Wednesday, May 30, 2012

90 Miles - No Problem, I Got It

Last weekend I had my longest bike ride ever scheduled 90 miles (NINETY).  Holy crap, that's really far.  Think of how far it is to drive 90 miles.  Now imagine doing that on a bike. Yikes.  I should have been really nervous.  I mean, the farthest I've ever biked before was ~60 miles.  The longest time I've ever spent on my bike was the hideously long bike time at Wildflower (~4 hours 45 minutes).  So, 90 miles was going to be WAY further and way more time.  We had a 6 hour minimum time AND 90 mile minimum (meaning you go all 6 hours even if you've hit 90 miles OR if it his 6 hours before 90 miles, you keep going til you get to 90).  I wanted to get through the 90 in 6 hours or just under.  Seemed like a reasonable goal based on what I've been doing and what the course would be (north on PCH to Las Posas, east to Camarillo and back).

I really SHOULD have been nervous.  But, I wasn't.  At all.  I knew I could do it.  I've been doing everything my coaches tell me to do and I know they wouldn't have me go for something I wasn't ready for.  I got all my stuff together and prepped my bottles and nutrition the night before.  I was super tired and passed out early after a swim at the pool (the ocean was being mean and nasty and it wasn't safe to do OWS in the afternoon, and I couldn't make the AM OWS, so a million laps in the pool for me =/).

Woke up Saturday morning, still not nervous.  Got to OSV and was ready to go a few minutes early.  Its funny, cause not only was I not nervous, I was actually excited.  I was excited to tackle this distance and see how my body would respond.  We rode down Ocean to PCH and headed North.  I felt good the whole way, even the climb up Encinal.  I tried a new bar in my nutrition thinking it would be good.  Its something I've eaten before, but not while exercising.  A Bonk Breaker Bar.  So yummy.  Seemed like a good thing to try.
I kept up with my nutrition and hydration pretty well and was averaging around 15mph, right on track.  I was excited.  When I got north of Zuma Beach the wind picked up a little bit, and I felt like I was pedaling hard and not going anywhere.  But, it wasn't as bad as the power brick day, so I kept going.  I got out to Las Posas and started to head east.  It was boring.  I was singing little songs to myself in my head, all with the words, "this is boring" and "i am so bored" with a couple of "FOCUS!" thrown in there to get myself to pay attention to my speed again.

On the way back to PCH I started to get uncomfortable every time I was in aero.  My stomach was hurting and I realized the bonk breaker was sitting there, not digesting well, like a rock.  Ugh.  This went on for about an hour or so.  I drank more water than normal and prayed it would break down faster.  Back on PCH there was a good tail wind heading south and I was making good time.  I was still on pace for ~6 hours, even with not really being able to be in aero for a good hour and a half.

Finally my stomach started to feel better and I was able to return to aero.  I was still feeling good (albeit a little bored at times).  Actually, when I got to our check point at mile 54 I told my teammate, I need to remember this feeling, cause this sucks, I don't want to do this again, one full ironman will be enough (I still had 35 miles to ride and I wasn't feeling great and was a little bored).

At about 5 hours in I saw a car pass me that looked like Coach Brad's.  But, it didn't stop, so I kept along my merry way.  I got to the top of a hill and there was the car, parked, with Brad waiting for me.  He told me I looked like I was "lumbering" up the hill.  I already knew that.  I was just starting to feel better post bonk breaker bar.  I told him about the bar and he said that wasn't really that surprising, other people have similar issues.  Now I know, what I've been doing works for me, no need to change it up.  I told him I was good and ready to finish strong.  He looked at my time, 5:09 and seemed happy.  Good, cause I was very happy.

Off I went to finish.  As I approached American Apparel on PCH I started to think about how far I've come, how much I've changed.  It's incredible the things I'm capable of.  I passed the spot where I crashed and at 6 hours I was at 87.8 miles, I slowed down a little bit and reflected on everything that has happened since I started this journey.  Not that long ago I was scared of my bike, intimidated by a ride of 25 miles, wondering if I could do this.  I headed up the last hill to OSV (its a mean little hill at the end of a long ride - rude) and stopped my timer.  90.9 miles in 6 hours and 11 minutes.  Boom.  A hair slower than I'd like, but I did it. I DID IT!!!  I was never scared or intimidated and I knew the whole time that I could do it.  And I know I'll be able to do 112.

