Rock ‘n’ Roll USA Half Marathon Recap

For every single mistake, there’s an opportunity to learn from it.

Well, I have lots to learn from yesterday’s race.

With 10 half-marathons and a bunch of shorter races under my belt, I don’t consider myself any kind of running or racing expert, but I thought I knew pretty well what my body could and couldn’t handle.

Um, maybe not so much.

As I said the other day, my main goals were to: run with Tina and enjoy the race, finish hopefully under 2:00 and finish safely.

Well, I finished under 2:00, and I ran with Tina (and Meganerd!), and I enjoyed the race.

I don’t think I finished safely.

The night before the race, I went to Sette Osteria, one of my favorite DC Italian restaurants, with my roommates for the weekend, Ashley, Laura and Caitlin (Beth and Samantha also joined us.)

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I ordered a delicious gnocchi and had them add chicken so I could get a little protein in.

I also had two fabulous glasses of New Zealand sauvignon blanc. I wasn’t planning on PRing at the race the next day, so two glasses of wine couldn’t hurt, right? Two glasses of wine isn’t much, right?

I had water at dinner and in the morning…

We woke up at 5:30 to plan on leaving for the race at 6. My stomach was a little upset, so I took one Immodium as I was getting ready—which is not terribly unusual before a race for me and my sensitive stomach. It generally calms things down.

We were staying at the Washington Marriott, near Foggy Bottom, courtesy of the very awesome Caitlin’s father and his Marriott points. Thank you Caitlin and your dad! I love him. We decided splitting a cab four ways wouldn’t be much more than taking the Metro and might be less stressful. The cab ride went very smoothly and we were at RFK within 15 minutes.

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One of the best about this race is the access to the Armory before the race. A warm, indoor place to hang out? What?? Awesome.

Also awesome? The race on St. Patrick’s Day and everyone decked out in green.

(Laura, by the way, was pacing the marathon…her 68th marathon. Because she’s a little crazy like that.)

We hung out inside until about 7:45 when we decided we should probably get in the corrals. My phone wasn’t getting good service, and I couldn’t get ahold of Tina, and I started getting a little nervous. For a race I was undertrained for, it would really be nice to have someone else to run with.

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On the way out, I ran into Meganerd and we walked to the corral, hoping to find Tina.

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Whew.

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Since we were relatively close to the front (corral 8 out of 20-something corrals), we were able to cross the start quickly.

Our first mile was in the low 9:00s, and we tried to keep as many miles in the low 9s as possible, but our splits ended up being pretty inconsistent. We’d run one mile in the 8:40s and then the next in the low 9:00s. It was almost like we were doing intervals while racing? Really weird.

It was in the low 50s when we were standing in the corrals, but it warmed up really quickly, and kept getting warmer as the sun came out.

I’d had my usual pre-race breakfast, a Luna bar and banana, but it didn’t seem to be enough. About 4 miles in, I started getting really hungry—for real food. I’ve been hungry for solid food at the end of a marathon, but never so early in a race. I usually Gu at mile 6 of a half and then take half a Gu around mile 9 or 10, but I went for a Gu at mile 5 yesterday. Speaking of Gu, they hooked me up with a free bib for this race, which was much appreciated—especially since I signed up for this race when I was unemployed.

I ran the National Half last year, too, before it was organized by Rock ‘n’ Roll/Competitor Group. I hadn’t heard good things from other races the group has put on, but I hoped for the best at our race. Last year wasn’t terribly well-organized—the race ran out of water at a lot of stops, there were few mile markers on the course, so the race could only go up from there, right? Thankfully, yes. I can’t say I noticed any major hiccups yesterday.

As for the Rock ‘n’ Roll part of the race, I’d always heard there were tons of bands on their courses. I don’t remember how many bands we passed, but it was a nice perk. I can see this being especially awesome for a race that doesn’t go through a city, where there’s less to look at on the course.

Even though I’m not as well-trained right now as I was for this race last year, the extra year of running under my belt, and plenty of racing on hilly courses, definitely helped my muscle memory. Running at a 8:40ish pace was certainly no walk in the park, but I didn’t feel like I was dying, which, for being undertrained? Pretty awesome. Physically, my legs didn’t feel very fresh, but they never felt completely spent, either.

The three of us managed to stay together until around mile 6 or 7, running through Dupont Circle, when we lost Megan. It can be difficult enough running with one other person sometimes, but trying to keep three people together at the same pace is pretty hard.

