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2018 She.is.Beautiful ‘baby mama’ 10k race report – Santa Cruz, CA

2018 She.is.Beautiful ‘baby mama’ 10k race report – Santa Cruz, CA

The Santa Cruz iteration of Run She.is.Beautiful 5k/10k has become a go-to race for me in the past few years. It has been a race that I’ve done for the past four years now, almost as long as I have lived here, when I’ve been in very different junctures in my life: in 2015, pushing A in the 5k, and freshly into my second trimester with G; in 2016, pushing a little 7 month-old G in the 10k; in 2017, pushing a bigger, heavier, and of course older G in the 10k again; and now, in 2018, pushing G in the 10k yet again, and just one day shy of 6 weeks after having a stroke.

from packet pickup in SC on Thursday

 

To run — or race — a 10k, pushing your heavy and healthy 2 ½ year old, just six weeks after having a stroke is both an exercise in humility and unwavering gratitude. I had registered for this race way back in autumn ‘18, before I had even a remote idea of how I wanted my spring racing to resemble. After the CIM high came and went, and Lisa and I started rebuilding in January, I figured that maybe I’d be able to repeat all my other SIB appearances, notch another W for the fourth consecutive year (because why not aim high, right?), and more importantly, hack off some more time from my SIB ‘17 posting. It sounded good on paper, at least. 

definitely some truth here

The stroke, of course, upended everything, but only to a degree. When I toed the line at SIB, surrounded by basically a colony’s worth of some of my friends from various running circles, Wolfpack and more, my mind wasn’t focused so much on what would surely be the physical challenges of the day — I had run exactly six times in six weeks, with all of those runs being in the ten days prior to race day, and no more than 5 miles — but instead, I just couldn’t believe that I was there, that I was physically well enough and sufficiently able-bodied post-stroke to go casually run a 10k while pushing my toddler. Oh, also, I had run with G exactly one time — for a solid 2 miles, on my first run post-stroke — so not only was I definitely out of shape, I was also intensely out of stroller running shape. (There’s a difference; ask any parent who runs pushing children). This was going to be quite a ride for sure, much like this whole post-stroke reality has been.

SIB always has great signs pre-, mid-, and post-race

I couldn’t have picked a better race to be my first foray “back” into the racing scene, and my expectations — and if I’m being honest, my goals, too — were nonexistent. I just wanted to do it. I had even told my friends that, in the days preceding the race, if my neurologist were to come back and renege on his earlier diagnosis and sideline me from running for longer, I still would have made the trip over the hill for the race, even if it meant experiencing it on the sidelines. The positivity, sense of empowerment, community, inspiration, and of course, the fun competition that this race engenders is second to none, and it’s truly up there with Thanksgiving on my “favorite days of the year” list. It means a lot because I believe in its message, that you (I, we, all of us) are good enough where we are, right now, and that we’d all do both ourselves and the world a solid by acknowledging that.

 

Wolfpack women showing up

The beauty of starting lines is the promise they hold. We’re designed in such a way that we place a lot of value on ways to demarcate our time (and our lives, really) very cleanly; in so many words, that’s why so many of us will willingly start a new habit (a better way of eating, a more regimented exercise routine, whatever) on a Monday, or on January 1, rather than some random Thursday in August. (Aside: Daniel Pink’s When talks about this in a lot more detail. It’s really fascinating. We are hardwired to do some weird shit).

Anyway, to be able to stand at an actual starting line, a real, tangible, starting line, surrounded by a sea of other people — in this case, women,  more or less around my age, some pushing kiddos around G’s age — was a very cool feeling. Couple that with the fact that I just had a medical emergency that could have very well killed me a month and a half earlier, and yeah, suffice it to say that I was thinking about starting lines in ways more profound than simply related to running.