After the ride we had a 30 minute run.  That was the worst part of the whole damn day.  That run hurt.  When I finished (2.65 slow poke miles) I wondered how the hell I'm going to run a full marathon after 20 more miles on the bike. Ouch, that run hurt.  My body was not happy.  That afternoon I had a late lunch with some teammates and then got home and about 2 hours later had another meal.  I was famished.  I guess a 90 mile ride will do that to you.

Sunday morning brought OWS.  The water felt good and it was a good swim.  I stuck with a teammate who doesn't love OWS and I think it helped her stay calm and made the swim better for her.  After the swim was a 17 mile run.  I had twisted my foot earlier in the week at an event (blog post on that coming soon) and after the 90 mile ride it was feeling angry.  I mentioned it to Coach Brad and said I was still planning on running.  I was doing okay, but coming down Amalfi (a hilly street) it hurt every single step.  I got to our sag box and stopped for a few minutes, took off my shoe, foot was swollen, and rubbed it.  I was debating what to do.  After seeing a couple of teammates I knew I needed to head back to the start, my foot wasn't having any of it.

I was at about 10 miles when I got back to the start and my body felt fine (the first couple of miles I was trying to figure out how the hell I was going to finish the whole run, cause I was not feeling it).  So, I decided to run up and down the beach path, thinking the flats would be easier on my foot.  It was okay, but by 12.5 my foot was done.  I stopped and waited for the rest of my teammates.  Its incredibly frustrating cause I knew better when I was doing what I was doing and hurt it, I knew I shouldn't have been doing it, and yet I did (foot still hurts a little).

Post run I got home, ate whatever I could that was quick (cause, damn, I was HUNGRY) and hurriedly got ready for Hawaii send off at Trader Vic's at LA Live.  At send off I proceeded to eat all the things.
This is what I felt like on Sunday.

I was ridiculously hungry.  The hungry monster passed by Monday, but on Sunday, I felt like I couldn't eat enough.  And, 90 miles ridden plus ~15 total run over two days kinda hurts.  But, my body felt surprisingly good on Sunday and on Monday I felt normal (I did live in compression gear on Monday, so that might have helped a bit).  Win.

Week 1 of "Go Time" deemed VERY successful.  Hit my workouts and hit 'em hard.  Week 2, so far so good.

It was lovely to have Monday off and I went and did something very grown up - bought furniture.  I've never actually bought furniture before - long story.  But, I am the proud new owner of a lovely couch and chair and small ottoman being delivered tomorrow - yay!  And, I've definitely decided what dining room table I want and will be making that purchase post-Vineman.  Double yay!  Now I just need to find a good coffee table and a new dresser then I'll be like a real adult - finally.

Remember, I'm still fundraising and getting really close to my deadline.  Please donate if you can.  Lots of miles are still available to be sponsored, just $15/mile!

Thanks!

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Dear Hawaii Teammates

This coming weekend is Ironman Hawaii 70.3.  This is an event that the IronTeam has been training for since November.  If you don't already know by now I'm on the IronTeam, training for Vineman full in July, so I've been training right along side all of these fabulous people heading to Hawaii this week.  Late last summer, when I heard what the events for Ironteam would be this year I knew I wanted to join, because of Hawaii 70.3.  I was in.  Then, I was tag-teamed by some Ironteamers who had just finished Vineman Full and a coach, and voila, I changed my mind and decided I wanted to do Vineman instead.  Even though I'm not racing Hawaii, it was the catalyst to get me on the IronTeam.  So, yay Hawaii!

And now, my amazing teammates are getting ready to race Hawaii 70.3 this weekend, and I could not be more excited for all of them.  They are well trained and ready and are going to rock it.  The following is a note to them.

Dear Hawaii teammates,

Training along side of each and every one of you has been a privilege and an honor.  You are all so ready for this race.  Saturday is going to be an amazing day.

I wish, more than anything, that I could be there, on the course, cheering for you all, ringing a cowbell, and screaming my lungs out to encourage you.  But, alas that is not the case (I needed a new couch and it seemed a more appropriate way to spend the money - $1000 for a three day trip was not something I could justify).

