Saturday, August 11, 2012

Lessons from a Sunset

When I rolled into the parking lot near UC Cyclery in La Jolla, I honestly was expecting a handful of riders, similar to the amount you'd normally get for a Saturday bike shop ride.  As I was pumping up my tires and prepping my bike, I was looking around at the fit cyclists in their race kits and kick a$$$$$ bikes.  I honestly felt more nervous this morning than I have felt before any races I've done all year!


Ummm...so like, where are all the girls at?
UC Cyclery was a great host shop and provided the riders with hydration and bananas pre-ride.
Too bad I can't stand bananas.  :(

There were 6 separate rides based on ability.  I was the newbie in town and didn't want to break any "rules" of the rotating double pacelines, so I stuck to the more conservative group.  I was glad I did.  There were probably only 3 times during the entire ride that my heartrate crept out of zone 2, but I had a blast enjoying this beautiful city via bike, making new friends, and learning the lingo of the paceline.  Words like "clear" and "last" and stuff like that....stuff that you will never ever hear or say in a real paceline.  This was a new riding routine to me- I'm used to the "every man for himself" mindset.  We rode much faster and more efficiently when we all worked together as a team.  You know, chalk up another important lesson that can apply to life.  I should write a book.

There were two riders who were also closet hammerheads like myself, so on the parts where there was a sprint to the top, it was the 3 of us who took off like balls shot out of a cannon.  We became friends instantly and ended up sticking together for the ride home.


For all of my non-cyclist girlfriends.  Here is pictorial proof that not just F.O.G.'s (Fat Old Guys) ride bikes.
You're welcome.

After the ride, I headed out to UCSD's Canyonview Pool to see where all my tuition money went.  Surprise, surprise... the long course pool that my dollars funded was closed, but I still happily sold my road bike along with my Garmin 910XT to afford a one-day day pass to the regular 25-meter lane pool.  


This is where I used to de-stress in college.  Love.this.pool.


Digital paceclocks!  So now there is digital proof when I miss my interval!
No trip to San Diego is complete without visiting the cliffs.  There were some Asian college students there watching the sunset too; it reminded me of my younger self.  The cliffs, the ocean lapping underneath you, the tiny silhouettes of the surfers, and the sunset- some beautiful things never change.  I thought about how much has happened to me in my life during these past 10 years.  All the lessons, the trials, the joys, the accomplishments, and the hope that the future holds.



Made it just in time...
Watching the sunset was a visual reminder that there is an appropriate time to allow things and circumstances to "set"-  to gradually remove themselves and their presence from our lives.  True, there was a time when their rays burned strong on our skin and provided light to us.  But just like the sun, those things needs to set in order for life to continue and progress.  And if we allow it, there can be exquisite beauty in that fading away, in that goodbye.



As I watched the sun disappear behind the clouds, I was also reminded of all the things that never fade.  And even after 10 years, these things remain unconditional, steadfast, and hopeful. 



Friday, August 10, 2012

9.5 is the new 6.5

It's been awhile since I've done this drive.  Once it took me only 6.5 hours from the Bay Area to San Diego.  Today it took 9.5 hours.  I also drive like a grandma when I have my bike on my roofrack.  Like even slower than the grandpas on the road.  I just wave at them while all the other cars swerve angrily around us.  I just need to wear dark wrap-around shades and sit lower in my seat so that I match the grandpas.

It's hard for me to sit still for 10 minutes.  I'd rather lead group therapy sessions for the Kardashians than sit in a car for more than an hour, so I did myself a favor and did a sanity swim set of 4100 yards this morning before I hit the road.  The benefit of driving was that I could load up my entire car with all of my stuff.  I don't see how people with kids do it. 

Quick suit review: the 2-piece Betty Designs suit is no joke.  This suit is functional!  After falling in love with her cute cycling kits, I wanted to try her swimsuits.  I've swam in 2-piece TYR and Nike suits, and across the board, I had issues with all of them because the bottoms would loosen up and slow me down!  Not with BD suits- the bottoms are fitted and stay put, so you don't have to worry about mooning the guy in the lane next to you when you do a flip turn.  Good quality, and you honestly swim faster with a butterfly on your crotch!  Worth the money.


Ms. Multi-tasking. Drying the suit on the dash. Free advertising for Betty Designs.
Truckers can't wait to order their speedos now!
Wearing my Betty Designs cycling kit. (From Tierra Bella Century)

Tomorrow morning I'm gonna hop onto the SDBC Saturday group ride and see how long I can hang with the big boys.  I printed out route directions as back-up, because in reality, I'll probably get dropped in the parking lot since they average high 20s, low 30 mphs?  Should be interesting.  

San Diego holds a lot of memories from my college years and beyond.  This weekend I'm hoping to rekindle all that I've loved about this city, visit with some old friends, and have a decent amount of swimbikerun thrown in there for good measure.  Life is pretty amazing with all of its twists and turns, but when it brings you back to places with amazing sun and ocean water, it must be pretty darn good after all.


Sunday, July 29, 2012

Vineman Full Aquabike Race Report

Race morning
At 3:15 am, my alarm reminded me of how stupid this sport is sometimes.  But then again, I'd rather arrive to transition with plenty of time versus being rushed and not find parking and miss my wave start (I know, I'm soo dramatic), so 3:15 am it was.  I changed, sunscreened, Body Glided, Booty Buttered, internetted, coffeed, and breakfasted.  I decided 2 days prior to the race that I would (again) change my pre-race breakfast and stick with the tried-and-true: oatmeal, a scoop of BiPro protein and 2 Tbs. ground flaxseed.  Arriving at Johnson's Beach at 5 am gave me first dibs at my transition rack position and plenty of time to pump tires, encourage the first-timers who were racked next to me, get body-marked, and visit the portapotties like 12 times.  I sucked down an Accelerade gel 30 minutes prior to my wave start at 6:44 am and sipped on MRM.  


