Monday night as I was tucking in my 4 year old, we were recapping the day and the terrible tantrum that he threw after swim lessons (the screaming and the hitting because he wanted to stay longer to swim in the kiddie pool, meantime I was of course, completely embarrassed and wanting to run away and hide in a bush), and I put in my early request to him that we try to do better Tuesday.
I explained (again) that we will be having swim lessons again tomorrow, but this time, when swim lessons are over and Mommy says it's time to go, it's time to go. Even if we are sad about leaving. "OK? There is no hitting and yelling, do you understand?" I asked. "Can we do that?"
And he nodded and said, "Yes." (Of course it didn't quite go that way on Tuesday, but the tantrum was at least down to just a mere 30 seconds this time around, which is something anyway. I can at least hope for 5 seconds and then no seconds the days after, right?)
Anyway, then I said, "OK then. We'll try to do better tomorrow." And as I leaned in to kiss him goodnight, he started wiping my head with his blanket. And I asked, "What are you doing?"
"Wiping the mad off your forehead."
Sigh.
Darned cuteness.
Wednesday
My Brow and its Furrow.
Monday
The Tri: Post Tank Top
I was curious to see how I'd do. To see if I'd improved. And what it would be like. I was nervous! What if I don't do any differently!
(That's my husband.)
Anyway, I finished 9 minutes and 15 seconds faster that last year! I know I should be super-proud but of course, I'm a pain in my own butt and I wish it were more than that! But still, HOORAY! I beat last year's time of 1:49:30 with 1:40:14. Race report time!
The Swim 1/3 mile
Well, the same song, different race. I went into the swim brimming with confidence and I was actually slower in this year's swim by 1:30! I mean, really??? I'm still surprised about it to be honest! Because I swam the whole time! And felt more confident! I swam alongside of a fellow Tri-Warrior (which is my group) for a while and only came out about 20 seconds after her and she's awesome! So....WHAT??? I don't really get it. But I did discover that there are a lot of people who really have no idea how to swim in a straight line. Which among other things, was some of what slowed me down.
- The thrashing about was insane! Grabbing, hitting, kicking, it was crazy! Note to self: start at the outer edge of the pack, like last time! Much, much better.
- There was one girl in particular who zig-zagged in front of me. She would swim really hard toward the beach, I would think she was gone and unfortunately she would realize she was swimming toward the beach instead of along the beach like the rest of us and turn and swim really really hard out to sea, crossing in front of me. Just when I would think she was gone again, there she was again! Zigzagging again right in my face! I kept having to stop because I couldn't get away from her!
- Stopping. I got out of breath in the initial thrashing because it is quite unnerving to be swimming in such a packed group of women, so I turned on my back and did the backstroke and caught my breath then turned around and kept going. That was the only time I had to do that, but a few times I did have to stop when someone like the zig-zagger kept crossing in front of me. But you know what? For next time, I don't care, I'm going to plow ahead. The end.
The bike: 13 Miles
By far my best event. We had three really tall bridges to contend with, one almost right away. They're really pretty freakin rough. I tried my best on the bridges but my legs were literally on fire. Once I got to the top I'd just go as fast as I could on the straightaways and the downhills. After the last bridge, I was flying. I looked down and my computer said 31 miles an hour. I've never seen 31 miles per hour on my computer! Ever! Squeeeee!!! But I kept between 18-20 mph on the straightaways and finished in 44 minutes, just 4 minutes slower than my husband. (snicker.)
The Run: 5k
Hurt. The run always hurts, but this in particular hurt because the first mile is in loose sand along the beach. There were also no milemarkers which I was banking on to help me pace (dammit.) It took me what felt like a mile and a half to get my race legs back, so I just did the best I could, getting one water to pour over my head and the other to sip and just moving forward. I kept cool with my "Shut Up and Run" Bondi Band (we're giving a Bondi Band away over at the Sisterhood, by the way!) and I finished it in 32:01. Last year's was 36 minutes. So I'm ok with that. (Also I finished a minute faster than my husband. Snicker.) I felt surprisingly good most of the way. Of course, there is the occasional, fleeting painfilled moment where I think to myself, "Why the hell am I doing this again???" but otherwise, the whole thing went great overall. If I didn't want to improve myself, I would worry.