Know this though, in my heart, I am there with you, cheering for you, all of us you leave behind are there in spirit.  We will be cheering for you, awaiting news of victory.

You have all worked so hard for the past 6 months, you've got this.  Enjoy your time in Hawaii, this is your day.  Smile and know that the months of hard work are about to pay off.  And, remember, you are doing this for something bigger than yourself, you are doing this for an important cause, and that is the most amazing part of all.

I am honored to call you my team mates, and more so, my friends.  You each inspire me, in different ways, every single day.  I could not imagine training with a more wonderful group of people.  You have all made the last 6+ months of training so much more incredible than I ever could have imagined it would be.  So, I thank you for that.

Have so much fun this week and weekend and know that if I could be there I would, in a heart beat (if I can find a way to Hawaii this week, trust me, I'll be there, but it's highly unlikely).

Listen closely while you're racing, you might hear us, all the way from LA, cheering for you.

To the coaches and cheer squad - there's plenty of cell phone service in Hawaii, I'm sure, so you best text and/or Facebook the stay behind crew with the progress of the day.  We will all be anxiously awaiting news.

I love you all, and I can't wait to hear about your week and race.  Now, stop reading this, go drink some water, and get ready to ROCK this race.  Go show Hawaii what the IronTeam is made of.  And, when you finish, celebrate like only the IronTeam can!

Love, hugs and EXTRA loud cheers all the way from LA!  See you all soon!

Pomaika'i!

Love,
Elisabeth, aka EWS, aka E, aka S

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Go Time

Last week was kind of awesome.  Filled with cupcakes, aero bars, open water swim mania, and fun times!  A recovery week over my birthday and some time to prepare for what's next - GO TIME.

Last Tuesday was my birthday, and I decided to celebrate with a swim.  Last year I celebrated my birthday by running a half marathon, and had fun, so I thought a workout would be a great way to spend the evening.  I had gone out to dinner to celebrate with my family the night before so it worked out perfectly.  After the swim set I went to dinner with a bunch of my teammate's and a couple of our coaches.  It was a fun dinner and birthday celebration (for me and Coach Brad, his birthday is the day after mine), including sombreros!  (I also had cupcakes and ice cream at work on Tuesday - sugar overload!)  And, I got a number of birthday donations to my fundraising, which made the day even more special.  Thank you to everyone who donated.  (You can still donate to wish me a happy belated birthday, its not too late!)


We're going to fast forward to Friday cause nothing interesting happened Wednesday or Thursday. Friday morning I got up early and headed to Santa Monica, to Tower 26, for OWS (open water swim).  I had gone the previous Friday morning and it was a great way to start the day, so I decided I would do this every week that the team is out there.  I got to the beach and the waves were kind of big, and coming in sets of 5 and 6.  It was a little scary looking, although the water felt good, it was a good temperature.  I tried making it out once and freaked out a little and started to head back to shore.  Coach Brad made me try again.  We were almost past the break and I didn't duck dive in time and got knocked around by a wave and inhaled some water and freaked out again.  So, I headed back to shore.  I felt like a little kid, holding the coach's hand cause I was scared.  Fail.

A little bit later I decided to try again.  I went out with Holly S and successfully made it past the break and got in one loop.  Not enough for the day, but a good start.  At the end of the day I headed home a little early and my awesome teammate Amy picked me up and we headed back to Tower 26 for another OWS.  The waves were much smaller in the afternoon and I had a good swim, got in a couple of loops and at the end we all played in the water and Holly S taught me how to body surf.  So fun.  (Also of note, Holly has taught me a bunch of stuff since I started with the team - how to clip in and out on the bike, how to get past the waves, how to body surf... Thank you Holly!)

Saturday morning brought yet another OWS! Three open water swims in 24 hours!?! Kind of a lot, but seriously fun!  This one was longer, and the water somehow felt more polluted.  I kept swimming through sheets of plastic.  So nasty.  After the swim we had a transition to bike/run/bike/run/bike/run extravaganza.  First we had to prove we could grab a bottle from bottle exchange and holster it.  No problem, I had done that at Desert Tri and Wildflower.  Finally, something on the bike I can do easily!

