Sunday, October 30, 2022

Ambitious AF

It certainly feels bittersweet and weird to be preparing for the upcoming NYC marathon weekend, with the knowledge that I was supposed to participate and now will only be a spectator. As expected, at the end of August I pulled the plug and withdraw my entry due to my injury and reduced training time that would certainly re-injure me. 

Going into this week, I'm in much better spirits than expected. Maybe somewhat relieved from the pressure, at least temporarily. 

I've been spending these last few months planning and executing my re-qualification for next year's marathon, which requires me to run 9 races of varying difficulty + one volunteer day for the organization. Somewhat luckily, I've been fairly active in NYRR this past year in preparation for the marathon, running my favorite races. I'm not starting from zero towards this count. Actually I started from 5 races already on the books. But nonetheless, still a difficult feat to quickly pivot from running for experience and fun to desperately needing those races to count. With a countdown clock towards December 31 ticking away.

The most recent big race (and post injury milestone) was the Staten Island Half on October 9. It was the most perfect weather for running, and the course scenery was breathtaking with the bridges and NYC skyline. BUT it was not my best performance. I pretty much knew by mile 3 that there was no chance I would recover enough minutes to clock a good time. I was running slow and it felt hard. And something just felt off. My feet felt heavy. Perhaps even just the pressure of needing the race was getting to my brain. But nonetheless, I ran safely and without pain with a finish time of 2:33:59. Considering I couldn't run for 3 months, I'm forcing myself to be happy with that. Even though competitively I'm not.

My races to date in 2022 - with an * next to the ones that count towards the program:
  • January: Virtual Resolution Run 5K* 
  • February: Virtual Black History Month 5K
  • March: Washington Heights Salsa, Blues, & Shamrocks 5K*
  • May: Brooklyn Half*
  • June: Front Runners LGBT Pride Run 4M*
  • September: Virtual New Balance 5th Ave Mile
  • September: New Balance 5th Ave Mile*
  • October: Staten Island Half*
  • October Virtual Abbott Dash 5k

That leaves 3 races to go, including running the upcoming Abbott Dash which I've done with Rob and cousins for several years now. I will also be volunteering at the Marathon Expo on Friday to help runners find the information they need and welcome them to NYC (which is really fun and fulfilling across different languages!)

At the Abbott Dash, I'm curious to see if I beat my PR of this specific race last year which was 0:28:37. Rob seems to do better each year, whereas I waffle back and forth. Last year was a particularly good time for me - there was a lot of excitement! And the promise of an expedient brunch if I hurried up. 

On Sunday, we'll of course be "marathon chasing" which is a sport unto itself. With just slightly more alcohol involved than if we were running ourselves. The goal is to get 3 hits of Fred and Kara. We've always been successful seeing them at mile 6 in Brooklyn, mile 18 in Manhattan, and mile 22 in Manhattan. Even with the subways, we've never manage to get them in Queens. Perhaps that will be an added challenge this year to heighten the stakes!

After all the commotion and business of this upcoming marathon weekend, that leaves two races left for me to run - Virtual Run for Thanks 5K (easy) in November & Ted Corbitt 15K (more challenging) in December. I'm already ramping up for the Ted Corbitt race as it's only four weeks away and I don't want to lose my long-run base. I've run that one before - it will likely be a cold weather race with layers and some other dimensions added on to the experience. 

Here's to a safe, happy, and successful 2022 NYC Marathon weekend - and to the promise of a better year to come for my ambitions. 

Tuesday, July 12, 2022

Pain Is Not Temporary

My last post in February was about healing, and anything but that has happened since then. It's been a rough few weeks. I'm injured and my marathon dreams are in real jeopardy. Besides being physically hurt, the emotional pain feels deep to my core. It's difficult to explain what running means to me and why this setback, this year, at this moment...feels particularly unbearable. I thought this was my year, my chance to rid myself of the trauma of the past two years and use my favorite tool, running, as a mechanism to achieve something. To feel something. To feel greatness. And to feel worthy again. When the injury first happened, I felt like I reached rock bottom of sadness. In addition to an accumulation of recent events - mass shootings, war in Ukraine, political turmoil, my rights as woman being devalued. Can anything be positive anymore?