I had sought out to achieve two goals yesterday: to beat last year's time and to not come in last in my age group. Because my age group is a serious group of badass women. You notice these things when you are standing in the transition area at 5 a.m. and looking at all the bikes of the women in your age group on the rack around you and you see some pretty serious bikes and some women with some serious muscles. It can make a girl nervous. But it's a grounding experience too because you remember to yourself that yes, it's a race, but you're really racing against where you yourself have been. Not them. And I had to remind myself that a few times.
Alas, I did not come in last.And I want to enter my little disclaimer here: I believe there is honor in any finish, even in finishing last. The only reason I did not want to finish last is because the women in my age group are so freakin fast, I wanted to be among them somewhere in the middle. My secret goal was about 1:36, because to give you an idea of the average times: the really fast ones were at the 1:13-1:20 range, the middle ones were in the 1:30-1:35 range and the backpackers were from 1:40-2:00. I didn't come in last, but I was still toward the back of the pack coming in 22nd out of 32 women but still, that works for me.
What bothers me about that though is that there was a group of us that all crossed the finish about a minute or two apart, which means if I had just pushed myself a little harder on the run or somewhere along the way, I could have climbed in the group a little further, but again, I won against "Last Year Me."
Anyway, other lessons learned (and because none of us seem to have any shame about talking about bathroom matters:)
- A headlamp would be very useful at 5 a.m. in the pitch-black bathroom with no lights. Or a flashlight.
- An I-Pod surprisingly provides just enough light to make sure you're not leaving the bathroom with any unsightly-ness on you.
- Wearing a tank top over your one-piece tri-suit prevents you from having to be sitting there naked in the pitch-black bathroom, which is always good. I'm just saying.

Morton Plant 2010 Morton Plant 2009
Well, 2010 Me, good job. You have indeed improved. And you lost a couple pounds, too, which is always a bonus. Next up, another sprint July 31! Gotta get back to it. My goals? Swim better, bike longer and run harder! That's all.
Saturday
Om Nom Nom
What?! You don't know what a Bondi Band is???? I am showing off the rest of my collection and screaming about my love for Bondi Bands from the top of the rooftops over at the Sisterhood today and we're giving one away, too! I'm so excited! So you must go to there! And get your shot at it!
Well, we're off to Toy Story 3 today for family movie time! Did you see it? How did you like it? Hope you have a great day!
Follow me on Twitter.
Subscribe to my blog.
Friday
Another Ridiculous Waste of Time and Money
I hope I don't annoy anyone here when I say this, but I really, really just can't stand when we, as a collective people, can't take responsibility for our actions. Like, for instance, blaming America's obesity and inability to parent on now, a Happy Meal toy.
Yes, McDonald's Happy Meal toys are the latest culprit for a potential class action. Because that's what's made us fat. Yeah. That's what it is.
Have you read this yet? A consumer advocate group has threatened to sue McDonald's if they don't remove their toys from Happy Meals because they say the toys lure in children "like a stranger on a playground handing out candy..."
When I was at the very beginning of the weight-loss journey, I was angry about commercials because they shoved all that yummy yucky food in my face, all that stuff that I knew I couldn't have, and I was bitter about it. But that was my issue. Not theirs. I hated how I had gotten to a size 16, pushing 18, because I had eaten that food. But they didn't make me. I joke around now that Ben and Jerry's is part of a conspiracy because they put their little love-pints on Buy One Get One sales and so then I get not one, but two Peanut Butter Cup pints. But I'm the one with no restraint.
This world is filled with temptation.
