Her writing sang sweet music to mine ears whens I read it, so here it is for you to enjoy...
The road to
marathon weekend in Fargo, North Dakota was a sort of anticlimactic one. Before
I even began the Fargo Marathon, I had the odd feeling of wanting to be past
the race. It wasn’t that I wanted the race to be over, exactly, but I didn’t
have the typical slush of excitement and nerves in my mind. I was calm—or rather, I wasn’t feeling much
of anything. I had put in the miles, missing just a couple of runs in my
18-week training cycle. When I look back on it, it felt like I was slogging
through the Minnesota winter until practically taper time, when the major work
was already done, and I was surprised to be so close to race day.
I got to the
FargoDome on Saturday morning plenty early, ate my breakfast and drank coffee
before finding a spot where I’d camp out for 15 minutes or so before moving to
the next spot. I was still expecting rain. Other runners had garbage bags
covering them as a precaution. Many of us wore hats. It was a small, cozy race, and it was a tiny
miracle to me that I noticed it was 7:10 or 7:15 and figured I should head over
to the starting area in time for the 7:30 gun, instead of the usual incessant
reminders blaring over the loudspeaker.
I stood in the crowd, stretching and thinking about how my running had
evolved since October 2009, when I ran my last marathon.
For three races
in a row, I had badly wanted to run a 3:40 and qualify for Boston. My training
indicated that it was a longshot but that if stars aligned gently, I could get
there. I haven’t yet, and after each race, I’m embarrassed about how hard on
myself I was about what went wrong and what I didn’t do well enough. Leading up
to Baystate Marathon in 2009 or even during the race, I ended up with a stress
fracture in my foot, with the subsequent six weeks totally off running and then
a long, long, long, slow build-up back.
It was frustrating and boring, and as I racked up magazine subscriptions
for my long workouts on the stationary bike during gorgeous late fall weather
in Minnesota, I remember thinking I’d do anything to go out for a run of any
length.
As I recovered
over the next year, I felt the marathon bug creeping back into my mind—for a
spring race, not wanting to wait until fall 2011. All of a sudden, during some random and
unspectacular run, I had an epiphany of sorts, the kind that you can read and
hear about over and over but have to figure out yourself for it to stick. I
could train hard and be excited for a spring marathon, but run it for fun,
without rigorous time goals.
This was
liberating to me. I realized that I train for these fiendish races not just for
the finish time, but because I truly love the process of preparing and training
my body for a challenge like this. It’s really—excuse the cliché—a labor of
love. I love conversations with Molly during a long run, I love my podcasts,
and I love finishing a workout in the best humidity blizzards rain
weather Minnesota can throw at me. I love seeing improvements in a workout from
one month to the next. I love how strong I feel during a great run. It makes
all of the early wake-ups, tired miles, and lackluster days totally worth it.
As soon as the
gun went off in Fargo, all of the emotions that I had been shoving down cropped
up, and I completely choked up for the first minute of the race, thinking about
my recovery, the first run post-stress fracture, the slow buildup and all of my
made-up re-injury scares along the way.
After hundreds and hundreds of miles, here I was, on a start line I
wasn’t sure I’d ever stand on again last year.
I settled into an
easy pace with the hope that I’d find the first 10 miles very easy and be able
to rachet up the pace in the second half of the race. By mile 10, though, it
started to feel unlikely that I could hold that pace. My face was hot under my hat, but I didn’t toss away
my hat for fear that the sun would pop out right away. Later, I found out that while the temperature
stayed low enough—mid-60s—the humidity was 92 percent, and it didn’t rain for
more than five or 10 minutes that morning. I touched my face, then my
collarbone, then my shoulder, and all three were salty with dried sweat. I
decided to start drinking more powerade and water as I started to run more by
effort than pace, and each time I grabbed a cup of powerade, I tasted the salt
in it and that tasted like paradise: a bad sign.
The course
meandered along out-and-back sections around the city, mostly on concrete
roads, with lots of great spectators. My favorite signs were “Finish before the
rapture!” “You’re so not almost there!” and “Worst parade ever!” Some runners later mentioned someone dressed
in a Grim Reaper costume at the end of the race holding a sign that said “The
end is near,” but I was in such a fog of fatigue that I barely glanced at him
and then didn’t want to see him again.
There were bands at every mile, too.
The miles were
ticking by quickly, but I just wasn’t having fun with them the way I wanted. My
splits started slow and got slower, and my legs just felt heavy. All along, my
goal was to pick up the pace halfway through, but instead I shifted my eye
toward mile 17, when the single-digit mile countdown began. I started walking at every mile marker, and
then more toward the end. I ate a freezie, a chunk of watermelon, and a lot of
blue powerade. (Gross.) Everyone around me looked like how I felt, and the
course intersected with the last few miles of the half-marathon, which faded to
a lot of walkers by the time the marathoners overtook the course. The energy of
the race started to lag and feel more like a grind—as most marathons often do
around mile 23. Toward the end, I looked at my watch and figured out I could
walk the last mile in 20 minutes and finish under 4:30, but then decided to try
to shuffle under the 4:20 mark.
As soon as I
got to the FargoDome and the course began curving around the stadium toward the
finish, I started to move more quickly and felt lighter. I noticed someone
holding the “You’re so not almost there” sign with “so,” “not,” and “almost”
crossed out, and I remember saying “Oh!” out loud. Among all of the cheers, I
heard a man yell “385 yards to go!” and all of a sudden I realized I made it.
You turn a sharp corner, and you squint into the tunnel into the FargoDome and
see bright lights and a huge “FINISH” banner with a clock. I started moving as
fast as I could toward the finish line and all of the emotions hung on me again
in the last 100 meters—that I had done it, I came back, I finished this race. I
had an impossibly huge smile on my face when I crossed the finish line and then,
as soon as I stopped my watch, I burst into tears, for the first time ever after
a marathon.
I’m left now
with the feeling that the race itself didn’t matter. I worked hard to prepare,
but what happened out on that race course isn’t so memorable or special to me,
and it’s telling to me how sharply my heartbeat at the start and finish
contrast to the dull feeling in my legs for the rest of the run. The start and the finish and what it
symbolized are what I’ll always remember: the heightened joy and pain, how
heavy a finisher’s medal feels on my neck, and the miles of preparation that
helped get me to the finish. After every other marathon I’ve run, I’ve felt
drained and disinterested in running for weeks and sometimes months. By the car ride home, I was already
brainstorming about summer training and how best to prepare for Chicago in
October. I had moved on.
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