Indeed this will not be the year of healing - or will it?

It's important to understand how I got here. What feels to be an all time low came right after a few months of an all time high. I had a slew of accomplishments this spring. I ran my first NYRR race of 2022 in Washington Heights. I won a third place medal during a local race for St. Patrick's Day. I finally started going back to CrossFit again consistently after being sick with Covid early this year. And I had the best long run of my life - a 10 miler in the pouring rain where I experienced no pain and true runner's high that I forgot that I was running. 

Then there was an omen. About a week before the NYRR Brooklyn Half, I started to feel some dull pain in my right hip. This has been an issue for me in the past when I reach higher mileage in training. Dull became sharper as race day drew closer and I had to seek professional help to feel better. I *thought* I was ok. 

RACE DAY - MAY 21:

I was so excited to run this caliber of race. I didn't just sign-up, I earned entry from my prior year of work. I had a special race bib. I slept in a hotel the night before and laid out all my gear (it's A LOT of stuff). I took corny pictures in excitement.  In retrospect, I should have known it was going to a bad day when the person singing the national anthem messed up three times and had to start the song over!

The race began in Prospect Park. It was a one-way course, a loop in the park and then as straight shot down to Coney Island. Just like any longer race there was the normal progression. For miles 1-4, I thought "oh God - why am I doing this!". Then miles 5-9, I noticed I was actually running really well and slightly ahead of my goal pace. I could actually PR this race. Then around mile 10 after I had emerged from the park and had been running on Ocean Parkway for a bit, I started to get that nagging feeling in my right hip again. It was dull and I pushed forward, though making the conscious decision to slow down. I already discounted a PR at that point, but would still place a really good time for what I had expected to achieve.

What I'm about to describe next can only be likened to a movie scene - well from my perspective anyway. At exactly mile 12, I could see the rollercoaster and ferris wheel at Coney Island in the distance. I could smell the ocean. I could hear the larger crowds near the finish line. I was only 1.2 miles away from being done. And then it felt like someone took a gun and shot me in back of my right leg and I stumbled down, but caught myself before hitting the ground. I hate to use a gun analogy, but it's the only one that reflects what it felt like. Sharp and sudden. I got right back up. A little dazed and confused. I remember quickly looking around and all of a sudden realizing there were lots of runners in bad shape. Not just the ones that looked like me, but the super fit ones, professionals, experienced - people were suffering.

Further context: it was 90 degrees out, the course was designated level red for high risk safety, 16 runners were hospitalized and 1 died from cardiac arrest. 

I got back up and started to run again. Within 30 seconds, my leg started to spasm (like rubber bands snapping or a guitar strings breaking one by one). I stopped again and went off to the curb to do some stretching. I couldn't believe this was happening to me, but at the same time, I was slightly laughing it off as a story I could tell later. I was confident that I would shake this off and keep running.

I began running yet again, at this point, only going maybe 100 feet, when the leg spasmed again, and again, and again. I went off to the side to get out of the way of other runners who at that point were full force, trying to take seconds off their finish time being so close to the end. I began to sob. I'm talking ugly cry with gasps and all. Medics came to check on me, and I brushed them off. Still not fully understanding what was happening. Other runners tried to get me to run with them (very annoying, don't ever do this to someone). I remember trying to run a few steps with one person (their face is blank in my memory), and then my leg spasmed again. This pattern continued for the remaining 1.1 miles. 

At some point, I texted Rob's cousins who already finished and were waiting for me at the finish line to be prepared to deal with a disaster when I arrived. I remember muscling up the last few hundred feet once on the boardwalk by stiffening my leg to lock it out. This prevented the spasm at least temporarily so I could finish with some *dignity*. 

Was I dehydrated? I had been drinking at every station the entire race and eating gummies to add calories back.

