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2018 California International Marathon (CIM) Race Report – Folsom-Sacramento, CA

2018 California International Marathon (CIM) Race Report – Folsom-Sacramento, CA

The tl;dr version is that I shared a fantastic and memorable weekend with friends, bonding over the experience of running a marathon, in what would amount to be my second go at the California International Marathon (CIM) and my thirty-third 26.2. Under Coach Lisa’s guidance, I had trained hard in anticipation of fighting for a big PR at CIM, and (spoiler) while that unfortunately didn’t manifest, it doesn’t dilute or sour the weekend’s experience, particularly when I consider how well so many of my friends ran and how utterly and genuinely happy and proud I am for/of them.

Don’t get me wrong: it is really gutting to train really hard and not have a race day performance that you’ve envisioned; dare I be so dramatic to say that in the heat of the moment, it’s  heartbreaking.

That said, it’s irrational and illogical to decide that the totality of a training cycle, the relative success and growth and self-discovery and everything else, is bound up in how fast you can ultimately cover the distance come race day. That just ain’t how I roll with this stuff anymore. 

If that metric remains as your chief, principle deciding factor or governor of happiness, I can promise you that you’ll be disappointed and saddened by this sport more often than you are left feeling jubilant. It’s how it goes.

I’ve already written about my training and such leading to CIM in my pre-race post, so by the time race weekend rolled around, I was feeling pretty solid, pretty satisfied with my training, carrying the mentality of run a race you know you’re capable of posting into the weekend. Since I made a big jump in my marathon finish time in 2013, going from 3:31 in Houston (January) to 3:20 in Eugene (April), my marathon PR has hovered squarely at that precipice, dropping sub-3:20 only twice, at Two Cities in 2016 and then three seconds faster, 3:19:10, at CIM ‘17. I know I am capable of a faster time, and with every marathon I’ve trained for since 2013, I’ve trained with the intention and goal of going sub-3:20 in a big way. The results from the past five years show that far more often than not, it doesn’t come together on the day, but dammit if I haven’t stopped striving for it. The fun is in the work and in the chase.

breaking 3:20 for the first time at Two Cities

Saturday

Race weekend at CIM, just as it was last year, was a lot of fun. After a shake-out run in the rain with Janet in SJ, we journeyed north to the expo and to meet up with Meredith, with whom we’d be shacking up overnight. At the expo, we ran into many Wolfpack teammates who’d be competing on Sunday, which was delightful. It was good vibes all around, minimal nerves, and more than anything, just a lovely way to spend a Saturday.

rainy shakeout in SJ

 

obligatory (and in dry clothes)

Post-expo, post-lunch, Meredith, Janet, and I ventured out to circa mile 14 on the course for Meredith to stow her rental car overnight, since she was planning to drop at that point in the race, and soon afterwards, we checked into the hotel and then met the rest of our group for dinner at the same place where Meredith, Connie, and I ate last year. Again: all good vibes, minimal nerves, and more than anything, just a lovely way to spend a Saturday night. The marathon talk and scheming was there for sure, but in no way was it domineering. It was as though we all happened to be in Sacramento that night and all happened to be doing a little footrace in the morning. It was an awesome pre-race vibe if there ever were one.

we originally planned to stow the rental at a church overnight. eventually, intuition kicked in and made it be known that it was a horrible idea. moving on…

 

…but no worries, we found a better (read: safer) alternative!

 

race eve dining with Lisa, Anna, Krystal, Mitchell, Meredith, and Janet

Janet, Meredith, and I returned to the hotel and were in bed shortly afterward and likely asleep by 9 or 10pm, as a 3:45 alarm would be haunting us in the morning. Despite a seemingly non-functional heater, I slept well enough and woke up Sunday morning feeling ready to go.