…and friends <3

Starting lines intrigue me so much, too, because most of the time, we have close to no idea of what everyone had to do, which choices they had to make, in order to be standing at that start line, bumping shoulders with us, and yet here we all are, together, about to race alongside each other and travel the same journey. That starting line may be Runner A’s way of making an income, while it could be a PR attempt for Runner B, or a celebration of many weeks’ and months’ worth of concerted training and shattering comfort zones for Runner C. Runner D might have gotten suckered into showing up by a friend, or Runner E could be there simply because they’re alive and feel like that is reason enough. Talking about starting lines in such crunchy granola terms like this makes me sound more hippy-dippy and metaphysical than I actually am, but there’s an inherent beauty in starting lines — and in the promise they hold, the sheer opportunity and magnitude that underpins them — and sometimes, it’s easy to forget. It’s really a pretty beautiful thing when you step back and really consider it in its totality; it makes me, at least, stop and sorta behold the whole thing. 

 

nice capture by the race photographer’s drone; do you see us?

 

thanks to SIB for the free pics, too!

The SIB 10k, specifically the ‘baby mama’ division (the race category that delineates stroller-pushing runners from those running unencumbered), was my first opportunity since my stroke to see a lot of my teammates and friends from the running community. Holding my shit together was of the essence — there’s no crying in running! How can you run if you can’t see through teary eyes!? — and for the most part, I was successful. Janet and I, and our respective kiddos, ran from her friend’s house to the start line, about a mile and change, for our warm-up before hanging around for a while and catching up with many of our teammates and friends from the greater south bay running scene. I didn’t hesitate to line up right on the line, even though I knew I wouldn’t be racing at any sub-7 paces like I’ve done before in this race, and when the starting sound blared, under a somewhat ominous sky and over freshly-rained-on pavement, G and I began cruising toward the finish line.

 

with Janet and Paula and children at the start

 

an added bonus of running with the stroller is having my phone for start line pics 🙂

As much as I can tell, the course was the same, or very similar, to the 10k course in 2017. Meg passed me early on and went on to clinch the 10k baby mama W this year (which was awesome!), and I got to see a handful of 5k-running teammates at their turn-around, flying toward home. Seeing Dave and three of the four fitfam6 children around mile 2, just like last year, was a treat as always, and when my body began to make it resoundingly clear that it was sufficiently tired, I didn’t think twice about slowing down: no expectations, no goals, just sheer gratitude to be alive to be there racing with whatever I had in me on the day. G was comfortably hanging in her little sleeping bag-like stroller sack and remarkably managed to fall asleep sometime before mile 4, if I recall correctly, even with American Idiot jamming behind her head. (She’s a big Green Day fan).

HI, FRIEND! (PC: Dave/@fitfam6)

After we exited Natural Bridges, began running straight into a wall of wind, and inched our way closer to the finish line and Hoka’s half-mile-to-home finishing straight contest, somewhere in the mix, I noticed JT Service (founder of Represent Running, the race organization responsible for the Run the Bay series of events) doing crowd control. Never before I have attempted to run, while pushing a stroller, and somehow mid-run jump to the left, while never letting go of the stroller, and hug another person without breaking stride, but now I can add that trick to my repertoire. Next time, I’ll have to add the “take a picture” element to that maneuver.

another great drone capture by the event photog

 

Santa Cruz is stupid pretty sometimes (another great free pic)

Per usual with SIB, the last bit of the race, when the 5k merges with the 10k, was pretty hairy. I’m not sure how SIB can rectify the problem, short of staging the race at different times (5k before the 10k or vice-versa) or changing the course altogether to one that’d allow for wider passage, and even these changes would bring some unwanted side effects, too. In pre-race emails, I noticed that they had communicated very clearly and very explicitly that runners and walkers shouldn’t be more than two abreast, but unfortunately — as in years past — people didn’t listen, didn’t seem to know, or maybe didn’t care. It was no big deal for me this year, since I wasn’t racing competitively, but I know from years past that it can be really frustrating to be coming in hot — and pushing a stroller — and suddenly have to worry about crashing into a wall of people who can’t hear you or don’t understand (or care?) that you don’t want to break pace. Every year I want to solve this challenge, and every year I come up short.

