Marathon: Round Two

Boston, marathon, TV
Running toward the finish line of the Sugarloaf Marathon in Maine. My form had completely fallen apart at this point. (Seriously, how did I not roll my ankle? Look at my right foot!) (Photo courtesy of the supportive Patrick Stanton.)

Running toward the finish line of the Sugarloaf Marathon in Maine. My form had completely fallen apart at this point. (Photo courtesy of the supportive Patrick Stanton.)

This past Sunday, I woke up at 4:45 a.m., made coffee, fixed myself breakfast, laced up my running shoes and stood in 40-degree weather and pouring rain with 650 others.

This is what insanity looks like. Of course, you have to be slightly insane to run a marathon. All of those miles logged, all of those hours spent toiling away — putting one foot in front of another. For what? For the glory of saying you’ve run 26.2 miles in one go? Maybe. I mean it is pretty damn impressive.

But for me, it was finally attaining a goal I’ve been holding onto for five years. A goal I’ve been dreaming of since I first moved to Massachusetts: qualifying for the Boston Marathon.

In the days and minutes leading up to the race, I was, naturally, full of nerves. This wasn’t my first marathon, but the stakes were much higher this go around than the last one. (I have a tendency to place a lot of pressure on myself and have been known to hold myself to pretty high — sometimes unrealistic — standards.) But to add to those nerves, I also didn’t give myself as much time to prepare for this race as I should have.

But as I stood there with the other runners, our breathes floating above us in a hazy cloud, I felt myself relax. And when the gun finally fired, my legs took over, my mind quieted, and I was flying.

I was cresting hills with ease. My stride was fluid and seamless. It felt so easy.

Then came the first water station.

For those that haven’t run a longer race and aren’t familiar with the act of simultaneously quenching a thirst while the lower half of your body continues to propel you through space and time…consider yourself lucky. And graceful.

Running a marathon is decidedly unsexy. Aside from trying to inhale a few sips of water while maintaining pace, you run the risk of choking on said water or missing the target of your mouth entirely.

Within the first couple of miles of the race, runners look like they’ve wet themselves. (And maybe they did a little, but that’s nothing to be ashamed of, right? … Right? … RIGHT?!) Or maybe you miss the oral target altogether, throwing orange gatorade right into your eye.

Aside from these perils, there’s the undeniable inevitability of going out to quickly at some point. Maybe not this race. And maybe not the next. But at some point, you will get antsy and kick it into high gear well before it’s time to do so.

For me, this moment set in around mile 18. The first 15 miles passed so quickly and so breezily I thought I would crush my time with a vengeance.

I imagined people bowing down at my accomplishments, kissing my blistered feet and praising my unbelievable finishing time. I would get rounds of applause as I sprinted through the finish line, with barely a drop of sweat, a smile gracing my lips and a glistening ponytail with as much bounce as my stride. Little kids would look up at their parents and say they too wanted to run a marathon some day, just like that pretty girl with the long legs and luscious hair.

Then, my legs started their protest.

Between mile 18 and 20, I imagined I was pushing through a wall. Or rather THE WALL. The one many embattled runners speak of when they share war stories from their time in the trenches.

At mile 20, I contemplated quitting. Not really contemplated so much as fantasized. I dreamt of lying on a bed with many pillows, a fluffy duvet enveloping my sore body, as I drank bottomless Bloody Marys and binge-watched all of my favorite shows.

By mile 21, I was somehow miraculously still moving along, if only barely faster than a crawl.

Miles 22 and 23 passed by in a pain-filled haze.

At mile 24, I stopped to accept my cup of water, hobbled along in pain, contemplated running off into the woods of Maine and never coming back.

I walked. Then walked some more. I started feeling a little sorry for myself. Then, the pity turned to anger. I used the anger to fuel myself to mile 25.

And then, I stopped again.

By this time, my legs had turned into sacks of rocks. With each step, I faced the horrible reality that I had to again lift a leg, put it in front of the other, and then somehow manage to do it all over again.