Bottle exchange

We rode our bikes up to Ocean and San Vicente (OSV) and did an Amalfi loop (an uphill windy road) followed by the San Vicente Challenge.  What is the San Vicente Challenge?  Well, it involves riding up hill at faster and faster speeds.  I got to 18mph and couldn't hold it and had to tap out.  I was pretty impressed with myself.  After coming back down San V we did a 10 minute transition run and then back on our bikes and repeat, repeat, repeat until 12:30.  I got through three loops and got to practice being in aero a lot.  I actually really enjoyed it and it wasn't terribly hard for me, I kind of found it comfortable.  Ha! Who would've thought?  I am enjoying the bike more and more everyday.  Excited to start pushing my pace a bit more.  And, I feel like after all the struggles I've had on the bike, I was due to have something come easier.  Apparently that's aero.
Look at me! Having fun and smiling on the bike!!


 Safety first!

Saturday afternoon consisted of visiting with friends and then heading to a birthday party.  I was dead tired by 10:30.  I got home and passed right out.  Thankfully practice on Sunday didn't start until 9:15am.  We had another OWS, and I was excited, I charged right in to the water.  When we were done we saw dolphins jumping and swimming right where we had just been swimming, so cool.

I love OWS (even if a wetsuit is potentially the most unflattering thing I've ever put on)

After the swim Vineman/Canada participants had a nice easy 10 mile run.  I ran with Coach Andie again this week.  She was good company and made the miles feel easy.  After the run I had the follow up to my hydrostatic body fat test (better results than I thought - more on this in another post).  Then home to clean and relax.  Then I went out to a birthday dinner with Allison and Sheree at Gyu Kaku, where we had delicious food and yummy cupcakes!  Thanks girls for helping me finish out a super fun birthday week!

Carrot cake cupcake, s'mores cupcake and birthday cake cupcake. Yum!

Recovery week done.  I swear I try to jam way too much in to the recovery weeks.  I'm exhausted.  And, on that note, it's go time.  Only 67 days til race day.  I need to hit all my workouts and hit them hard.  No more occasionally half-assing it (I've been doing them all, most of the time, I just haven't always been giving them my all).  I need to get my ass in gear.  Cause I want to finish and not look like I'm going to die when I finish.  To my friends and family, I'm sorry, but you're going to be seeing WAY less of me.  It's focus time.  Please understand that I need your support and understanding for the next several weeks as the race approaches, my absence isn't cause I don't love you, its cause I am committed to seeing this through.  In 69 days I'm all yours again.

Day one of Go Time, successful.  I did the bonus spin, the core workout and ate healthy all day.  On to day 2, swim tonight and already eating healthy today.  Lets keep this trend going.  (I'll post a weekly update for how I'm doing to keep myself accountable.)

Lastly, a lot of my teammates are heading to Hawaii next week for their race - Ironman Hawaii 70.3.  Good luck to all of you, you're going to kill it! I wish I was going so I could cheer you all on and see the amazing things you are about to accomplish, but listen really closely, you might hear me cheering extra loud all the way from LA.  Speaking of, if anyone has a ton of frequent flier miles they'd like to give me to get me to Hawaii I'd be more than willing to accept them. :)  Or, you can just buy me a ticket, and if you're going to be there I can be your own person sherpa/cheer squad, I'm great at both of these things! :)

Thanks!

Note: All images are courtesy of Paiwei Wei and Louis Kwan, thank you both for your incredible images, seriously, you're amazing (sombrero dinner pic from Marvin, cupcake pic I took).

Help me get across that finish line and make a donation to LLS, cause I'm still doing this all for a cause.  It's 100% tax deductible!  Do it... you know you want to.  And, you can sponsor a mile for just $15! I'll swim/bike/run in your name or in honor/memory of someone you choose.  Just $15 a mile.  Help a girl out! (And, if your company does matching gifts I'll double the miles you get to sponsor.)

Thursday, May 10, 2012

Wildflower (aka how a DNF can maybe be a good thing)

It's been five days since race day and I'm not even sure where to start with this.  But, I'm going to give it a try.  Forgive me if this is long-winded, but its a process for me and its cathartic to get the whole thing out (plus it'll help me remember later).  (This is about the whole weekend, the race part is in the middle, so feel free to skip down if you want - it's marked where it starts.)

