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COVID, week 6 & feeling your feelings

COVID, week 6 & feeling your feelings

On racing. Thanks for chiming in here and on fb, IG, and Strava last week about my musings related to fall races (particularly, BSIM) being cancelled or postponed. It seems like races being cancelled are just a hot a topic as GPS watches’ distance accuracy. 🙂

Meredith, Austin, and I chatted over the past week and ultimately decided to collectively defer to 2021 for BS. We were all going to be going down together (along with other people), sharing a room at the “romantic lodge,” and making a big ol’ event out of it, and none of us can foresee the event happening in November. Or, even if it does go on, none of us are especially comfortable with the idea of being around hundreds of thousands of people. Maybe we’ll be wrong — which would obviously be fantastic — but I guess time will tell. 

2017 throwback when Austin ran BS

To everyone else who has races, tournaments, and other life events that are being thrown to the wind, I see you, I feel you, I get you, and I get the emotions. Ride ‘em out because — though we’d like to think otherwise sometimes — we’re not robots. We have feelings. 

Pertaining to the rest of my race schedule for 2020, all that’s left is CIM in December, which I imagine will also cancel in due time. Earlier in the week (4/20), CIM announced “worry free” registration, saying that if the 2020 race is canceled due to COVID, “all 2020 CIM registrants will receive a one-time voucher that will allow them to register for free for any one future CIM through 2023,” which is pretty incredible. Yesterday (4/21), Berlin canceled, the first Major to do so, so I think it’s just a matter of time for the other World Marathon Majors to follow suit. And just now (4/22), Mountains to Beach emailed its 2020 runners and are giving us all the opportunity to donate our race registration fees to a local charity beneficiary of the MTB race, defer our 2020 race to 2021, or get a refund. Again: that’s incredible. All these RDs are making some enormous decisions with extremely limited information (and with no crystal ball, unfortunately), and I feel for all of them. I didn’t expect any of this, so I’m pretty blown away.   

I think the 2020 competition year is a wash, and instead, we’ll all be presented with this magnificent opportunity to remind ourselves why we do this stuff in the first place. It’s always a good conversation worth having from time to time, but it’s also one that gets lost rather quickly when the tedium and uber-commitments of our daily lives overtakes us. I don’t know, I guess sometimes breaking from “the motions” can be a fantastic way of asking ourselves why we go through “the motions” in the first place. 

Besides — being honest — even if races were to happen this year, I don’t think I’d feel comfortable participating or competing. (While we’re at it, I can’t foresee my family or me willingly participating in huge public gatherings anytime soon). I encourage you to take the RRCA’s survey about running, races, and the pandemic here, particularly if you had races on your calendar this year. 

On feelings. With all of the death and despair and joblessness and Really Huge Problems going on right now throughout the world, I think it sometimes feels completely selfish or juvenile to think about all the things (the events, the milestones, even the totally vanilla stuff that we’d otherwise not particularly anticipate with any amount of enthusiasm) that we’re missing. I get it; it’s hard. 

In a way, it makes me think of how oftentimes parents, when talking about their children who are driving them crazy, feel like we have to buffer our comments with “I love my child SO much, buuuuuuuuuut…” at the risk of otherwise sounding like our feelings toward our children are anything short of unconditional. The same goes for when partners are talking about each other, when they’re getting on each other’s nerves: “My husband is SUCH a good guy, buuuuuuuut…” In a life defined by COVID right now, I very much feel the same. Yes, absolutely, I feel god awful that thousands of people are dying each day, that literally every person on this planet is threatened and adversely impacted by this insidious disease about which we know very little, and so on … buuuuuuut I’m still allowed to be frustrated that I can’t buy mundane stuff like diced tomatoes or chickpeas or flour seemingly anywhere on god’s green earth right now, or that I am 100% responsible for my children’s education right now with very limited direction, or any number of other issues. 

It’s not a competition; you’re allowed to feel unhappy or annoyed or whatever. 

Don’t feel bad for your feelings.  

On doing the best you can. The whole thing about living in a COVID-filled lifetime right now is that we’re all swimming in uncertainty. There are precious few things that we know about how to protect ourselves and our loved ones right now (prolific hand washing and physical distancing chief among them), but there is a whole bunch of speculation and, probably, wishful thinking about what we should or shouldn’t be doing at any given time. It can be overwhelming, to say the least. Plus, suddenly everyone is an expert and is clinging on to the latest “research” “study” they “read” about all of this. Again: it can be overwhelming (and probably a bit annoying, if I’m being completely honest). 