Tina and I ran together just the two of us, and definitely talked even less than we did at the NYC Marathon, since the running was not coming terribly easy to us. I remember around mile 7 or 8 seeing salt packets at one of the water station and thinking they looked really good. Not a good sign.

The rest of the course and race was pretty standard until around mile 11.5. Megan had caught up to us a few minutes earlier, and the three of us were running together again. I started feeling a surge of energy, and with Megan a bit behind me, and Tina a bit behind her, I decided I was going to give the rest of the race all I had.

We were around 11.25 at 1:40ish, and I thought I still might be able to pull out a miracle PR. The first 10-11 miles of the course is fairly scenic, but the last few miles is really boring. Once you pass Howard, you run through Capitol Hill on the NE side of DC through some residential streets. There’s also a long street—I think 13th Street—that you run on for seemingly forever.

I told myself I’d pick things up once I hit 12 or got off that damn street, whichever happened first. Once I hit 12, I turned it up, and ended up running that last mile in 7:55! I am still in utter shock when I run an entire mile in a race under an 8:00 pace.

I ran hard, looking at my watch, doing mental math to figure out whether I’d be able to PR or not. Once I hit 13, I saw I wasn’t going to PR, and I became discouraged and slowed things down to a jog. When you hit 13 on this course, you can’t even see the finish line, which is also incredibly discouraging.

I ended up crossing the finish line in 1:57: , a time I’m really happy with for the amount of training I did. I can’t wait to see how much faster I can get later on this year when I do put more effort back into my training.

I walked past the finish line and turned around to look for Tina and Megan for a few minutes. When I didn’t see them, I started walking towards the beer tents, figuring I might find Tina there. Sure enough, she walked over there a few minutes later. As I started talking to the girls, I knew something was wrong.

I felt woozy, and I started to see double looking at them. (And no, I hadn’t gotten a beer.) This happened to me once, when I ran my last 20-miler before the marathon, and I knew I couldn’t make it back to the hotel without getting some salt into my system. I looked around to see if I could nab someone’s Gatorade, but didn’t see any wayward Gatorades for me to take.

I told Tina I thought I needed some salt, and we walked over to the medical tent. I thought I’d be able to grab some salt packets and peace out, but they took my information and had me sit down and mix salt packets into water. After one little bottle of this, I didn’t feel any better at all, and asked for some straight-up salt packets. They tried to offer me Gatorade, but it usually makes me sick to my stomach, so I tried to say no. After taking a few salt packets and realizing they weren’t doing anything, I relented and took the damn Gatorade.

When I’d sat down, they asked if I wanted them to take my vitals. I thought I’d be fine after some salt, so I initially declined, but once I wasn’t feeling any better, I asked them if they could take my vitals. The volunteer took my pulse, and said it was 112. She told me she thought I should lay down on a cot and elevate my legs. As I sat there, I started feeling really nervous and scared I might pass out. I remembered once at physical therapy, a guy telling me a story of how he was in the hospital for 36 hours after passing out after a race from dehydration. and had visions of the same happening to me. Tina came back in and sat with me for a few minutes and calmed me down.

The volunteer came back again and took my pulse again—it had only gone down to 106, but at least it had gone down. I tried making a joke and saying “well, sitting in a medical tent hoping I don’t pass out isn’t really doing anything for my nerves.” She smiled but told me if it didn’t keep going down, I might need an IV. Even more nervous at this point, I was determined to be a good patient and get the hell out of there. I finished the Gatorade, asked for more salt and took some more water. Finally, I wasn’t seeing double and got the hell out of there.

I walked back over to the Armory to meet up with Ashley and Caitiln (who ROCKED her race—1:53!). Ashley’d had a rough time, too, and we sat in the Armory and decompressed a bit before finally leaving. At this point, I was absolutely shivering, and just wanted to get back to the hotel.

While I don’t know whether it was the two glasses of wine, the warmth on the course and this being my first warm race of the year, being undertrained, or what, having to take a trip to the medical tent really scared me into not being so blase about my racing and training. Sure, I can pull out a half-marathon on minimal training, but I need to be kinder to my body. I can’t not train AND have a few glasses of wine before a race and expect everything to go well. That’s a lot to ask of my body. (As if a half-marathon alone wasn’t a lot to ask of my body.)

Whew. What have you learned from rough races?

Mohegan Sun WineFest ‘12

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Ashley and I are back in NYC, and our fun weekend is over.

AND IT WAS FUN. I’ll share you with the pictures I can share and still keep my job, but let’s just say we had a really good time.