Time to fly for the final 800m of the race (and navigate a sea of people)

As I finished the 10k, I couldn’t help but laugh at how tired I was and wondered if I had bored G to sleep, since she had been knocked out for a while and proceeded to sleep for another 30+ minutes at the post-race awards ceremony, to the backdrop of bumpin’ music and a boisterous crowd. It was awesome to see so many teammates and friends again and to meet friends of friends and re-meet Strava/IG/people I’ve met at previous races. It was also really touching to hear so many people ask me how I was doing and listen to them tell me that they had been following my story online for the past couple months. For someone who’s way more comfortable talking about my children’s exploits, or otherwise operating fairly behind the scenes, it is incredibly humbling to hear so many people tell you that they’ve been worried about you and have been thinking, praying, rooting, whatever for you and your continued good health.

    

she rarely sleeps when we run together, so I was pretty impressed.

Janet, the children, and I ran another mile cooldown back to her friend’s house, and we eventually went over to our teammate, Sam’s, beautiful home for brunch, alongside many other teammates, friends, and family members. It was an awesome morning and a long one, too; G and I left SJ around 6am for an 8:30 race and didn’t return until close to 3pm. It was wonderful.

 

cooling down along the coast with Janet and the kids

There was a time in my life, relatively recently, where I would hesitate to show up for races if I weren’t in “racing shape” because I wanted to spare myself the embarrassment and the trip on the Struggle Bus. All things considered, it would have been a lot easier for me not to run SIB for any number of obvious reasons, but running this race — showing up for both it and myself, really — mattered to me. Among other things, it signified that I was moving in the direction of recovery post-stroke — both physiologically and psychologically — and surrounding myself for a morning with some of my biggest local cheerleaders and friends whom I genuinely find inspiring and wonderful human beings, who just so happen to be runners, was good for my soul and my head. Most of us would stand to benefit a ton from doing more stuff that’s good for our souls and our heads, regardless if we’re coming off a life-threatening medical emergency or not. YOLO, right? Let us not waste our precious time on things, activities, or people who rob us of joy.

Ultimately, on SIB race day (St. Patrick’s Day!), I had run my furthest distance post-stroke (a continuous 10k and 8+ for the day), and soreness aside — the woes of getting in shape — I felt great. When I talk about my running, I always say that my joy is in the journey, and SIB is a perfect backdrop for that sentiment. If you’re local or are ever in the area, definitely put it on your calendar. (Plus, this year’s Women Who Fly winners will get to run SIB in Santa Barbara, yay! If you haven’t yet, seriously: go apply! What do you have to lose by trying?!)

Again: thank you, so much, for all your continued support and encouragement.

d’awwwwwwwwww
My neurologist’s interpretation

My neurologist’s interpretation

Reintroducing running — and physical activity, in general — about 4 ½ weeks since having the stroke on 2/4 has been excellent. I’ve been taking things really easily and have been abundantly cautious in my approach. At any other time in my life, I wouldn’t bat an eye at running many consecutive days, but for right now, I’d rather not.

It’s not that I’m worried I’m going to injure my brain and cause another stroke — more on that in a second — it’s just that I went from running 50-60 miles per week fairly habitually to ZERO, basically overnight, and stayed at that mark for over a month. There’s something to be said for muscle memory when returning to running, sure, but there’s also something to be said for not building back mileage and intensity like a moron. I will gladly take being conservative here if it means that I can safeguard myself and my body — the latter which feels like it has completely lost every ounce of any muscle I ever developed — and circumvent any potential running-related injury that would crop up from going to 0 to 60 in a heartbeat. I’m all for dreaming big and taking chances, don’t get me wrong, but I’m also into self-preservation these days, too. 

after that first run, post-stroke, about 4.5 weeks after the date of the trauma. I kinda felt like a baby giraffe (and while pushing G, woooooof) but still had that goofy, shit-eating grin on my face just about the entire time.

When I said in my previous stroke-related post that I had gotten cleared to run from my neuro NP (on 3/7), I think I mentioned that we were still waiting on the neurologist’s final interpretation of that repeat MR scan I had on 3/3. In what I described was a somewhat shitty chain of events, I saw and read my MR scan results — which were “unremarkable” (yay!), save for some weird cyst thing — but had to wait for nearly another 10 days before the neurologist would interpret them and officially say that I was in the clear.

Rationally, of course I realize that having to wait for results for 10 days would, more likely than not, intimate that that’s great news because if something were more urgent, I’d already be back at the neurologist’s office. Yes, absolutely, but waiting is hard, especially when you feel like your life (and specifically, any control that you think you have, any semblance of normalcy, and any notion of power, volition, or agency that you thought you once possessed) has been dramatically usurped by this insidious THING that just came out of effing nowhere.

