Showing posts with label Running. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Running. Show all posts

Monday, March 1, 2010

An Adventure In Four Movements


When I was in high school taking piano lessons, I would tackle classical compositions that would take the musician and listener through a series of distinct emotions, feelings, experiences and sensations. One would be energetic, one melancholic, one thoughtful, etc. For some reason, trying to write this blog about my experience at the Ragnar Del Sol Relay Race feels a lot like trying to master those piano compositions.

So, what are the distinct movements of this adventure?

First Movement: Camaraderie. We took 24 people from diverse backgrounds -- stuck them in vans for 24+ hours, asked them to run really long distances up and down mountains at all hours of day and night. What did we get? New friends, different understandings of old friends, trust, faith and fun. And, the camaraderie went beyond our team. On every leg, I was encouraged by other teams, offered water and assistance, offered encouragement and support from strangers. We can learn a lot from this -- perhaps Congress should be required to participate in a Ragnar together. Maybe then, well ..... I don't want to get political.

Second Movement: Laughter. All day and all night, we laughed. You could hear people in the other vans laughing too. You knew that the guys running in tutus were laughing. The clown with the horn was clearly laughing. People running in hotdog, pizza, grape costumes were laughing. I know this was a race and we joked about smokin' the competition -- but it was just fun smack talk to get us pumped for the next leg. We laughed so much that post race, my abs hurt almost as much as my quads.

Third Movement: Sadness. Late into the night we received word that a race participant had been hit by a car. Rumors about the circumstances and severity were rampant. Confusion raged as the course was diverted, the race redirected and we were all struggling to understand what was before us. When would we run again? Could we run again? Was it safe to run again? But more than this kind of inward questioning was this somber beat, beat, beat of thoughts, prayers and sorrow for this runner most of us never knew, never saw, would never know. We now know his name. That he was 18 and a beloved son, brother and friend. He was running with friends, living life to the fullest. His prognosis is not good, and on the afternoon of March 2, I learned that he passed away. So, this leaves me wondering -- clearly adventures of all kinds -- running a relay, climbing a mountain, riding in a bike race, taking a stand for a cause-- are full of opportunities and risk. It's clearly safer to stay home not taking the risks, not putting yourself in harm's way. But what does that do to the quality of life? I don't know the answer and I will not have the wisdom to answer by the end of this blog. Henry (if you have read my previous blogs you will know Henry) would have suggested that a life without risk is a life lived un-fully. He would say .... jump the fence, run down the roads so you can experience what life has to offer. If you don't - you are clearly alive but not truly living -- that was Henry's philosophy. This doesn't mean the grief of tragedy is less when an adventurer is struck down -- but somehow it makes it more understandable when the person is doing something they love with people they care about.

Fourth Movement: Elation. Joy. Relief. I can almost feel what this movement feels like playing out beneath my fingers. As previous blogs have revealed, I do not fancy myself a runner. But, I was challenged, I agreed and I ran. Slowly, but I ran. And, as I am learning is the nature of runners, no one cared that I ran slowly. They cared that I ran with them. Laughed with them. Mourned with them and stepped through the movements of this adventure with them. I thank my van for the elation. I thank my team for the joy. I thank the finish line for the relief.

Sunday, February 28, 2010

Ragnar Blog/Compilation

Sunday Post Ragnar
We did it! Both TMC teams crossed the finish line in unison. Made it hope safely -- Oakleys are missing but other than that a great adventure. Looks like the kid who was hit is doing better -- rumors were high that night -- more later and I will post pictures and write a proper report later.