My legs started cramping in the face of this reality. Their protesting growing from a grumbling to a collective roar.

Then, another runner came along that reminded me why I signed up for this race to begin with.

As he saw me struggling to move, head hung low, wondering how in the world I would get to the finish line — he tapped me on my shoulder and said “Hey, come on. You can do this! Run with me! Stick with me.”

Never in any other length of race, from 5k to half marathon, have I found this miraculous and amazing camaraderie.

In both marathons, I have found encouragement from a stranger, a stranger who challenged me and carried me through my tougher moments.

These bonds are brief, but they are so strong and pure in the moment they exist.

This runner (who I later learned was named Michael) got me through that last mile of my race and pushed me through to a 16-minute personal record and a Boston Marathon qualifying time.

Running a marathon is hard. It doesn’t matter if you’re a professional athlete or someone approaching with the mindset of just getting through the course, the time be damned. But there is something undeniably special about toeing the line with the hundreds (or thousands) of other individuals who happen to be just as insane as you are. And this insanity will (hopefully, should my final time be accepted) power me through Boston 2017.

New Year, New Reads

Books, Reading, Running, TV, Uncategorized

I took a hiatus from this blog. I was busy wallowing in my sorrows. Then, I decided to run a marathon, so I was busy putting one foot in front of another for 26.2 miles. Then, I got a boyfriend. And well, romance in the real world is much more interesting than putting fingers to the keyboard and typing. Also, I was promoted to manager of a coffee shop. A coffee shop that was under going a great deal of transformation. The last thing you want to do after working a 14-hour day is open your laptop and struggle to be witty and smart and make intelligent sentences strung together to paint a picture about anything.

Also, my motivation was lost. It tripped and rolled down a mountain, and then fell off of a cliff, where it stayed crippled for a couple of years.

2013 has been a good year for change and motivation. I realized I don’t want to be in the food industry at all, much less managing it. This led to the beginning of my grad school search and application process.

This is still ongoing. So far, I’ve applied to one. Three more to go…Bah.

That’s where I am currently. Coffee shop manager, girlfriend to a boy, and runner. Also, a sporadic blogger. And sometimes, I watch things and want to write about them. Specifically TV.

Currently, I’m binge watching season 2 of “Girls”. As in, I’m doing that right now as I type these very words.

This show makes me feel pithy and witty. Maybe it shouldn’t. But also, maybe it should.

Back to the resolutions…blogging is one of them. Doing it on a consistent basis, mainly.

What will I be blogging about, besides the incessant amount of television I watch? New Year’s resolution #2: reading books outside of my comfort zone. My comfort zone has narrowed to coffee shop mysteries and other easy-to-read chick-lit novels.

And that fact makes me want to vomit on myself.

My goal, or resolution rather, is to read one book a month. And the only requirement of this book is that it must be “a book I have to read in my life.” Like Catcher In the Rye or Brave New World. I’m asking my literarily-inclined friends to pitch in ideas.

First up, Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein. I somehow managed to miss being required to read this in my various Language Arts classes over the years and my boyfriend thinks it’s a must. So I’m doing it.

And then I’m going to blog about it.

And you’re going to read it. Maybe.

Aside from blogging and reading, I’m going to be running. I want to run another marathon this year, and with the help of a good friend, I hope to be doing that in 3 to 4 months time.

So here’ to running, reading, writing, and getting into grad school!

Image

Postponing Packing

Boston, TV, Website

This is going to be super short.

I’m supposed to be packing, but I hate packing. I know I should be packing…waking up in a frenzy this morning speaks to the above.

The big day is a little over 3 weeks away and I only have 3 smallish boxes to show for my “packing” progress.

Whatever.

So what have I been doing with my time? Watched all four seasons of Mad Men within a few short days. (I’m great at watching a ridiculous amount of episodes in a short amount of time.) I also have been playing around on screened.com.

It’s an awesome interactive and editable movie website. The creators write reviews (as well as users) and have video features that are hilarious and informative.