Fortunately — and finally — by about mid-day on Thursday (3/15), I heard back from the neurologist.

In so many words:

  1. My brain scan was unremarkable (read: boring and normal);
  2. They never found any source of the bleed;
  3. I’m not at any increased risk for future strokes; and
  4. That cyst was a completely incidental (and innocuous) finding.

In other words: I’m fine. My brain is fine. There are no aneurysms lurking anywhere, no congenital or vascular something-or-others they missed, nothing.

My stroke was just a shitty, shitty circumstance.

right after I got the news, the girls and I went over the hill to pick-up my bib for she.is.beautiful’s race on Saturday (recap forthcoming!). this poignant sign couldn’t have been timelier.

You cannot begin to understand the weight that I honest to god felt like was lifted off my chest when I finally read my doctor’s (and NP’s) notes and read his interpretation — he, being one of the best in the world, one of the most world renown, so on and so forth expert — and saw that he, personally, had signed off that yes, Erin’s head is fine and no, there’s no need for any further neurological follow-up.

Even though I had gleaned (and hoped for) as much from when I read the findings the previous week, it is a completely different feeling to see for myself, with my own eyes, that determination in writing from not only my physician but who is also, apparently, one of the best physicians in the world for this type of stuff. If you want anyone looking at your brain and interpreting it, it’s this guy. 

and so began the weekend of telling basically anyone who looked at me that I’M OK! MY DOC SAYS MY BRAIN AND I ARE OK!

I don’t know how or if I will ever be able to find “closure” with this stuff, but for now, reading my doctor’s words is at least putting me on the right path. It’s weird, really, but I think his interpretation has caused a very real and dramatic mentality shift for me in the past week. In fact, I’ve caught myself even thinking about the whole stroke situation differently than I have in the preceding month and a half.

It was as though after reading his words, my mental talk switched from I had a stroke to I survived a stroke, and friends, you don’t need to be an expert in the English language to know that those two verbs have hugely different implications and connotations. Among other things, this shift removed the shitty passivity from the equation — this shitty-ass thing happened to me — and replaced it with action, agency, and power.

There’s no contest between I had versus I survived.

Changing the operative verbs has been instrumental.

With running, one of my all-time biggest pet peeves is when other runners complain that I have to go run 12 miles or I have to go do my speedwork or whatever. Unless you’re a professional runner with a paycheck on the line, you don’t have to do anything; you get to. Simply changing our word choice can greatly affect not only how we approach our workouts but how successful we are in them, too. I have this same conversation with my six year-old about school and other six year-old obligations; she doesn’t have to go to school, she gets to. There are tons of children all over the world, and here in California, who would love to go to school but can’t for whatever reason. The same holds true for running; we can bitch about having to go run (for a hobby, mind you), or we can be grateful and happy that we are healthy enough to go willingly do this stuff for fun in the first place. Words matter, man, more than we sometimes realize. So it goes with this stroke stuff, too.

Tangential soapbox aside, getting the feedback that I was hoping to get from my doctor has been enormously helpful in getting on with my life. I absolutely still think about how this horrible thing happened to me, but I quickly intercept that train running gangbusters off the tracks and remind myself I survived a stroke; I didn’t just have one. There’s a difference, and that semantic difference matters.

I absolutely am still in the mindset that I’m measuring my life by how many weeks I am post-stroke, and I don’t know when any of that will change. I imagine that the further out I get from it, the less omnipresent it will be in my mind (and man, do I ever hope so!). I’m not trying to rush things along — I’m all for allowing myself to “feel my feelings” and roll with all of this as it manifests — so suffice it to say that I’m IN IT, in the THICK of it. Some days are fantastic — most are, actually — and others are rough and suck and are super shitty, and that’s ok, too. It’s part of the process. Every medical professional I’ve talked to has confirmed as much, which is reassuring.