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The wine festival was held in Mohegan Sun’s convention center, and it was just a bit more fun than any other convention I’ve been to before.

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We picked up our wine glasses and got to work.

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Why do they not come pre-filled?

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Bobby Flay!

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It was really crowded, but we never had to wait in line more than a few seconds for a pour.

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I tried to stop for snacks wherever I saw them so that I didn’t pass out mid-wine fest. These Wicked Natural dips were really good. (Or, you know, wicked good.) The guy tried to tell us that this was the only caramel mustard dip in the world, but we saw another one today at The Black Dog. Fail, buddy.

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Hydration. (In all seriousness, we took a few water breaks over the course of the day so that we didn’t die.)

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As I said yesterday, there were more than 1,000 different vendors there—so there were some that I’d heard of but plenty that I hadn’t. There were also wines I’d heard of that were distributed by a larger distributor that had other lines of wine in their portfolios. For example, Bronco Wine Company owns approximately a million wines.

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This White Wedding wasn’t fabulous, but it’s a cute name.

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Important things I learned from Cabot. Their tomato basil cheese was AMAZING.

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Um, I mostly just took pictures of wines and wineries whose names I really liked.

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This Gloria Ferrer was one of my favorite sparkling wines that I tried. At one point, Anne and I got separated from the others, and Ashley thought to look for me at the booths where they had bubbly. That’s how much I love my bubbly.

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The Serres wines were also really good. I enjoyed them because these Spanish wines were a little different from the California, South American and French wines we tried. I also enjoyed them because after quite a few tastes of wine, I kept trying to roll my Rs as I pronounced them. No, really. I swear I minored in Spanish.

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After trying our million wines, we made a beeline for the beer rooms upstairs.

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I don’t know if it was because it was late in the day and everyone had a lot to drink by then, or if the beer people were just more fun than the wine people, but we had a blast up here talking with all kinds of random people.

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I thought of my college bestie, Lindsay, who lives in Hawaii, when I saw this one. I drank my weight in Longboard when I visited her in ‘10.

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Lagunitas Maximus.

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Shockingly, after an entire afternoon of drinking, we were exhausted. We headed back to the room for a bit to recharge our batteries before dinner…

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…but dinner ended up being room service pizza because we were all so exhausted. We totally did not make our 10pm reservations at Bar Americain. Ashley and Tina fell asleep hard, but Anne and I snuck out for just a little more wine.

Thanks again to Mohegan Sun for comping our room and wine festival tickets, and thanks to my lovely friends for an awesome weekend!

What’s your favorite wine? I love sauvignon blanc and anything dry and bubbly the best. Wine’s I’m not a huge fan of: moscatos and rieslings—they’re too sweet for me.

Boston!

Yesterday morning, I woke up at 4:30 and hopped on a plane to visit my best friend and her family in the Boston ‘burbs. (She’s the one whose Aruba wedding I lost weight for!)

We went to a cute little place called Stars on Hingham Harbor for brunch, and I got an egg wrap with sweet potato, a little cheddar cheese and pepper and sweet potato home fries!

For dinner, we stayed in.

Cheese.

CHICKEN KABOBS. These were pretty amazing.

Salmon and goat cheese dip. (I’ll get the recipe for this!)

And snuggles! And wine, obviously.

Tags: food travel

So What Happens AFTER You Run a Marathon?

My last post left off at the finish line, but I’ve always wondered about after a marathon, so I thought I’d share with you my experience.

As soon as I had grabbed my bagel, banana, etc., I immediately picked up the phone to call my mom and find her. I needed a hug and badly. I also, very literally, needed someone to lean on. I think we were both a little delirious from the heat, because we had a hard time finding each other. I had told her I was walking towards the family meet-up area, but then I sat down and forgot to tell her that. Eventually, we met up by the flower truck, where she had a bouquet of sunflowers waiting for me (when I was little, my favorite song for her to sing to me was “You Are My Sunshine”) and a balloon.

I remember her telling me we could get a cab if we crossed Michigan Ave. We stood out there for about two minutes, and I realized everyone else had the same idea. I remember thinking, even if it hurt, I’d rather start walking back to the hotel than stand there waiting for a cab with thousands of other people. We got probably about 60% of the way back to the hotel when I finally found a cab. At this point, my mom was walking around in socks because her feet hurt so badly from putting on new sneakers that morning and wandering Chicago in search of her marathoning daughter.