Doesn't mean we gotta eat the apple.
If we eat at McDonald's or any other fast food every single day, it doesn't take a rocket scientist to tell me what will happen. And my children know too the difference between healthy and unhealthy foods, we talk about it all the time, they actually surprise me and make healthy choices on their own, even at 4 and 2. It's my job to make sure they do that. Sure, they will eat fast food if I give it to them or give them that option every single day. Of course they will. But who's the parent here?
The head of the consumer group says putting the toys in Happy Meals makes the "parents' job nearly impossible." Honestly, I find it just the opposite. I find it a teaching experience. I alone decide when we can go to McDonald's and when we shouldn't. I have conversations with my children about how often it is ok to have fast food and what kind of fuel our bodies need to do the activities that we do every day, like swim and play. Do they fight me on it? Sure they do! They've cried and thrown tantrums as I've passed those golden arches, but I don't cave in and they forget about them as soon as we sit down to a healthy lunch anyway. Trust me, the tantrum is not about the toy.
Come on, people.
Yes, I think that there is too much junk in our food supply. Yes, I think there are too many pesticides and preservatives and empty calories and yes I certainly do think that restaurants and packaged food companies could do a better job of labeling their products so that ultimately, we as consumers can make good, informed choices about what we put in our bodies. But I'm not going to blame my inability to make good, informed food choices or my inability to use restraint on a Happy Meal toy. As someone who has actually tried to rationalize how other people and other things made me fat (and failed, because, um, it was me!), that's where I draw the line.
Thursday
Wee-Cycle. Next Stop, Wee-Pop.
My two-year-old is growing up.
I know this because all of my favorite words that he says, ya know, all the ones that he butchers and botches up, he's now starting to say them correctly. Like the word, "motorcycle," which up until yesterday afternoon was called a "wee-cycle."
And it sounded so weird to hear this tiny high-pitched voice properly enunciating the word, "motorcycle." He might as well have been wearing a suit and carrying a briefcase.
Oh how I loved "wee-cycle."
I loved it so much.
Along with "wee-pop." Lollipop.
And "wee-cocker." Helicopter.
But those are next. I just know it.
So this morning I found myself sitting next to his little babydoll on the couch, which of course is named, "Baby" (because why wouldn't it be?) And I found myself rubbing Baby's fake little baby tummy and I turned to Baby lovingly, looked deeply into its little fake eyes and asked, "You're not going to grow up too, are you?"
He didn't answer, but I'm pretty sure he's not making any promises either.
Follow me on Twitter. Subscribe to my blog.
Wednesday
Weigh-In Wednesday: The Long Lost Version
It's been a while since I've weighed in at the Sisterhood, I know! I have taken a short hiatus from weighing in, but the good news is, I've bounced up and down the normal 2 pound range but hovered around maintenance for the past few weeks. I haven't been trying to lose weight, I have just been trying not to gain. And I've been successful at that!
As far as exercise goes, we did the half-marathon in San Diego, I took it easy on exercise the following week, just did a couple workouts that week (scored a new pr in a 5k at a beer run and came in before my husband!) and since then, I've been slowly getting back into things. I have my first sprint triathlon since the Olympic distance in April this Sunday. Woot!
And I am excited!
Because it's my one year anniversary of triathlons! Sunday, I'm doing the same exact race I did one year ago. It was my very first one ever and I'm going back! I'm returning to the scene of the crime! I'm so so excited to see how I do and if I have improved over the year. So so excited! Because I looked at my time and in the "newbie" category, I did ok, but if I had raced in my age group, it would have been dead last. Not that there is anything wrong with coming in last, someone has to, but I'd like to think that I'd come in a little bit higher this go around. We'll see! I think the only way I'll do well is if I kick butt in the run, and that's pretty hard because it's just so hot when it's time for that run. I don't care if I come in last (well, maybe a little), I just care that I improve my time. Of course it would be nice to finish somewhere in the midpack....Anyway, I have a secret target time and I'm going to try and hit it.