I guess my only real, unsolicited recommendation here is that if you’re wondering if you should or shouldn’t be doing something — like Lysol wiping-down your groceries each week, or wearing a mask when you’re running outside, or whatever — consult a (real life, medical) expert. Just because you did something last week doesn’t mean that you necessarily have to do it again the same way this week because our knowledge is evolving quickly. 

Unless you’re already a physician or an epidemiologist, our personal expertise on this stuff probably isn’t as top-notch as we think it is. I’d like to think that we’re all doing the best we can, unless you’re purposely flouting the rules right now, in which case, I’ll refrain from my color commentary about your selfishness. 

On occupying time and settling mental unrest:

  • Cooking: the quarantine taco game is still going strong, this week combining a couple black bean/sweet potato recipes that I had read from the NYT cooking app and Budget Bytes. Also, for whatever reason I felt compelled to make vegetarian sloppy joes, so that was also in the rotation this week. 
springing for HL from time to time, too
  • Reading: I finished Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy and began The Restaurant at the End of the Universe shortly thereafter. I hadn’t yet finished that book about Mr. Rogers (Kindness and Wonder) before I had to return my e-copy to the library. And for whatever reason, I also began reading Chasing My Cure, a book about a young doctor who was diagnosed with an exceedingly rare condition that took him to the brink of death. Otherwise, the girls and I are on a Beverly Cleary kick, having finished The Mouse and the Motorcycle and Runaway Mouse recently and will soon be starting the Ramona books. I loved these when I was younger. Also, this post is not to be missed. Holy shit.   
  • Listening: Bille Joe’s version of “That Thing You Do!” is delightful. There have been some great new podcasts that came up in the past couple weeks, too, including Lauren Fleshman and Jesse Thomas’ “Work Play Love” (I about died when LF described removing a tampon mid-race), as well as the “I’ll Have Another” episodes with Molly Seidel and her coach Jon Green, and the one with Courtney Dauwalter, Maggie Guteri, and Sally McRae. I’m trying to think of the worst/funniest thing that has happened to me on a run, and aside from many episodes involving mid-run emergency bowel movements, I got nothing. You? 
  • Enjoying: A week or so ago, the kids and I made a ton of homemade bath bombs. I was a little nervous that it’d be a disaster since you never can really tell from the internet what you’re getting yourself into, but it was actually really easy. Plus, they work!! 
  • Running: Still going strong on the streak and really just enjoying the mileage, usually somewhere in the mid-50s each week right now. I finally got a modicum of desire for some fast running last week, so I threw 5 miles of MP effort into the middle of a 12 mile long run. Another day, I had an unintentional progression from 8:4x down to 6:16, and it was a pleasant burn. More than anything, I’m just grateful for the release and the sense of normalcy that mileage and volume brings. The intensity will come when it comes.

Stay safe, and be well. xo

COVID, week 5 & predicting the future?

COVID, week 5 & predicting the future?

Life sure has been weird since the initial announcements on Friday, March 13, and even though in the grand scheme of things, today is not that much later — it’s April 15 — all I can think is that time is going both really fast and really slowly simultaneously. It makes me think of having a newborn, except it’s like we’re all newborns, and we’re all caring for newborns. It’s disorienting. 

Two recent developments, closely related, worth discussing come to mind right now: Governor Newsom’s conference yesterday and the recent announcement of a rescheduled race date for Big Sur. The tl;dr version of Newsom’s address is that everyone wants to have a date on the calendar when life will go back to normal (or normal-ish), but alas, this virus doesn’t play nicely like that. No one knows because none of us can foretell the future, much to our chagrin. 

why are you even here reading this? — the signs are getting sassy. #seenonmyrun

At the conclusion of his address, a reporter asked about big public gatherings– 49ers games, parades, whatever– and Newsom remarked that having anything like that is basically inconceivable until there’s a vaccine and herd immunity. I think it’s the answer that everyone rationally knows but no one wants to hear because we know that that stuff takes time, a lot of time, and no one wants to give any more of their lives, livelihood, the whole gamut to this pandemic than they already have. Let’s use a running metaphor here and say that the road ahead of us is long, quite long indeed. 