We got back to the hotel, and I hung out a bit with Bobbi, Meghann and Kelly. And stretched:

We walked next door to get burgers at 312:

I got two more Goose Island 312s here, and they were much better than the ones I had at the finish line.

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We went back to the hotel room, and I took a looooong nap. I woke up around 8 absolutely ravenous but still too tired to go out to eat, so we ordered deep dish pizza from Lou Malnati’s to the room:

I woke up yesterday with a terrible cold (I’d been sick a few weeks ago and I think my body’s been fighting this off since then and surrendered after I made it run a marathon) and decided that a boat tour would be the perfect way to see a little more of Chicago without having to walk. We walked over to the Corner Bakery for breakfast, and I had eggs, toast and fruit.

And we went on the boat tour. 

Our adorable tour guide.

Marina City, otherwise known as the corn-on-the-cob building. Every single apartment has some kind of amazing view, and they are all pie-shaped, which must make them really hard to furnish.

Skyline.

Lighthouse.

Apparently at one point, the Coast Guard turned this lighthouse over to a private civilian to take care of, and he started throwing wild parties there, so the Coast Guard took it back.

Me and my mom :)

The airport and flight back yesterday, in one word, sucked. I was feeling really sick at this point and incredibly tired. I usually take a little something to relax on flights, but feeling so sick, I didn’t want to fall asleep in the cab on the way back and have the cab driver have to wake me up. There was a massive storm in NYC last night, which I made it back before, but there must have been storminess in the air, because there was definite OMG-I’m-going-to-die turbulence at one point. I made it back, got some Pump, wrote that epic marathon recap post and went to sleep.

Back to my regular routine…

But now, I’m a marathoner :)

I’ve Come a Long Way, Baby!

Eighteen months ago, I could barely run a mile. 

One year ago, I was preparing for the Army Ten-Miler. It was the first race of a considerable distance that I would run the whole thing. (It was the second time I’d run it; it was the second race I ran the whole thing.)

Six months ago, I had two half-marathons under my belt.

Tomorrow I will run my first marathon! I’m definitely nervous, but the day’s festivities helped.

We started off with some blogger breakfast at Jamba Juice:

I went for a smoothie with some banana and oatmeal on top. (Their granola had peanuts, which I’m allergic to.)

L-R: Leslie (who’s also running NYC, because she’s hardcore like that), Bobbi, Meghann, Kelly, Brie and me!

We went to the Sears Willis Tower.

Apparently, the tower is the height of 313 Oprahs. Unfortunately, this is the closest I’ll likely ever get to the big O. 

It was really high.

Like, so high that we were above the skyscrapers.

We went to Giordano’s for lunch, but this lactard stuck to a chicken sandwich while the other girls had deep-dish pizza.

And then another blogger meetup over some fro-yo:

I went for key lime. Wise choice on my part, as it was amazing.

Then we saw this creepy lady.

And the bean.

And ended the day with the final carbolicious meal: some bow tie pasta with chicken, spinach and sun-dried tomatoes at the Pasta Bowl. My mom came to meet us! I’m proud of her—she never travels without my dad, and she flew here all by herself and came all by herself to meet us at the restaurant.

No matter what happens tomorrow, I’m really proud of how far I’ve come. For the most part, I’m not too nervous. My awesome roomies are all multiple marathoners (between the three of them, they’ve run 13 marathons and qualified for Boston), so that’s helped my nerves a ton. They haven’t let me doubt myself for a second, and I’m so grateful that Meghann asked me to stay with them when we ran together at HLS. Staying with other fun, blogging, motivational marathoners has done an amazing job of keeping my nerves at bay.

All the e-mails, texts, calls, Facebook messages, tweets and blog comments are putting a huge smile on my face, and I’m so thankful for all your support.

Unless something catastrophic happens tomorrow…

THIS NEXT POST WILL BE FROM A MARATHONER.

GOOD NIGHT!!!

Chicago Marathon Expo

Or, IT’S REAL NOW.

I landed and hopped in a cab to meet up with Meghann, her sister Kelly and Kelly’s friend Sara and her boyfriend at the hotel. We walked over to Epic Burger, where we had some epic burgers. I went for turkey, to keep my sensitive stomach happy, and also got some fries so I could keep my salt levels up.

Afterwards, we went to the expo to pick up our bibs.

L-R: Me, Meghann, Kelly, Sara. Yes, we have matching shirts. Yes, we love them.

Walking into the expo was totally surreal.

Let me break it down:

I was walking into a marathon expo. Not as a spectator or a friend of a runner, not to pick up a half-marathon bib, but to pick up a marathon bib. Whoa.

