It's over. And even though, six days later, I'm still under the weather (due to the weather!) and I can't
run even if I wanted to....it ended in the best possible way. I won't even hedge on a spoiler alert, because all of you reading know exactly what happened in Philly - you just want a good story! Well, here it is, folks, - the 2nd attempt at a BQ - in Philly - and the tale of one freaking wild, epic day. Let's just say...I definitely got my sweet revenge on that first attempt in 2019!So, the last few posts have pretty much summed up the build to this race - it was, quite honestly, similar to my 2021 half marathon training where I was a nervous wreck because EVERYTHING went well. I nailed all my paces, loved the process, and was, on paper, ready to rock this race! I needed a 3:39 to qualify (yay for turning 40 this year!), figured I could hit a 3:35 based off my training (again, sweet revenge from my 2019 goal), and My A goal was a 3:30 - depending on the course distance (rarely do you actually run 26.2 due to tangents, etc). My overall goal was really to hit that 8:00/mile, though I told a few people that seeing a 7 as the first number for my pace for a freakin marathon would just absolutely blow my little mind. I was pretty vocal about my goals, which served to scare the shit out of me even more - there was no hiding behind what I considered to be scary as shit goals. The taper was just as expected - early week, I had a few...okay, many... freak outs (what, you couldn't tell by the tone of my last post?) but once Friday rolled around, I was in the zone and ready to go. The biggest worry was now the race day forecast - which was 25 degrees with 20-25 mph winds. I had trained for the race in weather that went from 45-70, and had settled in on my pre race outfit weeks ago on my last long run - my under armour shorts, endorphin speeds, and my custom Raise tank and sports bra (stay tuned for this - I'm getting ready to officially launch the site soon!). I had throwaway arm warmers and gloves in case it was cold - but when I thought cold, I thought 40. I went back and forth quite a bit about this wrinkle, mostly worried about my hands and feet, as I don't run in socks (no. ever. and I do not get blisters.) The day before I decided to go with what I knew, and just double up on gloves and add a base layer long sleeved shirt. Done. Let it be what it was.Saturday was so much fun - with the help of some amazing neighbors and friends (THANK YOU!!), Greg was able to sherpa me and it was so needed. He hasn't been to a big race in years because of kids, and he was so damned amazing. We road tripped to Philly with bad 90s music and about 4 bathroom stops in the 5 hour drive (yay for being hydrated - NO, I am not pregnant). We played around with the expo, randomly ran into two of my friends from the ROC in a city of millions, and were all settled in by 4:30 at the hotel. I made the final prep for race morning, put my feet up, and ate my standard 6th grader meal pre race of pasta and veggies (I own it. I am not the party animal pre race, and the nerves are real.) Lights were out by 8pm, which was for shit, because I think I got about a half hour of sleep. No biggie - this is normal. Race morning dawned at 3:30 - and I got up feeling strangely calm. This would follow the whole morning - all nerves were left in Rochester. The work was done and all that was left to do was RACE!Pre Race
Several of my friends had run this race and I was told two things - get there early to get through security and it was not flat. Noted. (These were both spot on). I dressed and layered, stuffed my bra stored my gels, danced around like an idiot to Ginuwine
AND HOLY SHIT WAS IT COLD. My wave was set to go off at 7:10 and I was a chattering mess. I already could not feel my fingers and my legs were blocks of ice. Someone's mylar blanket blew into the backs of my legs and I grabbed it for warmth thinking - this is just not good. But it is what it is. I still had the overall feeling of calm that had been present since the day before. I was here to do a thing. It was time to DO THE THING. And before I knew it, the first two waves had gone off, our corrals gun sounded and it was time TO GO!!
Miles 1-7: (7:35/mi)
The first few miles passed in a blur, to be honest. I'd been told that my GPS would be off, due to the big city, and to look for the mile markers and turn off auto lap. I'm not great with manual lap, so I decided against that, but ran off of a 5-6 effort and was a little surprised when my first mile clocked in at 7:40. (Oddly enough, only a .1 mile off, which would be the case until mile 25. Sweet). I saw Greg shortly after mile 1 and flipped a thumbs up. I decided to piss off everyone tracking me go with the flow and run off effort solely - we had a tailwind and even though miles 2 and 3 were faster than they should have been, at 7:16 and 7:19, I was feeling great and literally felt like I wasn't working at all. Miles 4-7 followed the same pattern, and I hit the first (quarterish) at a 7:35 pace. The crowd support to this point was spot on and I was all smiles (okay, fine, I was for 90% of this race!). I hit my first gel at mile 5, right on pace, and turned to start the first of the hills feeling on fire.Miles 8-15 (7:59/mi)
I fully expected to slow down here, due to the turn away from the headwind and the start of the rollers. Miles 8 and 10 were the two hills on this segment, and while they weren't terrible, they were definitely noticeable and my pace slowed to match effort. At mile 9.5, running up the second hill, I dropped my gel and my mp3 player got completely tangled in my bra. I realized quickly that wearing double gloves might have been a good idea to keep my hands warm, but I couldn't maneuver worth shit. I took a quick walk break, righted my tangles, grabbed another gel from my bra (so classy) and picked it back up! I saw Greg at mile 12.5 and flashed him a thumbs up - stopped for a quick water break at the hill at mile 13, and hit the half