I'm going to start joining back in on the weigh-ins in a week or two, once I get my new training plan in place because I have a few large races at the end of the year I'll be training for all summer, like:
-The Disney Wine and Dine 1/2 Marathon Oct. 1
-Miami Man 1/2 Iron Distance Triathlon (which includes a fresh water alligator lake-- yikes!)
-My very first marathon -- The Disney Marathon in January, and if you're part of the Sisterhood or not, we're gathering a big group of us to go do this! This is an open invitation! Calling all runners! Calling all sisters!
Anyway, the training officially starts for these things in a week or two (20 weeks out from Miami Man.) For those, I will want to get into better shape, so I hope that weight-loss will be included in there although it won't be my primary focus.
Oh, and ps. my new blog is in the works, I can't wait! It's almost here!! Baby Tea Leaves is headed for retirement, but there are great new things happening with the new blog (at least I think so!) so please don't go anywhere!!!!!!!!!
Happy Weigh-In Wednesday!
Follow me on Twitter. Subscribe to my blog.
Tuesday
To Ben and Jerry (If That's Your Real Name...)
Dear Ben and Jerry,
What are you trying to do to me?
Please, I'm begging you, please stop selling your ice cream in my local grocery story on Buy One Get One. I can't take it anymore!
Your name probably isn't even Ben. Or Jerry for that matter!
For all I know, you're probably another average mom triathlete in the 35-39 age group whose real name is Geri, and you just want to pass me this weekend. You are a midpacker like me and you hope to inch your way up that list. Your "sale" is a conspiracy.
Well you can forget it! I'm going to pass your ass on the bike! And then I'll show you. Just because I had a half a pint of your darned Peanut Butter Cup Ice Cream last night, doesn't mean anything!
That's all. See you this weekend, GERI.
Lovingly,
Christie O.
Follow me on Twitter. Subscribe to my blog.
Sunday
To My Favorite Pushovers in the World: I LOVE you.
Maybe "pushover" is the wrong word. All I know is that the main men in my life will do anything for the people they love. Anything. Including (but not limited to) the following:
- (Dad)Renting a ridiculously expensive red convertible mustang for 5 people, including my 70-something-year-old-grandmother, and all of their luggage, just because his teenager begged and pleaded. (We took the convertible down once and only once and it was in the middle of Scaryville.)
- (Husband)Getting up before his wife, making her coffee and getting all her tri-gear out the door and into the car before she is even dressed because he knows she's dead to the world before 7 a.m. Love.
- (Husband)Letting the kids stay up for "just one more Caillou".
- (Husband)Still cleaning out the litter box without any complaints almost 3 years post-pregnancy.
- (Both)Willing to run out and procure whatever food and beverage requested and/or craved at almost any time of the night or day.
- (Both)Lawn service and/or handyman.
- (Both)Diapers.
- (Both)Spider-killers
- (Both) Leap tall buildings in a single bound.
- (Both)Support (and sometimes even partake in!) crazy wife habits and/or current and/or past obsessions, including dressing up for Halloween as Bacon one year (I was an egg - I was pregnant) and Harry Potter (I was a fat Hermione, post-pregnancy. We carried heavy books to a bar.) And wearing tights.
- (Both)The long shift in driving.
- (Both) Succumb to and subsequently crumple at the sight of a pouty lip and/or pouty eyes and tears.
- (Both) A million zillion thoughtfulnesses that often go unspoken but never go unnoticed. I promise.
Tuesday
Baby Tea Leaves Under Construction
Have you ever thought that over the years, you've changed but your blog hasn't? That maybe your blog doesn't match where you are in life? What do you do? I've spent so many hours trying to figure it out. Do I stay with Baby Tea Leaves? Or do I match it up with where I am right now? Because my blog started out as primarily a mommy and family blog, but it's changed so much from where it was when I first started it, right after baby #2. And now that he's 2 1/2 and my oldest is 4, things just seem so much different now! And I want to blog about it! So, I've made a decision (finally.)