Sunday, pre-race

Joining Meredith, Janet and me in our hotel room by about 4am was Meg, who was staying with her family down the street at another hotel, so she wouldn’t have to get ready while tip-toeing around her slumbering family. For it being 4am and all, it actually made for a fun morning, with the four of us hanging out, getting ready to go race a marathon, and hoping for a satisfying pre-race poop before the morning got going. Meg and I had similar goals — as did a lot of other Wolfpack harriers — so it was cool to scheme with her and share race strategies. Leilani came into our room from down the hall just a short bit later, and before too long, we all loaded up into my minivan to head over to the convention center to board the Folsom-bound busses. We managed to find the most expensive parking in downtown Sacramento that morning — since we left a little later than we planned, we didn’t want to waste time circling for free street parking — but at any rate, we were all on the bus together and got to Folsom by about 6:20 for the 7am start.

party in the van with Lani, Meredith, Janet, and Meg; can you see everyone? it was super dark!

 

strolling through a hella expensive garage en route to the Folsom-bound busses while sipping on water

Practically as soon as we arrived, Janet, Lani, and I departed the busses and headed for the bathroom lines, anticipating that this was going to be our only chance to, uh, drop any extra weight pre-race. (Success!) From there, as race mornings always do, things moved fast: bathroom to gear drop to warm-up to finding Coach Lisa and my teammates Krystal, Julie, and Anna. By the time Janet and I finished a quick ~5 minute warm-up, it was already just a few minutes’ shy of the gun, and we started sardined way back with the 3:40-3:45 group. Even though we had just seen Lisa, Krystal, Julie, and Anna moments earlier, right before our warm-up, we had no idea where they were, and I never found Meg before the start, after I left the bus. It was relatively chaotic compared to last year’s start, but it was fine, nothing to get hung up about.

The actual race

Of course, the side benefit of starting farther back in the corral than initially planned is that you’re really forced to be conservative early on; I told myself that this was a good thing, a la NYC 2013, and that I’d be grateful for it later. As it turned out, not too far after the starting line, Janet and I saw Krystal, Lisa, Anna, and Julie, and thus began our ‘pack running. Julie was going to be unofficially pacing all of us to a sub-3:20 finish, and Krystal and Lisa would be on bikes for the remainder of the race, providing moral support to us and to the other harriers further afield. It was going to be a fabulous morning with a lot of my teammates; it just happened to be backdropped by a 26.2 mile race that I was going to try to run as hard and as fast as I possibly could.

definitely a party at the start  (PC: this and most others, someone from my team)

 

smiling the miles

 

and so the climbing begins within the first mile, ha

 

following the pack leader, Julie, in the black crop

The 2018 weather gods doled out basically the same as they did last year — relative race day perfection — and there was no wind to speak of, nary a cloud in the sky, and probably temps in the 40s in the early miles. This was the weather that runners dream about during summer and autumnal training. I felt completely comfortable in my neon singlet and shorts, was casually chatting with my teammates and other friends I spotted throughout the course, and felt completely in control. The goal was to come through the half in 1:40/1:41, a little slower than last year’s 1:38, and I came through at mid-1:39, just about where I wanted to be if maybe a teeny, tiny bit fast. I took my SiS regularly every four miles and even got an orange slice in the mix there around the 10k marker from a spectator. I was feeling good and felt pretty at ease as I anticipated the negative split I was trained to execute over the second half of the race.   

Admittedly, however, from the get-go, despite the perfect weather and despite the relative ease at which I was ticking off 7:1x-7:4x paces, my body never felt springy-fresh. Earlier in the week, I definitely had that caged animal feeling — despite dealing with the kids’ colds/infections and my own until about Thursday — but on race morning, in the thick of the race, from the get-go, there was little, if any, bounce or pep in my step. It’s fine. Even if it takes you 10+ miles to warm-up, there’s still a lot of race left to run.

A wonderful benefit of having your coach and teammates riding along the course is that you can get updates on how other friends are doing. Pretty much anytime I saw Lisa, I asked how Meg was doing (“she’s looking SO STRONG!”) or where and how Mitchell or Leilani were, since we had gotten separated at the start (“they’re not too far ahead but are looking really good!”). As I ran ahead, with Julie and Anna just a few feet ahead of me until the halfway mark, I kept scanning the crowds for my teammates and friends, looking for neon orange singlets and Meg’s pink shorts.

somewhere within the first half

 

post-halfway mark and running nearly in stride with another teammate whom I didn’t know!