Just a day before Gov. Newsom’s address came Big Sur’s announcement of a rescheduled BSIM date, November 15, 2020, over the same weekend as the regularly-scheduled Monterey Bay Half Marathon, with the half occurring on Saturday and the marathon (and several other distances that are usually part of marathon weekend) happening on Sunday. Runners’ registrations will default to the November 2020 race date, but we can instead elect to register for the 2021 edition (in April) or the 2022 edition (also in April) at 60% of race cost. Alternately, we can decide not to run it at all, anytime, and use the registration as a charitable donation to the BS foundation that runs the race. In a moment in time where so few of us have options, the BS race team is giving runners many options, and that is impressive and commendable. 

Here’s the thing. As much as I’d love to run this race — and I’ve tried for many years, unsuccessfully, to enter it via the lottery and finally got in this year — right now it is unfathomable to me that it’ll go on in November. 

BSIM is a huge event, in terms of participant numbers, in a relatively small location, and thinking about those realities against the current reality where we find ourselves — where we’re being instructed to maintain a six-foot physical distance between ourselves and strangers at all times, where we’re really not supposed to be galavanting around in public or hell, where we’re not even supposed to be spending time with people with whom we don’t reside — having a large-scale race (or rather, several large-scale races) over a single weekend in seven months is inconceivable to me right now. 

I would love to be wrong about this, and I remain optimistic that the best in the world will create something that will protect all of humanity against this nefarious enemy that has upended everyone’s lives, but we can’t be naiive. This stuff takes time. In the grand scheme of thing, seven months is nothing. 

Let’s also talk about the (financial and otherwise) risk that the BS organizers are taking with moving the marathon (and marathon weekend races) to November. In one of the posts I linked to a few weeks ago, from a RD about cancelling races, they talked about the huge financial risks that the BS board (who also run the Monterey Bay Half Marathon) took by allowing the 2018 MBHM entrants to register for the 2019, 2020, or 2021 race since the ‘18 iteration was cancelled, literally the day before race day, due to the poor air quality from the horrific Camp Fire ~100 miles north of Monterey. It was a terrible fire, among the worst in California history, responsible for tons of deaths and destruction and event cancellations up and down California. 

With BSIM now slated for November, the same organizers may find themselves in the same dilemma in November — in the midst of a pandemic AND in fire season — and with several events that routinely draw in thousands of runners from all over the world and country. I cannot imagine the decision-making processes, logistics, and the enormous financial ramifications involved in possibly moving thousands of runners, over several different races, again this year to a future year (or years, plural). 

Again: that the board is even trying is laudable in my book. We’ll see what happens. Your thoughts? 

On occupying time and settling mental unrest:     

  • Watching: Trolls World Tour three times this past weekend, since we rented it on Friday night for 48 hours. Let me know what you think (and tell me what you make of the plot compared to Frozen 2)! 
  • Celebrating: Easter over the weekend with the family, though not in any religious sense. The kids were completely amped about it, which was sweet to see.  
  • Running: Daily, #lonewolf (or sometimes with the girls), however I want and typically not more than 8-10 miles, usually on fairly hilly or rolling routes that I can easily create out my door. I developed an unintentional run streak since 3/9, so I imagine that I’ll keep it up because … why not? 
the green is gorgeous right now
  • Cooking: I had a lot of leftovers in the past week but also created some vegetarian marathon bolognese (excellent taco fillings!) and the superfoods soup from the Run Fast Cook Fast Eat Slow cookbooks. I’ve made the soup twice now and haven’t been impressed with it, which is odd because it’s fairly idiot-proof. 
  • Reading: Still going strong on Hitchhiker’s Guide (albeit slowly) and in the last week I finished Mitch Albom’s Finding Chika and started Gavin Edwards’ Kindness and Wonder about Mr. Rogers. Chika was predictably depressing– I’m not sure why I decided to read this now– and so far, learning about Mr. Rogers has been a bit of a palate-cleanser to life. 
  • Listening: the second episode of the Growth Equation podcast was pretty interesting, especially since I knew nothing about Sabrina Ionescu. Highly recommended.  

Stay safe, and be well.  xo