Back in December when I registered for Wildflower I was scared.  I stared at the final page before clicking the button to pay and register for at least ten minutes.  I switched to other things to look at, like Facebook and Twitter, to stay calm about it (obviously I eventually clicked the button and registered).  See, I had been hearing about Wildflower since I started with Team in Training and ran my first marathon a couple of years ago.  From everything I had heard this was an insanely difficult course and the whole idea of it scared me.  A friend told me about a year and a half ago that the long course would be too difficult for me (ever), but I should probably try the olympic one day, after I had done some other triathlons.  This conversation happened before I was even thinking about joining the Ironteam.  But, I joined Ironteam and trained my ass off and was ready and getting excited.

Wildflower is like the Woodstock of triathlons.  So, I was excited.  There's camping, and a festival, and lots of hot men wandering around (seriously, so many attractive triathletes).  I was not excited about the idea of camping, so I jumped on board with a couple of teammates and we rented an RV for the weekend.  Best idea ever.  I don't really have a problem with camping, I just prefer not to.
Our home away from home at Wildflower
I knew going in to the weekend that there were some strict course cutoffs (and slanted a bit against women, but that's neither here nor there), but I thought I would be okay.  I knew it would be close, but I figured I had a good chance, and if I had a good swim I would have an even better chance for the bike cutoff, and I had a route slip from the coaches spelling out where we needed to be by what time to make the cutoffs and mph to make the next point.  I was prepared.  I had done the distance quite a few times.  I wasn't scared.  I wasn't even really nervous.  The only thing I was actually nervous about was the fact that I hadn't put all three distances together in one day before.  But, I had done them all.  (Wildflower Long Course is a 1.2 mile swim, 56 mile bike, 13.1 mile run - half ironman distance, but not an Ironman branded event.)

I left for Wildflower early Thursday morning, carpooling with two of my teammates (two of my other teammates took my bike up for me since my car only has a rack for two bikes).  I was hoping that we would get there by 11ish.  But, we had to make a couple of pit stops.  Well hydrated triathletes need multiple bathroom breaks.  And, after we were north of Santa Barbara, Cecy realized that she had forgotten her sports bra at home.  So, we found a running shop in San Luis Obispo and stopped to get her a new one.  Crisis averted.

We still arrived early afternoon and we were able to go for an afternoon swim in the lake, which was lovely, not too cold and felt great in the hot afternoon sun.  I was also able to take my bike out for a short ride to make sure it had traveled well.  Seemed fine, and I followed it up with a 30 minute jog.  I spent the rest of the afternoon hanging out at the campsite, welcoming in friends as they arrived.

Wildflower Ironteam HQ

The next morning we all headed down to the lake for another open water swim.  Also nice and the temperature was still good despite the earlier hour.  After the swim the coaches split us up in to long coursers and olympic racers (those training for Hawaii did Olympic, training for Vineman and Canada did long).  Coach Jason took us through transition and showed us the basics of what we needed to know about Wildflower.  The transition area was MASSIVE.  Seriously, so big.


the finishing cute I never ran down
We went to the expo and packet pickup.  I got my race number, shirt and goodie bag and bought a couple of things at the expo.  I got some new shoelaces that make shoes easier to slip off and on in transition (love).  I got two t-shirts from Endurance Conspiracy, and I love them (and a free hat for liking them on Facebook).  And, I went and got two official merchandise items, a cool visor and a sweatshirt.  I figured this is the biggest thing I've ever done, I want something (I never buy stuff at expos, ever).  We also ate burritos at the famous burrito stand (they did not live up to the hype, they were good, but not the best thing ever, as many said they would be).

After the expo there were more workouts to be done, a 6 mile ride for the long coursers and a 20 minute run.  After I finished that up I prepped for the next day.  Three of my RV mates were doing the olympic, and they had a 40 mile bike ride on Friday.  So, I took advantage of the empty RV and got ready for Saturday.  I was calm, focused and ready.  I had a small route slip with some notes about where I needed to be when and when to eat, when to stop eating, etc.  I was ready.

After dinner and a short team meeting I headed back to the RV to get ready for bed, with a bottle of Nuun and a nalgene filled with water at my side (I had been hydrating like crazy all day, it was hot and dry).  I went over my notes again one more time.  And went to sleep after a quick visit and chat with one of the coaches. I knew it was going to be a long, hot day, but I felt confident.  I could do this. I would do this.