today (3/18) was one of those fantastic days

Really, the only thing that my doctor’s final determination didn’t elucidate was why the stroke happened in the first place. He agreed with my Regional doctors’ determination, that it was, more likely than not, due to a weak vein in my head that blew, but a) why that vein was weak and b) why it blew we’ll likely never know. Moreover, when most people have brain bleeds, the bleeding doesn’t stop on its own; as I understand it, the bleed usually is halted or interrupted by some sort of medical intervention. Mine, however, did stop on its own. Again, why that happened we will likely never know. (And as far as I understand it, it’s not only the location of my bleed and the actual amount of blood from my bleed, but also the fact that my bleed stopped on its own accord, that is allowing me to make a full recovery, free of any stroke-related deficits). I cannot say this enough: my utter and profound luck with all of this isn’t lost on me. Everything coalesced perfectly.

I’ll say that one more time because it matters: everything coalesced perfectly.

All of this is really overwhelming. I completely understand how lucky I am, and that’s both really humbling but really pretty terrifying, simply because I know how different an outcome I could have had — but didn’t. Not having a “why” for the stroke is similarly both good — awesome, I should keep doing my life as normal — but also frustrating — shit, if I’m doing everything “right,” then why did this happen to me? I say this in jest, but if I were a raging cokehead and had a stroke, I imagine I’d still feel traumatized at the whole experience, but I’d also have a greater ownership stake in it because I would have done something that heightened my risk. Shit, I had a stroke, but my bad for doing coke! That’s not the case at all though.

When you don’t do anything — when you don’t have any lifestyle factors that could implicate you — and when you don’t have any genetic, racial, or socioeconomic factors that could do you in — not necessarily something you did as much as something you were born into and inherited — it becomes really unsettling. You want to know why, but you’ll likely never have it. That’s hard.

Everyone I talk to genuinely wants to know why this happened. The best thing I can say at this point — and what, I think, my doctors would confirm — is that inexplicable shit happens sometimes. That’s all there is to it. We throw our arms up in the air, and we shrug our shoulders. Weird shit happens every day. It just so happened to me on February 4th. It is what it is.

One last thing: several medical professionals have told me that they attribute my age but also my overall health and fitness to my fast and full recovery. I can recall specifically at least one of my physicians who outrightly said that my being in the shape that I was in — basically, me being a marathon runner — most definitely helped me to not only endure the stress of having a stroke, but to also survive it and come out on the other side unscathed (save for the understandable psychological duress).

I can’t help but wonder, then: did running save my life?

Any runner will tell you that running often tends to have a cascading, causal effect in life:

  • you run, so you eat well more often than not.
  • You eat well, which then allows you to run pretty well, pretty comfortably, and consistently. (Think of that oft-cited metaphor likening a car, its fuel, and how well it functions to your diet and how well you run).
  • You’re running when you’re not doing other stuff in your life (work, family obligations, and the like), so you’re probably sleeping more soundly, more deeply, and likely more hours than the general populace.
  • You run, so you’re likely probably not using drugs, smoking, or drinking prolifically.
  • And of course, since you run, it’s likely that a lot of your vitals — including but not limited to your cholesterol, blood pressure, resting heart rate, and weight — are probably better than average. (Obviously there are genetic components to all of this that simply being a runner can’t allow you to evade, but surely you catch my drift).

This isn’t to imply that we runners are saints; it’s simply that comparatively speaking, we’re  doing pretty well in the grand scheme of things. Running has begotten a pretty healthy lifestyle for me, one that obviously doesn’t make me invincible, since I am still human, but one that — generally speaking — has set me up for success at the doctor’s office more often than it hasn’t.

While we’ll never know why I had a stroke, as a healthy, active, and risk factor-free 34 year-old, I can’t help but think that my running did, in fact, have at least some role in my recovery. That’s not to say that running will insulate you from a stroke’s shittiest byproducts (because again, we’re all different individuals, and strokes, themselves, vary tremendously), but for me personally — and for my stroke — I cannot help but think that the habitual choices I make more often than not, choices that ultimately help me live not just a healthier and happier life but also that help to make me a better runner (and let’s be honest, a nicer person to be around), helped my case.

If that’s not reason enough to try in earnest to return to what I once knew was normal, then I don’t know what is.

and so it begins (PC: Dave/fitfam6)

Much love, again, for all the continued outreach and support. xo