Saturday
Last runners on the course.
Posted by Julia at 3:13 PM 0 comments

Second leg is process - go boy howdy and ryanimal - muffin is up next - getting closer to the finish line
Posted by Julia at 12:22 PM 0 comments

Looks like our van goes in about 45 .....
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Rested clean and well fed - thanks to angel penny for the sweet rate for courtyard by marriott! Momotorhead, hoho, mufin girl and sugardady are on the path!
Posted by Julia at 9:29 AM 0 comments

After a few hours of sleep - we are showering and the run has resumed. Everyone is stickie and a bit sore. Remaining runs (except for boy howdy) are pretty easy
Posted by Julia at 8:10 AM 0 comments

High school - not high boy
Posted by Julia at 3:13 AM 0 comments

Race is uncertain. Runner hit by car and it was fatal. We heard it was a high boy from brophy in phoenix
Posted by Julia at 3:10 AM 1 comments

Looks like there was a ragnar accident - our folks are all ok. Race is being rerouted. Hope everyone is ok
Posted by Julia at 2:40 AM 0 comments

Ho-ho is ready for the handoff - I stayed in the van for this one cause I am having a hard time shaking the chill that took over after my last run
Posted by Julia at 2:20 AM 0 comments

That made is laugh for the next block til I handed to rhonda - she is cooking! Rockin the pace - next it's Ho-Ho for 3.4 miles then a shower and a nap!
Posted by Julia at 2:00 AM 0 comments

My run was long but I was cheered on by MoMo. Good cheer makes the miles go faster. At 2am in wickenburg we saw a lady being carried from the bar to a big truck
Posted by Julia at 1:58 AM 0 comments

Barry's run was a long dark and hard 8.7 miles! He cruised through and passed off to me (hot mama - wolf).
Posted by Julia at 1:56 AM 0 comments

Long night - sugardaddy's trailrun was defined his flashy weiner. Molly pranced through the dark with ski cap flapping.
Posted by Julia at 1:54 AM 1 comments


Friday, February 26, 2010

Getting ready for our next six legs. Expecting to start in about 45 minutes. Chris starts with six miles on the trail/molly takes on 3m - then barry then me ...
Posted by Julia at 8:48 PM 0 comments

If you are looking at a map - we are in congress arizona
Posted by Julia at 7:37 PM 0 comments

Blinkies are coming out. It's kind of like christmas --- everyone is in good spirits - of course it's not even 9pm
Posted by Julia at 7:37 PM 0 comments

boy "f" howdy has a dirty mouth .....
Posted by Julia at 7:32 PM 0 comments

Sleep is elusive - laughs are constant! Full moon coyote hoho is howling.
Posted by Julia at 7:32 PM 0 comments

Smells like a locker room and heavy doses of ben gay
Posted by Julia at 6:11 PM 0 comments

Enjoying a little break from the course - van two is running hard through skull valley. The temps are dropping/the moon is up. Belly full/night young.
Posted by Julia at 5:53 PM 1 comments

Jolene says she is ready to tear skull valley up!!!
Posted by Julia at 3:29 PM 0 comments

Finished my first leg -5 miles of beautififul high country. Met my goal time! Felt good. Rhonda is smokin and jolene is gearing -- last words from Jolene -
Posted by Julia at 3:29 PM 0 comments

Molly looking strong - lindsey rockin it! Barry and Ryan face a long leg and 829 feet of elevation gain - the air is very thin! Boy "f" howdy!
Posted by Julia at 12:54 PM 0 comments

Chris is running.... Looked good two miles in. First exchange go molly! (Mo-motorhead)! Lady Gaga rocking the exchange
Posted by Julia at 12:20 PM 0 comments

Posted by Julia at 11:54 AM 0 comments

Gathering at the start - nerves are high
Posted by Julia at 11:28 AM 0 comments

Race Day
We arrived in Prescott last night and enjoyed a nice Italian dinner at Pappa's Italian Restaurant. Numerous TMC nurses were there -- I can't tell you how much it means to me to have our nurses at the aid station. I don't expect to need major first aid, it just feels really good to know that there will be familiar faces should I need something.Barry, Chris and I are having breakfast in our hotel, some of our team are still sleeping and some are on the road! We have already seen one team of runners -- Tucson Trigirls -- headed out for an 8:30 a.m. start. Dr. Eve Shapiro is on the team -- Go Tri-Girls!We have about five hours to start time -- everyone is in good spirits and excited for this adventure. The weather forecast is improving and rain is now predicted to hold off until Saturday night (when we should finish.)
Posted by Julia at 6:32 AM 0 comments
Thursday, February 25, 2010

Two of four vans are on the road headed for Prescott! Italian food and a bit of carb loading/vino on the agenda for tonight!