Baby Tea Leaves has been such a big part of my life for a few years now and I have loved it so much. But now I'm going to head off into a new direction. So, Baby Tea Leaves is currently undergoing a massive makeover and there are big, big changes to come and I'm excited! So please stay with me here don't go away! Get ready to bookmark an entirely new url!
It'll be soon! Oh, and with the new blog, the return of Mantra Monday! Thank you, dear e-mailers for asking about it! But for now, stay here and follow me on Twitter (www.twitter.com/christieo) where I'll leave lots of construction updates! DON'T GO ANYWHERE!! (Please?)
Friday
Our Team as a Whole
So, I talked about how I did in the race, but you wanna know how it affected everyone on our team? We had 13 runners on our team, Team Shrinking Jeans, made up of writers and readers of the website The Sisterhood of the Shrinking Jeans (http://www.shrinkingjeans.net/.) We're from all over the country, literally, everywhere from North Dakota to Texas to West Virginia and Washington state, I mean, truly, each end of this country. Some of us met in person for the first time, but it was truly like seeing old friends because we had talked so much over e-mail and pushed each other to keep going. I am so honored to have been a part of it.
Anyway, today, Melissa posted our official results and times here, and also posted about how this race has changed us all. Please head on over to read it! I just love my team so much.
Now, I'm off to a date night consisting of a husband and the Oldsmar Taphouse 5k! Because of the beer, really...
(I need a second job for my race addiction.)
Have a wonderful weekend!
Follow me on Twitter. Subscribe to my blog.
Wednesday
Tutu, Meet Porta-Potty: A Race Day Recap
Well, it happened.
Ask any runner and it’s very likely that they have a story about “that one” race. Most of them have a story about “that one race” and if it’s not about them, it’s about some other poor runner who succumbed to it. It happened to our own Coach Joe (the coach of our Virtual Team In Training team) and since he was open about it (right here and has offered advice on the topic), I thought I might come out of the closet on the topic myself.
So if you’re a runner and you enjoy partaking in races from time to time, I hate to break it to you but odds are, it’s bound to happen to you, too. My advice from the beginning? Be one with it. Expect it. And move on. It’s like a notch in your belt.
If you think about it, it’s like the race day lottery, really. You never know when to expect it and which race it’s going to happen in.
You never know when your number will be up.
Because you take all the necessary precautions. You eat the right breakfast, you eat early enough, you don’t eat anything crazy that might adversely affect you, you definitely don’t try anything different. In fact, if you’re like me, you get up a little extra early so you can have that one cup of coffee early enough to get things moving along quickly in the right direction. (You know where I’m headed now, don’t you?)
And Heaven forbid it doesn’t move along in a timely manner, you arrive early enough on race day to try your luck at the evil porta potty and its even more evil lines. All necessary evils, but evil nonetheless. (OK, NOW you’re with me. I was being subtle.)
And then before the race, things work out in your favor hopefully and finally, you believe that you are all squared away in that department when lo and behold! The race starts, you’re running along at a comfortable pace and suddenly there is an uncomfortable stirring that occurs around mile 6. I think the term we runner-wanna-be’s call it is, “Gut Rot.” Which inevitably turns into what’s called, “The Runner’s Runs.” (You’re welcome.)
And so when the feeling strikes, you briefly think, “Uh oh.” And then you briefly wonder, “Is my number up?”
So you look at your watch. You weigh out the pros and the cons. You wonder if it is, indeed, the emergency you think might be brewing and if it is, indeed, time to throw in the proverbial towel on the dream of beating that last PR because you know that any kind of pit stop is going to cost you.
You go back and forth in your mind for about a half-mile when all of a sudden, your mind actually decides FOR YOU that it needs to be in the company of a porta-potty immediately. I mean, right away. Because disaster is indeed looming and you know now that running another 7 miles this way is not an option.