 

As the miles wore on, I tried to keep on with the same effort level, relative to whether we were ascending or descending, while taking in the surroundings and spectators and still looking for Mitchell and Meg. Sometime around the halfway mark, I heard and saw Christina and Melissa from Arete/she.is.beautiful, waiting to begin their relay and pacing roles, and shortly after, I got another huge boost of encouragement from unexpectedly seeing Bjorn, Ida, and CT cheering for all of us on the sidelines. Even if I wasn’t feeling fantastic or fresh, I knew my effort was staying fairly consistent, and hearing and seeing so many friends along the way buoyed my spirits tremendously.

no idea where this is, though probably somewhere between 14-20

I wasn’t doing much clock-watching during the race, but a few times late in the game I began doing the mental math — inadvisable mid-marathon, but whatever — to determine my odds to go 3:18 +/-. Everything seemed feasible, and again, while the freshness wasn’t really there, nothing hurt, nor was my energy tanking, since I had been taking SiS regularly and tolerating the unpalatable nuun (again this year, ugh) and water. I could feel the beginning of some chafing near my right armpit, and part of my left foot had some weird rubbing action against my shoes, but on the whole, all things considered, for having run at least 18 miles at my goal marathon pace, going into the last eight miles, it was game on. I felt strong and ready to take them head on, reminding myself to run a marathon you know you’re capable of posting. Patience is a virtue with this stuff, and I had been patient for nearly 30km and was ready to duke it out for the final 12k.

Somewhere in this needlessly-dramatic monologue, I finally found Mitchell and yelled to him that I was right behind him; he mentioned something about wanting to take it easy in that mile, so I figured he’d catch up to me shortly. As I came upon mile 20, I tried to relax and smiled as I thought about spectating there in 2016 with my eldest and how much fun we had. Finally, at long last, I was at the flattest part of the course, ~10k to go, and I was ready to do what I needed to do. Nevermind that that sought-after freshness never arrived; mentally, I knew that the fortitude was there. At dinner the night before, Lisa had reminded me as much and helped me remember all the workouts we had done in an effort to strengthen me for the last 10k.  

…and then, the chassis just inexplicably and rather dramatically deteriorated. Seemingly like *that*, with about an 8k to go — my bread-and-butter, just-about-everyday minimal distance — I had gone from feeling like eh I’m not springy but I can rumble to there is not a chance, hell will first freeze over, and no amount of mental trickery or self love or loathing or ‘how badly do you want it?’ or anything is going to change things.

In other words, I had gone from not great but tolerating of the distance ahead of me to my body all but saying no fucking way. No. fucking. Way.

Laughably, right about the time that my body had made it resoundingly clear that the last 8k was going to be rather uncomfortable and sloggy, Coach Lisa pulled up beside me. What timing! I muttered something to her about how the PR was out the window and that a finish was the one and only goal, and bless her soul for trying to convince me that I was running really strongly, evenly, and powerfully and that the tracker was anticipating a 3:18 finish still. The goal shifted from PR to finish/finish faster than SF

It completely blew to get that far into the race, only to have it begin to self-destruct, but unfortunately, that’s the marathon sometimes. It was as though I had gone from GMP to recovery pace in a moment’s notice, and my body wasn’t going to calibrate in any other direction. I didn’t feel dehydrated or like I was salting out or bonking; my legs just suddenly felt as though they were physically incapable, like they hadn’t been trained to run further than the distance I had already covered. I had run 21 miles well, and now, I was done. Dammit! 

screengrab from the video of me crossing the ~35k mark, I think (and talking to Lisa on the bike), telling her of the imminent grind

The last 8k was all about one foot in front of the other and ridiculously smiling through the utter discomfort that was reverberating through my body. Naturally, I probably saw more people I knew over the last 8k than I had all race long, so my sincerest commiserations for showcasing my beautiful pain cave grimace to you 🙂 With every step I took over that last 8k, every part of both my legs just shook — like they were doing this stuff for the first time ever— convincing me that if I stopped for any reason or even slowed substantially, I’d be done. Head down, use your arms, keep grinding, smile like a maniac: anything to lessen that perceived exertion.