When I received the event photos, this exact timeline that I described above is evident in the timestamps and mile-markers. You can even see when I locked my leg out to drag it across. It's crazy. Once the dust had settled and I was home, I found out that my IT band that extends from my hip to my knee had micro-tears. I began rehabilitating that immediately. 

The story is not over yet.

About 10 days after the injury, I went for my first short run. It went great, slow but no pain. The next day, I attempted to run again but wasn't feeling great. My hip started to hurt again so I stopped immediately and begin to walk home. As I turned the corner onto my block, I twisted my left ankle and fell on the pavement. I have no idea what happened and honestly blacked out a few seconds of memory. My phone was smashed. It might have been in my hand instead of my running belt - I don't remember. I don't know exactly where I fell either, just the general vicinity. That patch of road is very uneven and has lots of potholes. I was covered in blood from my elbows and knees. I remember walking home and asking Rob for help. I don't do well with the sight of too much blood and it really hurt with little pieces of pavement stuck in the cuts. I hadn't even process the ankle yet since the blood felt more pressing.

As I was getting my cuts cleaned up, I noticed my my ankle had swelled to the size of a baseball. It was throbbing and really painful. That's when it hit me that Brooklyn wasn't rock bottom, this was. And if you think I cried on the race course, the crying that happened in that bathroom was the real deal. 6 weeks later my kids are still talking about the day Mommy cried in the bathroom. 

I suffered a grade 2 ankle sprain (partial tear, not complete). For those who have read my blog before, this is not the first time I've done this to me left ankle (re: pregnancy, hiking 2019). And way before that again when I was a kid. Clearly this ankle is weaker. 

I still don't fully understand what happened. Some think it's all related, overcompensation. I think it was a complete coincidence and strike of bad luck. I was obviously distracted, upset, and was putting a lot of stress on myself to get better from the Brooklyn injury as quick as possible. I think I was in a poor mindset to be running and was not focused at all. 

And let me tell you, once you experience this level of pain, you never think of walking the same again. I've been analyzing every step I take for the past 5 weeks. Avoiding all dangers. Cringing at sidewalk cracks and navigating through crowds. Pure fear. But just like with Covid behaviors, I'm sure that will be forgotten with time.

Now July 12 - I'm so fucked for the marathon. 

I'm getting better, little by little. But I haven't run since May. And cannot run in my current state even if I wanted to. The lack of range of motion of my ankle is jarring. It's still swollen and discolored. This is supposed to be week 1 of NYC marathon training - this was my year. After 8 years of fitness goals, 4 years dedicating myself through races to qualify, a pandemic cancellation in 2020, and a conscious postponement in 2021...this was it in 2022. 

Pure sadness. 

I don't know what I'm going to do yet. The reality is the risk of injury feels really high. Anyone who has run a marathon before knows the real event is the 16 weeks of training, not the marathon itself. It's extremely taxing on the body and I'm starting off at several disadvantages: my asthma, my hip, my first marathon, and now my ankle. And I'm running out of time - crunching the training will make all of these issues much worse. 

After consulting with some medical professionals and experienced runners, I'm giving myself until the first week of August to make the decision to drop out. I'm buying myself some time to heal for another full month. And honestly to push the emotional burden of the decision off until we come back from our Italy trip. Now with *some* mobility back, I've been doing some biking both outdoors and on a stationary bike indoors, as well as some light weightlifting. Keeping away from lateral movements and anything that puts stress or weight on my ankle. I'm going to increase my biking mileage for July to mimic what I would have been running for marathon training (in total time, not miles). 

I appreciate all the support others have given me as I navigate through this disappointment. And the space people have given me to mourn something that seems trivial, but was really important to me. 

Hoping in the end, 2022 was in fact for healing after all. Just not in the way I had originally expected.


NYRR Washington Heights - March 2022


St. Patrick's Day - Patchogue - 3rd place

10 mile long run in preparation for the Brooklyn Half



Brooklyn Half painful finish









Thursday, February 17, 2022

2022 is for Healing

Some people like to make New Year resolutions. I like to set a mantra at the start of the new year to set the tone of my intentions, orient my goals, and keep myself accountable. 2022 is the year of Healing. Healing from trauma, anger, emotional injury, and literal physical injuries. Now writing this in February, we're not off to a good start 2022...get it together man!

