromised at 18 miles
which was going to be 3 loops of Central Park (read: 3 loops of the Harlem
Hills which are famous for knocking out a person’s quads and will to live at
the same time). We arrived at the park
pretty early, and there were already over 10,000 other runners there, doing the
same thing we set out to do. We just
wanted to run. We talked about which
direction to go in and then realized that everyone was going counter clockwise,
so we could either join ‘em or get beat up trying to beat ‘em. About 20 minutes into the run, we both knew
that we were going to do the whole thing.
I tried to mention it to Karen, but she said, “Shh, I’m just telling
myself that I’m only doing one loop.” I
liked her strategy, so I also lied to myself, loop after loop. Just one more loop. OK, just one more.
Random New Yorkers helping out runners |
Because all
the thousands of runners were running different distances and started at
different times and at different places, everyone’s “finish line” was
different. Karen carried a GPS, and once
we got to about mile 25 and realized we were on a flat part, we just kept
running back and forth between two hills.
No more elevation for us.
Finally, Karen shouted “26.2!”, and we both stopped dead. I threw my arms up in the air, and another
random stranger – a runner this time – patted me on the back and yelled, “Great
Job!” without breaking stride. He still
had to finish his run – whatever length it was – so I yelled out, “Thanks, you
got this!” to his back, and he replied with a thumbs up as he jogged away. For a marathon that never happened, it was
awesome.
Now it’s
January of 2013, and I’m back. My
running/triathlon year from hell is in the books, and I get to start
fresh. Right now I’m training for the
New York City Half Marathon, which would be a lot of fun if the temperature
ever breaks the 20s again (or hell, even reaches the 20s). I’m setting up my race schedule now, which
already includes the Aquaphor New York City Triathlon in July, and the New York
City Marathon in November. I am looking
forward to what I expect to be a great training and racing year, and I hope you’ll
all come along on the ride with me, even if just virtually as you read my
blogs. I promise to make you laugh, and
I hope that I help you realize that you can do absolutely anything you set your
mind to!
Thanks for that, Ali!
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