grinding and sputtering with about 5k to go but thankful to see my TSFM ambo teammates on the sidelines (PC: Jenni)

With about 5k to go, Lani caught up to me and passed me — so happy I was for her, as I knew she was en route to a nice PR and at about 11 weeks pregnant, no less — and soon after, I saw more friends and teammates on the sidelines before making those last couple turns into the Capitol area. Last year, I posted a 6:something kick at the end; this year, the best I could haul was in the just-shy-of-9-minute range. I finished, completely gutted, gassed, and deflated, with a low 3:24. I was thrilled to be done.

Jesus, circa mile 25 and change, had a sign whose opposite side conveniently reminded me that the end was near. great capture by my teammate, Bjorn.

It was awesome to see so many of my teammates and friends right as I was finishing, and practically as soon as I crossed the line, I saw Coach Lisa. Admittedly, I felt horrible. As soon as I crossed the line, stopped my watch, and stopped moving, I did one of those weird side-step shuffle things, making a volunteer bolt over to me right away in fear that I was about to collapse; it was disorienting for sure and something that I don’t remember feeling before in any marathon recently.

 

I hadn’t really had time to process the 3:24 finish before I saw Margot, who was beaming with enthusiasm for breaking 3:30, and I only wish I was more in-my-body so I could have reciprocated her happiness better because I knew how big a deal that was to her. (Sorry, friend, but major, major congrats). I quickly learned from friends and teammates on the sidelines that Anna and Julie had come in around 3:15, Meg at 3:16, and Robin just a little north of 3:10, all big PRs for everyone, which was just incredible, fantastic, and so, so inspiring. It’s hard to feel shitty about your own race for very long when many of your friends (in whose training you are invested) accomplished some big-time goals of their own. After downing several cups’ worth of water and barely a few nibbles of food, I made my way over to gear check, got my stuff, and met up with my teammates and began sharing stories of what went down over the course of 26.2. The marathon has a funny way of bringing people together; everyone experiences something over the distance, and it’s always entertaining to compare highs and lows ex post facto.

 

just a handful of the harriers who competed this year and who cheered on the sidelines on Sunday. in the mix include an OTQ, some PRs, some BQs, and some grittyass performances. lotsa love for these fine human beings.

 

I shared a lot of miles and milestones with these two this year! behind us is the infamous BQ bell that people line up to ring post-race. I’m hella lazy and had no interest, but I think the sentiment is super special. BQs are pretty special, whether they’re your first or 21st (yea!).

I will be the first to admit that it was disappointing to come up short of my goal in a marathon for the second time this year; that burns. All those feelings of inferiority, of wondering if I should hang up my 26.2 shoes, and of thinking that I’ve reached my peak came flooding back shortly after I crossed the finish line, which sucks. It sucks bad. It’s also pretty silly and dramatic.

I think we amateur/average runners have a weird thing with this hobby of ours. I invest so much of myself into this hobby — physically, for sure, but also mentally, in particular — that when things go south and I underperform in a distance of this magnitude, one that dictates weeks’ worth of recovery after the fact and precludes frequent attempts at it, it stings. I’m always happy with a finish and don’t take it for granted, but it is also kinda deflating to finish knowing that I am capable of more, of better, but couldn’t bring it on the day for (insert reason here).

I think there’s something uniquely quixotic, compelling, and enamoring about this sport. Being able to run a marathon is a feat unto itself, and finishing one is even more so. We can spell failure in many different ways, and one of those ways need not be how we perform on race day. After all, race day comprises a very, very small part of the hours and hours’ worth of training that goes into the ordeal. No doubt this line of thinking sounds for sure like a great cop-out, a convenient way to cover the burn and suckerpunch feeling that follows us for days after the race. I don’t think it’s the case though. Train well and hard and consistently, and do the best that you can do on The Day. If The Day doesn’t materialize to your liking, move on, and keep grinding. 

Keep showing up, a la Des Linden.