RACE DAY:

I woke up early and got ready, ate oatmeal with peanut butter and banana for breakfast, with a bottle of nuun on the side.  We headed down to transition with our stuff and coaches and prepared to sit around and wait for a couple of hours.  (My transition was set up a full 2+ hours before my wave started at 9:15am).  I wandered around, figured out every possible way back to my area, looked for landmarks, chatted with teammates, took pictures, got my hair braided (thank you Sarah!), ate a second breakfast, luna bar and more nuun (yes, it was necessary it had been close to three hours since my first one), did a warm up jog, used the restroom, watched the pro athletes start and finish their entire swim, and then finally got my wetsuit on.
Me and my teammate Marvin - he's one of the people who convinced me to do Vineman.
Madeline, me, Jasmine and Janelle waiting for body marking


Massive transition

My nice and neat transition area - ready to go.

Pre swim, I swear I don't have 12 chins normally.

I waited on the ramp to start, took pictures and did a quick warmup after the wave before me headed out.  The five minutes between waves seemed to take forever.  I was still not nervous, just calm and ready.  Then it was time.  My wave, women 30-34, headed in to the water.  I started in the middle of the wave because I'm not the fastest swimmer, but not the slowest, seemed like a good place to start.  I've only done one other triathlon before, and I was not ready for the battle swimming that ensued as the race started.  Holy eff.  It was crazy, there were elbows and kicks and it was just uncomfortable.  By the time the crowd thinned out a bit it took me some time to settle in and find my rhythm.  I started to catch up with some of the wave in front of me and then shortly there after the faster swimmers from the next wave caught me (and the wave after that and the wave after that).  But, once I found my rhythm I was good.  I just swam.  (Next time I'll start off to the side, the middle of the middle was no good.)

This is not my wave, but you get the idea.  Battle swimming.

I got out of the water in ~48 minutes.  Not what I had wanted, and much slower than what I am capable of, but I was still okay with it, especially after the beginning (I would have liked closer to 40, and know that I can do that).  I ran up through the ramp, so much cheering, and saw a few teammates racing the next day cheering me on.  It was incredible.  I got through transition (~7 minutes, considering how far I had to run in a wetsuit, not bad and way better than the 11 I spent at Desert Tri) and headed out on the bike.  I was familiar with the whole course, having driven it with some teammates on Thursday.
Getting out of the water - so happy to see my teammates cheering for me

About a mile and a half or so in to the course comes a hill.  It sucks because its right at the beginning and you're still trying to find your legs out of the water.  I made it to the top and just after I got there my teammate Melissa caught up to me and then we passed Coach Brad.  Just as we were coming up to exit the park the elites were racing back in and finishing their bike (they had started their swim an hour and fiftenn minutes before me and were out of the water in 20, but still).  Anyway, I set off and settled in.  I knew I never wanted to be comfortable on the bike, so I pushed myself pretty hard.

I was doing really good time wise and was ahead of where I needed to be most of the ride, at the beginning 20 minutes ahead.  The wind got to be a pain in the ass and was definitely slowing me down.  But I stayed focused on my nutrition and moved forward.  And, every time there was a downhill, I pedaled, hard, so I could make up time.  Before I got to the infamous Nasty Grade I had to refill my bottles, so I stopped for a minute to do that.  The volunteers at the aid station were so awesome and asked what I needed and helped me get my bottles filled fast and back on the road.  Actually, all of the volunteers all weekend were pretty incredible.

While I was on the road I had to switch my bottles around (moving from rear cages to front) and I didn't want to lose time by stopping on the side of the road to do this.  So, I managed to figure out how to pull my bottles from the rear cage and keep moving.  Win!  This was the first time I've ever pulled a bottle from the rear cages while in motion, so I'm pretty excited about that.

Back to the ride.  It's not flat, but it is pretty.  You have to push through the whole way, so I did.  I was doing well on my nutrition and hydration, I had set an alert on my Garmin to go off every ten minutes to remind me to eat/drink, then I wouldn't have to think about it.  So, there was this girl that I first spotted on Beach Hill, walking her tri-bike up the hill.  And I kept seeing her throughout the course, she would pass me, and then I would be pedaling up the next hill and there she would be, walking again.  I kept thinking to myself, if she would just ride up the hills she would be done so much faster.

