Big Beach Marathon
January 27, 2019 |
New year...new goal back to hill training |
Where will these feet take me... |
Regardless of my eating habits and lack of fitness, I will beat the odds and accomplish the goal of running a marathon in all fifty states. Although I remain only cautiously optimistic about ending my "regular status" at my favorite food joints. Last year (2018) I kicked off January at goal weight with a run PR, but as the year unfolded it was a downward spiral month by month generating some uneasy feelings.
Fought so hard to lose those lbs...and those lbs fought so hard to come back!! |
Jellyfish... |
the pounds will fall off and my negativity will be left permanently behind on the roads of Connecticut, Ohio and North Carolina and gratitude will fill any remaining empty spaces. My speed and stamina undoubtedly will take months not weeks to rebuild...if ever. Our season starts with a training marathon in Alabama and more importantly it's an opportunity to erase a six hour marathon from my run stats...
Redemption here we come! Oh wait! my knee hurts! A two month break from regular running is designed to give me a chance to rest up and heal from the pounding of the previous year, but my body does not recover as much as I hoped and getting started again is not fun. Honestly, I may be on the downward side of the marathon running slope, but I will fight it all the way down. To quote Harper Lee, “Real courage is when you know you're licked before you begin, but you begin anyway and see it through no matter what.” I would never call myself courageous, in any way, in fact most of my life I have chosen the easier less scary path, but I do plan to complete this goal fat or fit, depressed or elated~The final finish line will be crossed!
is the last thing I want to do. I can't be the little boy or "old lady" that cries wolf anymore. My husband does not want to hear it. Even though my knee has been acting up making running difficult, my husband says, "You will be fine you always are!" He is right. I am ever so careful with my knee placement and slow my pace and what do you know, I make it through the Big Beach Marathon fairly unscathed. I moan and groan in the process of getting to the start line, but once it begins I
am in it for the long haul and just like that the magic happens. At mile seven a doctor in training asks what mile we are at and a conversation ensues. It is his first marathon and he says he is doing it to strengthen his mental fortitude. He keeps me entertained and is a wealth of knowledge for several miles. When I tell him it is my 91st marathon he replies, "What, marathons can't be that hard then!" How true that is...they are only as hard as we make them. I sort of lost him a few miles later when politics, a taboo topic, is broached and I can't refrain from sharing an opinion. Let's not go there...no surer way to offend people these days. Thankfully, I catch up to my husband a few minutes later and we run together for several miles. The race thins out once the half marathoners break away. It is a course full of trail roads and bridges and is quiet and isolating. Good for self-reflection! We are so close to the ocean, yet never get a glimpse of it until the final turn at the finish line. Once I am over the halfway point, I know I will finish faster than planned. In the last ten miles I make it my mission to pick off as many runners as possible. A slow going effort, but I mange to pass fifteen runners while three pass me. I pass one man in the last half mile, who passes me right back in the final shoot.I am elated to complete the race in spite of having to buy a knee brace something I sworn I would never wear again. Never say Never! My husband is right behind me and we celebrate in The (heated) Hangout, the perfect place to recover while listening to music and eating the food and beer provided by the marathon. Our crazy little weekend jaunt to a small beach town on the Alabama ocean shores is just what we need to get our run year started.
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