When race day doesn’t pan out how you envisioned, for whatever reason — out of your control or otherwise — be a human being and allow yourself the dignity of having an emotional response. Cry your ugly cry, in public or in private. Write it down. Talk to people who “get it” and who can help you strategize for the next go. “Mourn,” if you want to call it that, for a bit.

Get the despair out of your system, learn from the experience, both in training and in the race, and then metabolize the feelings and the learnings into fuel for the fire for the next time. Give yourself both the permission and the opportunity to have a next time. Remain open to the experience where marathoning takes you because it is certainly a wild and unpredictable ride. That’s both part of the joy and of the heartbreak or surprise. The chase and the work is gratifying.  

I’m proud of myself for gutting it out to the finish; quitting was never an option or even a passing interest. I am so thankful to be surrounded by so many people in my life who are supportive of my running endeavors, folks who are runners (many of my friends) and non-runners (most of my family members). On race day, the camaraderie was real and felt in a profoundly moving way both on the course and through the marvels of modern technology. THANK YOU. Celebrating so many others’ successes and joys — as well as commiserating with those whose experiences left them hungry for more and for better — reminds me of the depth of experiences the marathon can bring out for every single one of us. This is some beautiful stuff, gang! So many dear friends had The Race They Were Dreaming Of, and man, that’s really, really awesome. We all know that those days are really hard to come by, so when they do, they are damn near magical for all of us by extension.

The folks at the Sacramento Running Association yet again put on a great experience at CIM, and it’s one that I’d highly recommend runners doing. I’m already committed to ‘19 (early bird pricing FTW). In the interim, and for the rest of the year, I’m excitedly retreating to the drawing board (and to blowing up Coach Lisa’s phone with messages) to begin hypothesizing how to make next year the time when I post the The Race I Am Dreaming Of, The Race That I Know I Am Capable of Posting. 

Many thanks for the continued support throughout this little adventure. It means more than words can adequately describe. 33rd 26.2, 21st BQ, hungry for the next! xo

2018 Oktoberun Half Marathon Race Report – Redwood City, CA

2018 Oktoberun Half Marathon Race Report – Redwood City, CA

My restrictive schedule over the past few weeks made sneaking in a half marathon tune-up race, ideally about a month out from CIM, pretty challenging. There are definitely many HM options in the Bay Area at this time/all times of the year; it’s just that very few of them worked for me because of other, non-running commitments I’ve had on my weekend calendar (all good things though!). 

Plus, to be honest, HMs intimidate me, and especially in the throes of marathon training. That intimidation isn’t enough to completely turn me off from doing them during training, but it does make me less-than-enthusiastic to register for them. Typically, I often don’t perform better than GMP, in terms of my time, and of late, my HMs have been beset by other annoying externalities that negatively affect my performance (such as the weather, a challenging course topography, and the ever-popular GI issues mid-run). It’s certainly not the end of the world, but it’s definitely annoying.

Eventually, I came upon Redwood City’s Oktoberun half marathon, scheduled about 5 weeks out from CIM, on the last Sunday in October, and somewhat miraculously, it worked with my schedule. From what I could glean about the course, and from what I remembered from reading my peers’ RRs from previous years, the course would be flat and fast, and the whole shebang would be a fairly no-frills, inexpensive experience. That’ll work! RC is just about 26 miles up the peninsula, about halfway between here and SF, which was also convenient.

race logo. in case you were wondering.

 

Coach Lisa’s plan for the day was that I’d run the first four miles around GMP and then run HM for the remaining nine, with the option to pick it up at the end, depending on how I felt. I’d take SiS at about miles 4-5 and then again around 9-10 and would supplement with fluids as often as my stomach could handle it. By approaching the race as a long run workout, I didn’t feel any pressure to necessarily “race race” or perform, which was great. Instead, I merely had to focus on executing the workout as prescribed. (There’s probably just a slight difference in semantics between “performing” and “executing,” but to me, the difference is substantial).