You might not be totally able to see the writing on the back of our shirts, but we have our blog URLs on our shirts. Yup.

That’s my bib!

This sticker is totally going on my car.

Apparently the Little Rock marathon is pretty badass. Huge medals and Greek gods? Maybe Ben is on to something.

I also met up with E for a little chat, but no photo…yet.

It is actually way harder than it looks to keep one’s balance doing this.

We got some deep dish pizza to end our day.

I STILL can’t believe I’m running a marathon in two days.

12 Hilly Hawaii Miles!

I wasn’t going to blog while I was in Hawaii, but my run last night was pretty amazing.

Like some of my best runs, it shouldn’t have been. My stomach bothered me Saturday night. (Which may or may not be connected with drinking my weight in beer.) I didn’t have much to eat yesterday and spent most of my day outside on the beach getting more dehyrdated. So, when Lindsay and I set out around 5 last night for 12 miles, I had no expecations of it being a great run.

But we set out, and I hoped for the best. Most of my running buddies are actually new friends, which is awesome, but it was great running for 1 hour and 59 minutes with someone you’ve known for a long time. Lindsay and I were roomies our freshman year at American. We were put in a forced triple (i.e., there were three of us in a room meant for two), and we’re still friends! I think if you can live in that close of quarters with someone and emerge friends, you’re probably friends for life.

She ran track in college and was really fast. Since running was so foreign to me at the time, I thought she was Superwoman. Otherwise, how else would someone not only run long distances, but run them fast?  She tried to get me to run with her, and I usually looked at her like she had three heads.

Finally, when I started dabbling in running after college (read my running history here), we’d occassionally run together. Lindsay was such a trouper, walking with me when I needed to, on what had to have been the easiest runs ever for her. We ran together last May when she visited me. We ran about 3-4 miles, and I was still taking frequent walk breaks.

When we had got about a little more than half way through our run last night (I didn’t want to jinx myself by asking before I was certain I’d finish), I asked her if she ever thought she’d run 12 miles with me.

“Honestly? No.”

Fair enough!

Lindsay ran the Kauai Marathon last weekend and is still pretty sore, so we ran closer to my pace than hers. She was already doing another long run because she’s now preparing for the Long Beach Marathon. Apparently Kauai is ridiculously hilly, so she couldn’t PR. Long Beach is supposed to be pretty flat. We averaged a 10:15 pace for our 11.6 miles, which is pretty amazing, considering we ran up hills and mountains.

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I run in NYC, which is almost entirely flat, so this hill thing was brand new to me. My extent of hill training is running the Brooklyn, Manhattan or Williamsburg Bridges. Lindsay showed me last night what real hill training is. Considering that my long runs are usually a little closer to an 11:00 pace—and flat—I’m really proud of myself for busting it out last night. With one more long, hard run under my belt, I’m feeling more ready for Chicago!

Now, back to the beach…

Hawaii Tomorrow!

I’m going to Hawaii tomorrow!

Things I’m Excited About:

  • sun
  • sand
  • seeing Lindsay and her husband, Jake
  • running in Hawaii
  • resting
  • not checking my e-mail…too often
  • Not necessarily blogging every day (I have some awesome guest posts all ready for you!)
  • taking pretty pictures
  • resting
  • Hawaiian food

Things I’m NOT Excited About:

  • The flights. A 3h 41 flight to Houston tomorrow followed by an 8h 20min (ah!) flight to Honolulu. Like Laney, I am not a huge fan of flying. To put it mildly. However, have wine, will travel.
  • Leaving sweet Bailey dog at my parents. He’s in more-than-capable hands, but I’ll miss him.
  • That’s all. I’M GOING TO HAWAII!!!!!!! Of course I’m excited!

For breakfast this morning, I had an omelette again. I got all crazy today and added onions:

What this week looks like for me

And how I plan to get my exercise in.

Monday: cardio before work; 1:30pm 30-minute trainer session (yes, mid-workday)

Tuesday: 7:30am 30-minute trainer session; cardio immediately following

Wednesday: OH DEAR GOD. 6am trainer session. If I can make it through the work day, I’ll do some cardio after work. If I die, however, I won’t have to do cardio!!

Thursday: 8am regular one-hour training session; bringing Bailey to NJ at night. No extra cardio that day. But if I’m still standing after four trainer sessions and three other days of cardio, I think I’ve earned it.

Friday: Will be commuting in from NJ; will try for cardio…at some point. Flying to DC at night!

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