Because who wants to be wearing a tutu during any kind of disaster? Seriously! Even tripping and falling in a tutu isn’t an option. Because then you’ll be the girl wearing a tutu who fell and that image of the tutu flying up as you fall on your face and the image of you trying to get up and uncrinkle the poor tutu and run away will be forever emblazoned in the minds of both runners AND spectators. You will forever be the topic of conversation when anyone brings up their race experience, because now YOU are part of THEIR story. “Oh, and remember when that girl in the tutu busted ass? It was hilarious! There was tutu everywhere!”
We can’t have that.
And of course you know too that running with an unsightly substance running down your leg is definitely not an option, but even more importantly running in a tutu with an unsightly substance running down your leg is even less of an option that that! We’re not trying to win the Boston Marathon or anything, here, we’re just one of the thousands just trying to finish! And strangers telling that story? Uh uh. No way. A girl in a tutu has to preserve her dignity, after all.
So. There you are. In your tutu, running along, smiling, while the lower half of your body is screaming. And you pull off to the side when you see the oasis of porta-potties to your left and despite how disgusting they are in reality, you think to yourself, “Pretty maids all in a row!” Because that’s just about the best thing those eyes have seen since this feeling all started!
And then you get in line, because yes, even during a race at mile 6, there is a line, and you watch your PR, every precious second of it, tick away from you. And even though you know in your heart that the disaster that is awaiting is so much more important to divert, the pain of giving up the dream of a new PR is still there hanging over you. It’s a small moment of defeat when you stop running.
Finally, a long and full 5 minutes later (you’re welcome), I emerge from the porta-potty somewhat victorious and I’m ready to continue on, disaster averted, ready to run.
I de-crumple my poor tutu that was cowering at the sight of the porta-potty, and together, my tutu and I pick it up and get back in the race. At that point, I heard my tutu whisper in its little begging tulle-y voice, "Please. No more porta-potties." I assured it we were ok.
I get moving and it feels pretty good, only I realize that it’s actually pretty hard to keep that 10 minute mile momentum up after stopping for a good 5 minutes. Nearly impossible, in fact. And my mind frame begins to shift from trying to catch up and catch that PR, because honestly, yes, I was still a bit unwilling to give up the dream and trying to do the math for the next couple a miles hoping that maybe the dream was still alive somehow, somewhere, post-porta-potty. I realized that it might not be in the cards for me after all, so my mind began to drift toward just finishing. Which is just never the end I have in mind at the beginning.
So I GU, I GU Chomp, I hydrate, I run along with the 2:30 pace group for a while until my legs start to feel like concrete stumps around mile 10 and the 2:30 pace girl eventually fades off into the distance because I can no longer keep up her pace, and I feel a little more defeated.
At that point, I hear my husband’s voice in my head. “It’s easy. You just put one foot in front of the other, for a while, until you’re done,” he says.
Easy for him to say.
But that’s what I do. I keep propelling myself forward, hearing the masses along the route cheering for my tutu (because they do! They really do!) and it lifts me up. I play only the fastest, hardest songs on my I-Pod because those are what I need right now. But of course only one headphone is working at this point and it’s funny how only half a pair of headphones gives you the effect of only half a “pump up”, rather than the entire “pump up” that you need.
I look down at my tutu and it’s a bit crumpled and weary-looking and I decide that it looks just about how I feel. And I hurt. I hurt a lot.
I slow down and walk for exactly one minute. It takes me to the 11 mile mark and I decide that the pain in my quads and the pain in my feet doesn’t actually exist and that it’s only in my mind and I push through it.
Around mile 12, a song comes on and the lyrics are:“I need you right now.” And I decide that I might need a little divine intervention at this point. Because I’m now in the very last mile and my body doesn’t feel the end in sight and it’s yelling at me.
I say a little simple prayer. “God, I need you right now,” I say in my head.