After a super easy warm-up mile, singular, and then chatting with the many friends I saw that morning (Robin, Margot, Sesa, Jen, Angela, Claire and Patrick, and more I’m surely forgetting, sorry), we were off. It was pretty perfect racing weather, and I was feeling really good from the start. I caught up to the 1:40 pacer, who — delightfully — was my buddy, Sarbajeet. We hadn’t seen each other in a while, so it was great to catch up with him and talk about CIM plans, how he’s going to Boston for the first time in 2019, family happenings,  and all types of dorky runner stuff that just makes my heart sing. Staying with him for the first four miles was also excellent because it helped me to stay honest about my pacing and to better follow Lisa’s plans for the day. I felt comfortable and had no problem running my mouth while keeping GMPish, which was encouraging.

Aside from maybe the first (and then final) mile of the course, most everything else was on the Bay Trail and/or through little HOAs that abut the Bay Trail. It seemed that very little of the “Redwood City” race was actually in the city, proper, and with no redwoods to be seen, and that we instead spent a lot of time alternating between running next to 101, running through HOAs, and then running on sections of the Bay Trail that were pavement, dirt, or loose gravel. I imagine it’s way less money for the race to get permits when they set up races in this way — as opposed to shutting down entire swaths of a city — but it can get monotonous at times. Fortunately, I couldn’t recall ever running on those sections of the Bay Trail (and had spent very little time in RC before), so I was trying to take in the scenery while doing my workout. If nothing else, it was nice to be away from cars and roads open to vehicular traffic.

running by water … guess who took this picture?!

Soon after I split from Sarbajeet and his pace group at mile 4, I downed an SiS gel and concentrated on hitting the HM pace range targets that Lisa had set for me. It meant dropping from a 7:33/7:40ish to 7:09/7:16ish, and more than that, it meant not being an idiot at mile five of a HM. I think part of the reason I have historically struggled with this distance is because I go out like I’m doing a mile time trial or something (note to self: a HM is not a 5k or a mile; don’t run it like one) and then I just taaaaaaaank and finish completely demoralized. At this race, I was determined *not* to do that and found myself really focused on staying in each mile and thinking about how the mile *felt* versus what I was reading on my watch. I was hopeful that I could do what Lisa told me to do.

A quick aside: for reasons inexplicable to me, during this training cycle for CIM, I have found that I’m looking less and less often at my watch, even during workouts and races. Instead, I’ve been relying more on my perceived effort and using that to guide me to work harder or to ease up. I find this especially interesting because it wasn’t as though I ever really clock-watched all that much during races or workouts in the first place, before this cycle. Now, however, I almost feel like I could ditch the watch altogether because I’m barely referring to it mid-run for pacing feedback (though admittedly, I think I’ll always wear something just to have the data points later down the line). If anything, I glance at it during races/runs/workouts to check on the time of day or on the mileage, but I’m barely looking at the paces most of the time. I’m not sure what to make of it. 

chasing down someone about half my age and not be able to see at all (thanks sun)

Anyway, the nine mile workout portion felt pretty good overall, and I was completely surprised to see Lisa pull up alongside me on her bike around mile 6 or so, just shortly after I began the harder running portion of the race. We chatted briefly before she left, and by about mile 7ish, runners did a quick U-turn and began their journeys back to downtown RC. Along the way, I gave and received so many side fives from friends on various portions of their outs/backs that strangers were visibly and audibly laughing at me over it, which was fantastic. (There really is nothing like a solid side-five shared with friends mid-race). It was especially curious when Robin and I side-fived and my hand had dirt in it afterward — ohmygosh did she fall mid-race?! How did she fall?? Is she ok!? How is this going to affect her PR attempt?! — but aside from trying to Sherlock about this mystery dirt presence for a few miles, the side-fives were awesome little pick-me-ups that stayed with me for a while. (Note: Robin did fall, and she was fine. Her words. And I think she still eked out a PR like a boss. Cray).

TFW when your coach/teammate/friend/inspo pulls up alongside you mid-race, rather unexpectedly (PS where’s your helmet?!?)