But first let's recap the end of 2021 to better understand how we got here.

First there was the NYC Marathon weekend in early November. While we couldn't stay for the marathon this year, I completed volunteer service at the Javits Center to help runners pick up their bibs, answer questions, and figure out other logistics. I was also tasked with greeting runners from different states and countries, welcoming them to NYC. Sadly, no one spoke Italian with me!

Before we had to split, the festivities concluded with Rob and I running the Abbott Dash 5K (along with cousins and a friend). For both of us, it was our best Abbott yet - with my new time being 00:28:37 for this particular race and course (vs. 2019 - 00:30:38 and 2018 - 00:29:37). 2020 was cancelled because of the pandemic.

In December, I turned my sights to a more challenging race and a first for me - the Ted Corbitt 15K, which would be my last marathon qualifier of 2021. I ran roughly 9.3 miles through Central Park with a finish time of 01:35:40. It was frigid out! But I was super happy with my pace - exactly on the 10:00 I was striving for. And consistent. I had some pain between mile 8-9 with my left leg locking up. Apparently because it wasn't hot out, I forgot to drink water (rookie mistake). Nor do I replenish with gummies or anything because I didn't want to peel layers off from being cold (also rookie mistake). 

2021 concluded with logging my final run towards my year long NY One Challenge. Since January 1, 2021, I had been logging my miles through their app, competing with others nationally. I was supposed to run 1,010 miles, but unfortunately I didn't met my original goal. I closed out the challenge on December 31, 2021 with 775 solid miles run. No walking. During the year long challenge, my average distance per run was 4 miles, my longest run was 13 miles, and my average pace was about 10:00, and my fastest was 8:04. Most of these miles were outside enjoying the places I love. While I'm disappointed that I didn't complete the challenge, it's the most miles I have ever run in year. That's a huge win. 

While I was wrapping up that challenge, unfortunately my little family got sick with Covid over the holidays. It was awful and ruined our plans. Of the four of us, I had the worst symptoms - flu like. Luckily it passed fairly quickly over the course of 10 days. But more concerning, now in February, I still feel it in my lungs. I haven't felt the same running since. 

If you follow me on Strava, you know that I've been treadmill bound for most of January and February. This is a big pivot for me. I hate the treadmill. But with the cold air, my asthma, and the lingering effects of the virus, outside was making me feel sick. We've also had an unusual amount of snow and ice on Long Island making the running conditions outside less than ideal for safety (and with cars). I've setup a little home gym area (finally!) to get me through feeling homebound for now. 

These days, it has been extremely difficult to make the class times at CrossFit. I'm just at a period of my life between new jobs, new schedules, the weather, frequent sickness...and the kids being at an age spread where they really need me during any spare time I have. I miss the community. I miss the tools. I miss the expertise. It's super important to have that in your mix - solo workouts are not enough or sustaining. With my home gym setup, I've been lifting lighter weights at home to maintain for now. 

As I set my eyes on what's next. Healing, progress, and hopefully warm weather - I jump started these good intentions with a warm weather run in Manhattan Beach (LA) on a recent trip. I miss travel, but even more, I miss "travel running". We found a coffee shop 4 miles from our hotel and that was our target. Such a great way to explore a new place.

I'm both anxious and excited thinking about all the running that's about to enter my life. I'm planning to do 3 New York Road Runner races this year (NYRR). The first is a repeat race coming up in March - Washington Heights Salsa, Blues, and Shamrocks 5K. I really enjoyed the course and neighborhoods in 2020 (before the world shut down) and want to give it another go with new legs, new eyes, and new purpose. I'm also signed up for the Brooklyn Half in May which I also did last year, but this time will be in person. I haven't figured out what my third race will be yet, but likely something in the summer months.

Because...

I need to start training for the NYC Marathon in July. It's a 16 week program. Gulp. 


NYC Marathon Expo Volunteer










Abbott Dash 2021