When the ride felt tough or long, I would think about all my teammates out there killing it.  I knew that everyone was giving it their all and I knew I had to do the same.  I also had the motivation of TeamGab behind me, and I had that written on my forearm.  I thought a lot about Gabby and all kids with cancer and how much that must suck.  Nothing would be worse than being 5 and having to go through chemo.  I might not be the fastest triathlete, but I was going to give it my all, no matter what.  I'm doing all of this for those who can't.
Motivation

I knew where Nasty Grade was on the course, and I knew it was coming.  I was trying to time my eating and drinking so I would have enough energy to get all the way up the hill.  As I was approaching Nasty there was a girl I had seen a couple of times as well right in front of me, moving slow, so I went to pass her and she moved over to the left so I couldn't.  Rude.  I waited another minute and finally overtook her.  (She had been irritating me for a while, and I really wanted to pass her, I was happy when I did.)

Then came Nasty.  I was ready, I knew I could do it.  It was time.  By the time I got to the bottom of Nasty I was about 10 minutes ahead of where I needed to be.  By the time I got to the top I was a couple minutes behind.  I stopped part way up, I was tired, feeling totally spent (I think maybe I needed to eat/drink a little more before I got there).  Nasty just kicked my ass.  When you get to the top of Nasty it's not over yet, you turn a corner and there's another climb.  I knew it was there and it was still a mind-f$#%.  By the time I got to the very top I was about 8 minutes back.  I thought maybe I could haul ass and make it, maybe.

There was a Team in Training coach at the top who asked me how I was doing, I said fine and it was time to go fast.  He warned me to be careful.  Ha, if he only knew how scared I usually am of the downhills.  But, that day, I wasn't scared.  I pedaled as fast as my legs would take me.  I used as much momentum as I could to try to gain back those lost minutes.  I glanced down at my Garmin a couple of times and saw speeds of upwards of 35mph.  When I got home and downloaded my Garmin data and saw this I almost fell over.  Top speed: 44mph.
Directly from my Garmin data.  Who would've thought I was capable of that?
Good thing I didn't notice it while riding, I might've had a heart attack. (Also, I
probably wasn't going that fast for that long, but still.)

By the time I got to Bee Rock (close to the end) I was 8 minutes behind, and knew I wasn't going to be able to catch back up.  I spent a couple of minutes feeling sorry for myself.  And then I thought about TeamGab, and I remembered that no matter what happened that day, I am still strong, capable and healthy.  I needed to finish and finish strong.  I was doing good until I got in to the park.  I saw people along the run course and recognized one, my teammate Amy.  I cheered for here and said I knew I was missing the cutoff.  About 30 seconds later I saw Coach Brad.  I could feel the tears welling up in my eyes.  He asked how I was and if I wanted to stop.  I said so-so and no.  I just wanted to be done.  I pedaled back in to transition and had missed the cutoff by 13 minutes.  13 measly minutes.

They took my timing tag, I returned to my transition area and sat down and cried for a minute.  A big fat DNF hung over my head.  My teammate Melissa, who had passed me back on Beach Hill had rolled in just before me.  She came over and I cried some more.  I was so angry and frustrated.  I wasn't sure if I should run, but I felt good enough to do it and I felt like if I didn't at least try that would really be giving up.  Melissa told me to go run.  I put on my shoes and 8 minutes after I entered transition I started the run.  I was feeling down as I headed out of transition, and then I heard the announcer call out a name I recognized, John Webb, one of my teammates who was finishing.  That bolstered me to keep going.  I was doing okay, but I kept crying.  I was so mad at myself and frustrated and I couldn't seem to pull myself together.

As the miles went by I became more dehydrated and slowed down significantly.  The last mile I completed was more like a death march - took me 22 minutes.  Ugh.  By the time I got to the aid station at about mile 6 I was beaten down and exhausted.  I stopped.  I couldn't keep going.  A course official got me a ride back to the shuttle because medical attention would take too long.  I drank copious amounts of Gatorade and managed to get myself back to transition in one piece.  I honestly think if I hadn't started crying I could have easily finished the run.  It would have been hard, but I would have had the energy.  I know I had it in me.