One of my favorite parts are the quests. Basically, users search the sight for answers to the quests. So a question would ask “What are three ways to cheat death?” And an answer might be the holy grail.

The site really speaks to the super sleuth that lies within me.

So here’s Screened’s August movie preview!

http://www.screened.com/august-movie-preview/128-721/

Tom Hanks. Genius.

Movies, TV
Cover of "Big"

Cover of Big

Well. I fell off of the blogosphere for a bit.

Vacationing, family-reunioning, and general laziness are to blame.

It’s really hard to get myself back into the swing of things. Ridiculously hard.

I’ve been home all of two days. And aside from packing, I’ve done nothing that would even come close to being considered productive.

Aside from watching Big finally. Oh, Tom Hanks. How you make me swoon….

I seriously cannot believe I hadn’t seen this movie before now. It’s one of those movies I’ve always been meaning to watch but just never got around to seeing it. It’s been sitting in my Netflix queue for months.

I’m not going to write a semi-review of Big. That ship sailed over 20 years ago. No. This post will be an ode to Tom Hanks.

I’ve always loved Tom Hanks. He’s one of those actors that seems to be genuinely nice. He’s charming, cute, and all around a stand up guy. (I mean…that’s how he seems to be displayed.)

I haven’t ever read about him online, caught up in some scandal, or sleeping with some nanny who has a secret love-child hidden away.

And he’s funny.

His TV appearances are great. He was recently on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart and upstaged Mr. Stewart, but through sheer, pure personality. He wasn’t being showy. Obviously, that’s not in his nature. (I tried to find said episode, but it was a little older than I thought, and therefore, no longer available. Sorry to build the intensity and then leave you high and dry.)

He’s just a classy guy. And a talented actor. I mean, who could make the loss of a volleyball as tear-inducingly sad?

I’m really starting to lose direction with this post. So here’s a hilarious video to leave you with.

Enjoy.

Music to my ears.

Music, TV

I love driving and I love listening to music while I drive.

I crank it up and roll the windows down. It just sounds better with the wind whipping my hair around. (You know. Like a sexy model.)

But seriously, it’s just my thing. It calms me down. Relaxes me.

So tonight while I was doing this, along with singing as loudly as possible, I thought of some of my favorite musicians. I’ll give you a couple that spark the fire in my soul.

Let me start with Ryan Adams. Not Bryan Adams, the Canadian star who brought such hits as “The Summer of ’69” and “I Do It For You.”

The one who married Mandy Moore. Ok. Now that I overly clarified, let me delve in.

Adams is the kind of singer who makes me wish I was sitting at his feet (or beside him) while he’s playing his acoustic guitar. I picture dancing under twinkling lights on a warm summer night.

“When the Stars Go Blue” is a perfect example of this whimsically romantic feel. And I am a romantic. A slightly cynical romantic, but all the same. (Tim McGraw did a version of this song and tends to get the credit. But make no mistake. Adams wrote this song.)

“Where do you go when you’re lonely? Where do you go when you’re blue? Where do you go when you’re lonely, I’ll follow you. When the stars go blue.” I’m melting.

I like the idea of someone chasing after me when I’m upset or being so concerned when I’m the least bit sad. It’s every girls dream… Thanks a lot Janet Evanovich. You’ve ruined me.

Next, Joan Armatrading. I haven’t listened to a great deal from this person, but I discovered her while watching one of my favorite shows Sons of Anarchy.

She’s no Ryan, but hey. Armatrading hails from England and has toured with Eric Clapton and Bob Dylan. She’s got soul and has continuously revised her sound throughout her career.

“This Charming Life” is another song that makes me swoon a little. Joan sings about being so in love with a person that you want to be around them all the time. “I want to be with you all the time. Every day, every night. Don’t mind deja vu.” The lyrics aren’t exactly sparkling with originality and witty prose, but it has a catchy beat.

There are many more songs that get me going, but I’m a little brain dead after an evening run. Here’s a little running advice. Never eat a ton before running. It really messes up the stomach.