And then I climb a hill and what do you know? At the tippy top is an entire cheerleading squad wearing tutus and they are ALL CHEERING FOR ME! Because I’m wearing a tutu and all and when you’re wearing a tutu, you realize that there is such a thing called “tutu solidarity.”
We tutus stick together.
And it made me so happy and I got all choked up and have you noticed how hard it is to run when you’re getting choked up? So I try to regain my composure here and the very next song that comes on is “Hum Hallellujah” by Fallout Boy. Again, divine intervention? You know what I think, of course!
Here, is the spot where I would like to insert my two cents about hills. Because that’s just what cropped up in the final ½ mile. A darned hill.
Someone told me before the race that there were only a few hills and that it was a pretty flat course. But I’m from Florida. I know flat. And this course was not flat. It was riddled with hills. And not the kind that I like, because I actually even kind of like hills. The ones that go straight up and down? I like them. Even on a bike, I like them. I like to pretend that this big bad hill is out to get me and as I’m cursing it on the way up, I am conquering it. I like to yell at the hills as I climb them and I like to tell them off when I get to the top. Because it feels good.
But these hills were different. They were MILE-LONG inclines, hills that lasted forever and forever and forever. Ones that never, ever seem to end. Long, drawn out hills that are like those terrible movies with lots of really good actors in them that fool you into think they’re going to be good movies but really they suck really bad and you just want it to be over already.
I insert my little hill rant here because of course, it followed too, that the very last ½ mile of the run was on one of those slow drawn-out inclines with a tiny strip of straightaway at the end and it felt just the slightest bit cruel to do to that to a runner who had just gone 12.5 miles. I mean, really, race-course-mapper-outers. Thanks?
Anyway, despite my personal, ahem, pitstop, I loved everything about doing this race. In the grand scheme of things, this race actually had very little to do with beating the time from my last race. It had everything to do with running a half-marathon as part of a team, part of a wonderful group of girls and an even greater cause, it had to do with conquering so many little obstacles and finding victories along the way, an exact metaphor for the way life goes and especially the way life with cancer goes. Because that is what this has all been for, after all.
I love so much how every race has its own story, from the beginning of its inception, to the training, all the way to the very, very end. And in the story is a chapter of each training session, each learned moment, each victory and success, each injury suffered and overcome, each tear and each tiny defeat. It all leads to that one moment at the starting line when you’re waiting for that horn to blow. The journey was the hardest part, after all. It makes the next 2.5 to 5 hours toward that finish line look like gravy.
So in this story, it wasn’t my best race. It certainly wasn’t my prettiest. Well, the tutu turned out to be pretty cool. And my “unfortunate emergency” number was up for this race (because it was bound to happen sooner or later!) And in the end, I didn’t beat my PR. The training was long and filled with learning moments.
My lessons: I learned that nutrition before, after and during the long runs is well worth the effort of logging and switching and experimenting (although that wouldn’t have helped me on race day in this case.) I learned that playing softball and toying with a knee that has very little cartilage and no ACL will jeopardize my future in running or triathlons, so it will have to go for now. I learned that the long runs are necessary and should not be skipped (Yep. I skipped one.) I learned that tempo runs really do kick your ass into making you faster! I learned that you can somehow convince people to let you fly all the way to California without your identification because you have driven right out of the bank drive-thru without it the day before and your flight happens to leave before the bank re-opens. I learned that if I have a race, it is inevitable that I will get a cold that will level me the week before. I also learned that at some point, I might just have to stop having huge expectations for myself and believe that doing the best that I can do with what is going on at the time is victory in and of itself. That it’s not all about the PR, but like in this case, something much, much greater. That in the end, it is a race against me and only me. And that I win. No matter what.
Follow me on Twitter. Subscribe to my blog.