When I got back I went and met up with the team who were waiting at the finish line for the last of our teammates to come through.  I was trying to be happy for them and not upset, but every time someone asked me how I did or what happened or why they didn't see me cross the finish line, I would break down again.  I felt so bad for crying so much, I just couldn't stop.  I was angry and frustrated and more than anything disappointed.  I know I can do better than that.  I wasn't the only member of my team to DNF, but it still hurt.  To my teammates, I hope I didn't ruin your celebration by being so weepy and sad.  You deserved to celebrate and enjoy the day, and you are all incredible people in my eyes.

I asked Coach Brad what he thought about me doing the olympic distance the next day.  I didn't want Wildflower to win.  He seemed to think it would be a good idea.  Hm.  On the way out I asked about registration - $180, I wasn't sure I wanted to spend that.  I decided to wait until morning.

Some of the team

I spent most of the evening trying to not be sad and to be happy for my teammates.  They had all done such an incredible job and I wanted them all to know that I was so proud of them.  I chose to go to bed early because I was still considering the olympic race.  I also knew that if I stayed up with them I would want a drink, badly, and I can't put myself in that kind of situation.  I woke up in the morning still feeling dehydrated and with a bad calf cramp and decided against racing.

Not racing the olympic wound up being a really great decision.  I went with my fellow long coursers to cheer on all of our team doing the olympic at the top of Lynch Hill - a hill they have to ride up directly out of transition and then ride back down to the run and then they run it for the last mile of their run.  I had so much fun cheering with my teammates that it made the day before seem like a bad dream.  I remembered why I go out there and do all of this and why this team is so important to me.

And, if I had raced that day I would have missed some awesome things with the team.  I would have missed this insanity.









And seeing this guy take a beer:
That's MACCA, Chris McCormack, 2 time Ironman World Champion flying past us on the bike and then zooming past on his run toward a win.  Ya, he took a beer from my teammate Jasmine.  Kind of rad.

And, I would have missed my incredible teammates showing me what this is all about.  Cheering for them, and watching them race was more incredible and amazing than anything else from the weekend (even Macca taking a beer).  They are all such amazing people and I am proud to call them my friends.



That's our coach wearing that speedo while racing the olympic. We raised, as a team, more than $250,00
before Wildflower, so a coach was picked to wear it, and he was the winner.

This weekend did not go how I planned. But, sometimes that's for the best.  I am a firm believer in the idea that everything happens for a reason. I had a couple of ugly moments on the bike where I wondered if I should even be doing this.  Stopping would be so much easier.  And then I remembered that I CAN do this and I WILL do this.  I just have to keep the negative out of my head.  The negative is what killed so many half marathons for me last year.  I just gave up when I could keep going, when I could run harder.  No more.  This weekend I proved to myself that I can keep going and I will keep going, I only stopped because I was so dehydrated and was kind of made to.  I know what I need to do to fix things and I'm going to do them.  I am going to come out of this stronger, faster, better than I was going in.  Wildflower may have kicked me, but I'm not down.

To quote the Rolling Stones "You can't always get what you want. But if you try sometimes, you get what you need."  I think I got what I needed out of this weekend, including the realization of just how far I've come since the season started, even since January.  Cause I've come pretty damn far.  And, that, in and of itself is worth every bead of sweat, tear shed and cheer screamed this weekend.  I think maybe that stupid DNF was for the best.  Because even though I've come so far, I still have a long ways to go, and I'm not going to get complacent about it now.  Nope, now I'm going to work even harder.  And, you know what? I finished a BEAST of a bike course. Not in the time cutoff, but I finished it, and that counts for something.  And, I learned that all that core work that I've been doing, religiously 2-3 times per week is paying off, as I had no back pain on that hilly course and some of my teammates did.  Glad I've been doing it and I will continue to do it.  Its time to focus on the workouts and give them my all (cause sometimes I don't... no more).

And, next year, mark my words, I WILL be back at Wildflower and I WILL have my revenge on the long course.  Victory will be mine.  Just 358 days to go.  Tick tock.  Oh, and I have two more words about next year.  Double Dip.

Please consider supporting me and donating to LLS.  I still need your help to hit my fundraising goals and get across the finish line at Vineman.  (Plus, it's my birthday next Tuesday, and a donation would be a fantastic birthday gift!)


*Note - Most pictures were procured from my friends Facebook pages.  Thanks team!