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Ragnar del Sol -- The Journey is about to begin!

Ragnar is a 212-mile, 24+ hour relay split between 12 runners (TMC has two teams, so 24 runners). We are running to raise money for TMC for Children --- Mile by Mile, Miracles Happen.

I am not sure who might be interested, but I have figured out how to post blogs updates from my phone. The weather forecast is sketchy and we might end up quite wet. We start in Prescott on Friday, ending in Tempe on Saturday (note: some of us may be at Fourpeaks Saturday afternoon).

Stay tuned here for updates. In the words of Woody Harrelson's character in Zombieland .... "It's time to nut up or shut up....."

And, while I am prepared to "nut up" I think I have found a way to keep talking......

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Do the Rules of Bike Club Apply?

OK, so Bike Club has rules. Of course, one of them was to not tell anyone about Bike Club (please note that this was knowingly and willingly lifted from Fight Club). But, I think I am going to break that rule and hope the consequences are not too extreme.

I thought about Bike Club today as I trotted on my feet around the Bunny Loop of Fantasy Island. It's about a five mile loop -- easy-peasy on a bike, pretty easy running. So, since I thought about Bike Club -- I am now going to blog about it.

Alta and Sedona joined me on this little jaunt and I started to think about whether trail running was beginning to even remotely feel as fun as mountain biking. Strangely, the answer is kind of sorta, can see how it would be someday. If I compare the run today with some of the common rules of Bike Club -- this was a pretty good day. There was mud -- and I hit it. There was water -- and I hit it. I bled and I did have to retie my shoes, so that is sort of kind of like a mechanical failure (ok, that's a stretch).

I was with friends (Alta and Sedona) who did fun things like randomly race off the trail at full speed after phantom bunnies even if it meant a little pain along the way (cactus). This kind of reminded me of riding with my friend Doug (Chris, Doogie, Grant, Jim, Nancy, etc.) who occasionally dart off the beaten path on their bike to jump over something -- often leaving them bloody, hurt and, nearly always, happy at the end of the ride.

Of course, there is the rule -- or at least saying -- in Bike Club that we ride for stories (and beer) instead of exercise. And, that makes it fun and not work. I can tell you some stories about bike club .... There was the time @$*&#$ did a jump in the parking lot and bounced higher than any human I have ever seen; the time #$&*@(&$ was urged to "pull-up" on a rock drop that no one else even tried -- and he made it; when @#*!&(237 landed upside down in a tree during a sprint down Sunrise; and, of course, when #$(@U)(348 had to ride out of the trail in his whitie tighties after a cactus attacked :). There was also the time I had a three inch cactus spine in my hiney and my friend @#&@!*$&@( had to help pull it out. Fun times, right? RIGHT!

And, today's run reminded me of many biking stories -- which means I should have hope and confidence that one day I will be as joyful at the prospect of a run as I am at the prospect of a bike ride. I will readily admit that I have never grumbled (well, maybe once) at the end of a ride like I very commonly grumble at the beginning, middle and end of a run. That is something I need to change ... no grumbling on a run.

It's weird. The Ragnar Relay (a 200+mile relay foot race through Arizona) is just two and a half weeks away. I know that physically I could be better prepared. I am still slow and still a little (well, a lot according to my Wii coach) heavier than a I should be. But, I kind of sort of feel like I have made progress that goes beyond the physical. I am starting to actually think this will be fun -- not a slow and hellish death march. I will be hanging out for 24+ hours with a bunch of crazy people doing ridiculous things, supporting and cheering each other on, laughing when it's appropriate and sometimes when it's not. We will end up tired, possibly bandaged, sweaty, stinky, sore and looking for a beer. And, of course, there will be tons of stories.