By about mile nine, my legs were beginning to feel tired and sorta powerless, like every footfall I took into the dirt/gravel mix took way more energy to propel myself forward than it should. I felt like every step I was taking was just making me sink more and more deeply into the ground, which made for an interesting strength workout mid-HM. Must! Pick! Up! Legs! Come! On! Hamstrings! I had a lot of moments with myself over this — convincing myself that it was in my head, or that I was tired from the cumulative fatigue of training, and that I wasn’t tapered at all (by design) for this race, since I had just done a workout a few days prior, all that stuff — and just kept keeping on. What else are you going to do in a race, ya know? You can stop, yes, but you still have to get back to the finish line somehow. You could slow down, sure, but it’ll still just take longer to get back. The fastest way out is through. I tried to just keep grinding and began playing the “30 minutes of running left, that’s like 1 minute 30 times; I can run for 1 minute 30 times” mental BS that we all surely subject ourselves to when we get tired. It works!

the scenery was pretty, for the most part anyway (save for when we were adjacent to 101). 

When I wasn’t playing that fun game, by about mile 10, once we were back near 101 and getting closer to RC, I began playing the I wonder if I can catch that person ahead of me wearing ________ game, which made the time go by even faster (and which helped me pull ahead of four-five people in the back 10k of the course). I didn’t dare look at my watch at all for the final 3-4 miles because I wanted to keep continuing with the effort, regardless of what my watch would tell me. During this fun game, I tried to focus my energies on catching the people furthest away from me and played a game that (I think) Deena wrote about in her autobiography, wherein you imagine that there’s a rope tied between you and the other runner up ahead and you have to pull yourself closer to that person. Again: whatever works. That seemed to do the job.   

distracting myself by pulling a Lisa and doing finger guns

My mental math attempts were for absolute shit at the end of the race, but since I was ahead of Sarbajeet, I knew that *barring catastrophe* I’d finish in a sub-1:40. It was hard to run tangents perfectly in the race due to how the course was set-up, so my watch was (acceptably) about .1 ahead of the mile markers. I didn’t recall seeing any other pace groups between 1:30 and Sarbajeet, and as I was getting closer to finishing, I thought that I may be able to post about a 1:38, which for me, in the thick of marathon training, and as a workout, would be solid. I was thrilled to get closer to the finish line (and hear Claire and her family just steps from the finish line) and realize that my math was worse than ever and that I was actually going to finish in 1:36. Yeah!

hooray for a solid HM! that deep eyebrow furrow means GAME ON (PC, this and all previous: Lisa)

Because of all those externalities I mentioned earlier, I seem to run a good-for-me half marathon every couple years, so I was delighted that it happened at the Oktoberun. The other two half marathons I can remember running this year were met with very different outcomes — Silicon Valley half as the first big distance run that I completed post-stroke, when I was building up my endurance again; and the half in Ohio this summer that was super hilly and super humid — so it was nice to run the Oktoberun half, even as a workout, and get a little better idea of my fitness. 1:36 is a bit off my PR (1:33/1:31*), but given the conditions surrounding the day (doing it as a workout, on untapered legs, in the thick of marathon training, yadda yadda yadda), I was ecstatic. Plus, I didn’t shit myself mid-race, so that’s pretty awesome too (especially for me during HMs).  

After another super easy cool-down mile, singular, because I was being lazy, and then chatting again with Robin, David, Sesa, Margot, and Claire’s family, I hauled back to the south bay for day two of my eldest’s swim meet and gloriously made it before her first event. I had a really positive experience at the Redwood City Oktoberun and would recommend it to folks who are looking for a tune-up before CIM and who want something low-frills. The course is super flat, though I think it can be challenging to run ultra fast in parts just because of the varying terrain (pavement, gravel, dirt). It’s not an enormous field or rife with spectator support or anything like that, but if those elements aren’t important to you, then it’d be a great fit. It definitely has that nice little “community race” vibe to it, and it benefits RC’s public schools, which is nice to get behind. I think I’d do it again if I wanted to do another HM in advance of CIM next year (and especially compared to more expensive or farther afield options).

friends! with Sesa and Margot post-race. Seeing them mid-race was lovely (PC: Sesa)

I don’t ask for much in races these days — just an accurately measured course that’s safe — and I think this one delivered. This was my last race as a 34 year-old (woot!), and now, only one more race — XC champs — stands between CIM and me.

One month to go!