Miles 16-20 (8:15/mile)
And I would need that magic, that resilience. As we turned right shortly before mile 16, the cross wind became a fierce headwind. Greg was cheering me on here and I was still in a good mood, flashing him the thumbs up sign! We were cold and wet, but it was still just a magical day to be out there. I wanted it so badly. I hit mile 16 just shy of 2:05 on my watch and 2:06 on the marker (I was about a tenth off still, and did my marathon math off that). As it went, I had about a two minute buffer to hit my A goal of 3:30, but I knew this was going to be the hardest part of the course, as we had two more decent hills at miles 18 and 19, and the headwind was so fierce that when it gusted (reported to 35 mph) we were almost going backwards. I admittedly hit a low here - at about mile 18, I took a walk break, refueled (slightly ahead of schedule - as I planned on gels at 5, 10, 15 and 20, but I was grumpy and hoped some sugar would help - its worth noting this was the first water stop I saw ANY gels so I was glad to grab a spare but also glad I had my own!). My left hand was a mess, honestly - I kept curling it in under my jersey for warmth. I saw Runner Dave AKA Dumpster fire at mile 19, he was about ten minutes ahead of me and looked pissed (there was a story here, and not a fun one!) We tried to high five and failed, which summed this up about right. Hit mile 20 in 2:38 and change, and then the blessed turnaround - huzzah! With marathon running, much like Ironman, it's not a matter of if something will go wrong - it will. The trick is knowing what to do with it - do you need food? A mantra? Remembering your goal? This time, it was food. I've said it before and I'll say it again - your mental game has to be fierce for this stuff. I'm not always perfect at it but my "why" was on point during the low miles - and it would come to test me again!Miles 21-26.38 (8:06/mi)
So, I'm no whiz at science, but I would have thought such a shitty headwind would give us immediate relief. No such luck. The headwind was gone but it seemed to have changed to a weird cross wind, which was fine, though I felt a little cheated - where was my free speed?? LOL. My left hand was totally frozen, but my foot was doing okay - I picked it up for a bit and thankfully went from my slowest miles of the day at miles 19 and 20 (8:42 and 8:46) back down to 8:05-8:10.
I rescued a water cup for a woman at mile 22, who called me her hero (aww) and pretty much stayed in my zone. I got a little tired again at mile 22, and looked down at my watch - I was at 2:55 and change, and needed to hold roughly an 8 minute mile to hit my A goal. I knew at this point, unless something terrible happened, I was going to BQ. I reminded myself that a 3:32 or 3:34 was totally okay as a finish time and ...wait. NO. WHAT THE FUCK RAE. I did NOT come this far to settle here. This was a mental low. I needed to remember my WHY.
And I thought about one of my favorites....a mantra used by someone I admire a great deal that I met recently....and I love it. Whenever he gets low, he channels Mia Hamm's words.... I put in the work. I built the fire. And it was time to LIGHT THIS MATCH. Let's DO this!
And with that, I picked the pace back up. This was GONNA HAPPEN. I was READY. I hit mile 25 (the race mile 25) in 3:20 flat and I knew I could hit that 3:30. I took off my last throwaway layer and proudly sported my Raise singlet. My 8:05 pace became a 7:55 pace, and I saw my friend Laura at mile 26 (with Greg, who was filming and I totally missed!) and was ALL. GRINS.The last mile was surprisingly uphill (WTF) but I didn't care. My mp3 player changed over and I was ready for some SERIOUS INSPO a la Rocky style when...."Put it in Your Mouth" came on. OMFG. Seriously?? This song had some pretty great connotations from a few triathletes in my life (yeah, we are so mature) but also, most recently, my badass friend Jennie who joked that we would have that stuck in our head all day race day (she did IM Cozumel the same day). I burst into laughter and then shut off the music - I didn't need it - and dropped my pace even further, crossing the line in 3:29:57 - per my Garmin - all. freaking. smiles. (Actually, the photos suggest I smiled the whole race, which is pretty accurate. I had the damned time of my life!)
Post Race
HOLY SHIT DID THAT JUST HAPPEN??? As soon as I hit stop, I realized a few things. I just absolutely KILLED my goal - Boston Qualifying by ten minutes. I hit my A goal of 3:30 (official race time was 3:30:08 so I must have hit my Garmin a little late to start) and ran 26.38 miles at a 7:58 pace. A SUB 8 PACE FOR 26.38 MILES.Six days later, I still can't run. My legs are doing alright - but the rest of my body is in need of a rest. The weather, wind, and race effort completely tapped me. I spent a few days low key sick, and I'm honestly not sure I've even eaten enough to adequately re-up my stores. Food has been hit or miss. This is a new one for me - I've never felt like this post race. And....I don't care at all. I have never walked away from a race all smiles and not wanted to change a thing. And I still am in utter shock that I will be running the Boston Marathon in 2024 - I can't believe it.
What's next? Off season, baby. I've spent a lot of time this week sleeping, recovering, and spending quality time with my family and friends amidst the holiday. I'll go low key for a few more weeks then kick it off mid December for 2023. And what about that? Well, that's a post for another day. Today - we are still all smiles and my heart...well that's in Philadelphia.
Pretty amazing! Nice job kid!
ReplyDeleteNo idea why it posts as anonymous but you can play...who dis??°°¿°¿
ReplyDeleteI think I can figure it out :-P
DeleteMy Hero *
ReplyDeleteAlways an inspiration ~ well done Rae!
ReplyDelete