Funny, this is starting to sound like Bike Club....... And that can only be good.

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

Twinkies

I am already behind. I mean, the pressure is huge to be relavent and informative and witty and, well, whatever else a blogger is supposed to be. But, you can't be any of that if you don't even keep the blog current and regular.

So why am I behind? No good reason. Every good reason. Well, no good reason.

Random thoughts ....

My friend Rachel came over and we painted. It was fun and Rachel's painting was a great depiction of what it's like to look at the sky through a forest of Aspens -- a fabulous experience and very worthy of fine painting. I did a self-portrait/Ode to Doogie. It was meant to hang in our new StrangeSugar Tap Room. Unfortunately, last night it fell on the floor and one of the cats urinated on it. Sad. Maybe I will take a picture of it and make it my Facebook Profile Picture.

I was confused and confounded as I watched people protest the closure of parks in Arizona. I dont' like it either, but the sign I saw on the news (Where Will I Camp?) when it seems to me the sign should really say "What Am I Going to Go When I Have a Stroke" when the hospital start closing and EDs are overrun by people who no longer have access to primary care. The budget crisis is amazing and somehow we need to figure out a creative way to get to the other side.

Running. Two trail runs. I am starting to like it. Sometimes. Somedays. Some runs. Really, it's true. And I continue to really like runners. Most of the time. Except when they talk about running a long way. Then, it hurts. My bikes seem to be a bit depressed because they keep getting left behind -- but I will get to them later.

So, words of wisdom? "Believe it or not, Twinkies have an expiration date.... ." Or so says Woody Harrelson as Tallehasse in the movie Zombieland, which Chris is watching right now. We all have an expiration date, so...... Live for the Day, right?

Friday, January 22, 2010

Run Fat Girl Run

I am not a runner. My family runs -- but I -- being a rebel -- do not. I do lots of other things, but I do not run. Now, this gets complicated because occasionally I agree to do some sort of running event. It's not typically a 5K or a 10K or even a one mile fun run. No, really the only running events I seem to think merit paying good money for are half marathons.

In mid-October 2009, I was having a lovely day with some friends and somewhere between beer, wine and dinner we all agreed to run the PF Chang half marathon in January. Seemed a long way away. I had to ride the 109 version of El Tour de Tucson before 2010 would be even close.

Well, October passed, El Tour passed and I had to train -- running miles and miles and miles. One training run in Sahaurita -- I stopped running (about mile 9.5) when I saw elephants in the park across the street. That became a rule -- you see elephants, you stop running. I have other rules and gimics and tricks to get me to run.

Shortly after we set this goal, I did a long bike ride and then, for some reason, watched the New York Marathon on television. Weird to watch a marathon on TV. They were following the leaders including Paula Radcliffe who, apparently was not having a good day. The announcer almost gleefully noted that Paula was running a "pedestrian" 5:51 pace. Holy cow, I thought. If that is pedestrian, I am apparently sleeping when I run.

Regardless, I try to keep my commitments so after El Tour I started training. And running and training. And last weekend, I completed the half marathon amongst a group of real runners, several of whom ran the full marathon. When I crossed the finish line very far behind where I wanted to be and not very happy, I decided to just put a smile on my face, but to let people know I wasn't going to run any more. Ever.

Amazingly, or perhaps not so amazingly, the people who I knew who also ran -- people who completed the marathon in around 4 hours or quicker -- and others completed the half marathon a good 45 minutes before me -- were quick to see something in me I have never seen. A runner. A slow runner. Who sometimes limps because her funky toe doesn't bend right. But, a runner nevertheless.

I am not quite there in my head. Not ready to say I am a runner. But, with the encouragement of friends, I am signing up for more races and foot adventures. Run Fat Girl Run.....