Monday
Greetings from San Diego, Home of Free WiFi
I'm at the airport right now, having just said goodbye to Team Shrinking Jeans after our long-awaited 1/2 marathon in San Diego. I hate goodbyes. So.MUCH.
It's so weird that it's all over. There was more than 5 months of running and hundreds of miles. Injuries and all of the blood, sweat and tears. Millions of e-mails and pictures and posts. Hours of training and worrying and excitement. And it all culminated into yesterday.
Today we all woke up and it was over. The crowds of thousands of Team In Training runners that filled the hotel lobby have all dissipated, as if into thin air. What was left of our 14 person team (painfuly) walked to breakfast. We quietly sat and ate breakfast and drank our victory mimosas. We went back to the hotel and I packed up and said goodbye. Almost anti-climactic.
Hard to believe it's all done.
It's like the saying goes, The hard part is getting to the starting line. Or something like that.
The easy part was finishing.
Well it wasn't really that easy. The race report to come, along with the full weekend recap and of course, "how to make a race day tutu." Hope you had a mahvelous weekend! Thanks to everyone for all the great wishes and who followed our whole journey and supported us on Twitter during the race!!
Wednesday
Where the HELL Have I been?
It's 2 days before I leave for San Diego and forever since I've blogged.
In that time, we have switched pre-schools, finished out the school year, had a family reunion, nursed one knee injury and I'm currently on my second box of tissues after inheriting my sons' colds and being completely laid out.
Whew. It's been a week.
Because it wouldn't be me if I weren't nursing a cold before a huge event like the Team In Training 1/2 marathon, right?? You can just call me "Murphy."
Boy do I have a lot of catching up to do here.
An update on the knee: Last week, during a softball game, I tweaked my knee. It was so swollen and it hurt real bad, but I iced it and compressed it last week. It was swollen until Sunday and it's been feeling pretty good, the swelling has definitely gone down. Of course, I thought the worst, so I went to my orthopedic guy today and he played with it and looked at it and x-rayed it and everything. I was waiting for the worst, "No more triathlons, no more long-distance running, no more anything..." But he was nice to me and told me what I wanted to hear: that besides my missing ACL, everything looks like it's in fine working order, the swelling's gone down and I did the best thing by staying off it last week. I've had two surgeries on my meniscus in the past (I have almost none left) and during my last surgery, it was discovered that there is a black hole where my ACL should be. One day he said he'd like to convince me to have ACL replacement surgery (which requires 6 months of crutches and another 6 months of rehab -- shah! Right! That'd work well with toddlers...) but until then, as long as I keep the muscles around my knee strengthened, I should be ok to continue doing what I'm doing. So, good! I'm going to! And I probably was going to even if he said not to! (I'm stubborn like that.)
Whew. That was close. But for now, I'm going to say goodbye to softball while I'm doing triathlons so I don't keep screwing up my knee. That'll be hard to do. But I think it's necessary.
Now I have a cold and I've been laid out for a couple of days. I'm going to see a doctor tonight who will tell me what I know, that I should take this and that and have plenty of rest and fluids, yada yada yada. But I'll go anyway.
And remember how I have to wear a tutu during the race on Sunday? I've found amazing directions on how to make my own and I'm buying the tulle tonight to make it. Hurrah! I will supply the pictures in case you, too, are ever interested in making a tutu yourself. Because you know you are.
I haven't been weighing in, weekly, just in case you've been wondering. I've been maintaining and steady for the past few weeks and not really trying to lose any (though I could still stand to lose a few). I'm just trying not to gain a whole lot. I'll be back at it once I'm 100% after the half-marathon.
WHICH I AM SO TOTALLY LOOKING FORWARD TO! I haven't run in a week, but I hope my body will remember that I had done some amount of training over the past 6 months! We shall see. But a tutu makes everything better.
Now I have to go clean my hovel while I'm up to it and then I'll be off to make a nice purple tutu!
Have a nice day! Glad to be back!


