Everyone's favorite part of triathlon.  Clearly.



Swim: 2.4 miles (1:06:47) 4th place 
We were ushered into the swim corral and had 45 seconds to line up.  I was scanning my competition to see who looked fast.  I was having major decision paralysis since no one caught my eye, then all of a sudden, everyone started swimming!  I didn't even hear the horn!  I started my Garmin and put my head down and started swimming.  Soon enough, I was swimming over the earlier waves.  I was swimming through pink caps, then caught up to blue caps, gray caps, green caps and orange caps.  I kept running into people and getting kicked, so I resorted to a semi-breastroke/freestyle swim that allowed me to sight without getting my goggles knocked off.  I knew this was wasting energy, but it was my only choice!  Imagine driving fast on a highway and getting cut off by cars who are going 30 mph, where you have to screech to a sudden stop, adjust positioning, and continue driving.  This is how the swim was.  I remember looking up at the colored caps all around and thinking, "This is the picture of MASS CHAOS."  Why weren't our wave starts separated by more minutes??  I accidentally kicked someone hard and felt really bad.  My foot hurt badly, so I can't imagine how their face felt!  Sorry!  I exited the swim and saw my time.  Considering how congested that river was, I was happy to be out of that water.  I saw my parents and Roena as I ran up the ramp, and that made my day!






I'm the white cap in the center. I think hearing my parent's commentary is even more entertaining.



T1: 6:10
This was a real sh*tshow. I thought I had counted racks correctly, ran down the aisle, and couldn't find my stuff.  I heard someone else screaming, "Where the F is my bike?" and all I could do was laugh because I was thinking the exact same thing.  I ended up running back to the main aisle to check signs, found my bike, but I was positioned on the opposite side.  I stripped off my wetsuit and managed to shimmy between my bike and the girl's next to mine without knocking it over, and got my stuff on.  There was so much dirt and gravel and mud everywhere, so I spent extra minutes wiping off my feet well so I didn't have rocks in my shoes for 112 miles.  T1 and the finish are miles apart (don'tcha just love a logistical nightmare?) so I threw all my stuff into the bag they provided, cinched it shut, and prayed it would make it back to the finish.  I grabbed my bike and went on my way.

Ready to roll!

Bike: 112 miles (6:15:45) 5th place
I settled into a nice groove and found my rhythm.  I love this course- the rolling hills, the wineries- but man, there are some roads on that course that need some serious work!  Ever since my crash, I am now hyper-vigilant about scanning the roads for potholes that can potentially take me out.  There were areas that were so bumpy that my CO2 cartridge came unscrewed and I lost a water bottle after hitting a hard pothole.  The whole time I stayed at a steady and harder-than-normal pace.  Sometimes I got distracted by the wineries, and then would have to refocus and remind myself that I was racing!  Thinking back to what what going through my mind is quite comical- I remember telling myself, "You didn't come all this way to chalk this one up as a training ride!" and "Don't phone this one in!" (This is a total Jillian Michael's line, for those of you who are also "Ripped in 30"...lol).  Also, lines from friends' emails were running through my head that kept me focused and strong.  When I found myself relaxing a bit in my pace, I would look down at my wristband and see "FEARLESS" and then I'd pick it up again.  It was about risk; I went out harder and faster than I normally ever would on the first loop, and I had to be fearless and trust that my body wouldn't cramp on the second lap.  The second time climbing up Chalk Hill at mile 102 was hard, I won't lie.  Everything hurt and it seemed longer and steeper than it did the first time around.  It was silent around me and some people were even walking their bikes up.  One guy shifted down and it didn't sound good.  He shifted again, and his entire chain broke.  His race was over.  My heart went out for him; I knew he had sacrificed so much to be here, and now he couldn't finish.  I just hope he comes back one day and completes it.  We were slogging along, and I said, "C'mon boys, let's make this hill our b*tch!"  (I know, this is more comical coming from a girl).  When I first started riding, this was a line someone told me everytime I saw a hill and would freak out.  Something about that made me want to conquer the hill, like I owned it.  The guys around me  laughed, and we did eventually crest the top of Chalk Hill.  The rest of the miles flew by.  On the course, I had only seen 2 girls in my age group ahead of me, but their pace was blistering and I knew I could only do what I was capable of doing.  I guess there were 2 others who snuck ahead of me (maybe when I stopped to refill nutrition/use the porta-potty at mile 57??).  But at the end of the day, I was pleased with the performance I had put together, knowing that I had finished strong, finished smiling, and finished fearlessly.






Bike nutrition was spot-on and I had no issues:
-1.5 bottles customized Infinit Nutrition mix (450 calories)
-3 Accelerade gels (300 calories)
-1/2 sleeve Clif Shotblocks (100 calories)
-Udi's blueberry muffin (250 calories): This was so good, but so messy to eat while riding aero! I smashed it up as much as possible, but it still crumbled and blew all over the rider behind me.  Sorry!  Better than snot rockets, though, I'd imagine!
-2 mini Clif Bars (200 calories)
Total: 1300 calories






Finishing time: (7:48) 5th place AG
All I could think of when I got off the bike was, "Thank God I don't have to run a marathon after that!!"  I suppose Lake Tahoe IM training/motivation will come in due time.  But for now I was happy to be done, and to have beat my previous time by over an hour.  I guess this proves that we can get faster with age.



Thursday, July 26, 2012

Fearless.

There is comfort in the familiar.  As I was driving and saw signs for "Old Redwood Highway" and later turned into the parking lot of the hotel I've stayed at every single time I've come here for a practice ride and actual Vineman race, I sighed a sigh of relief.  It felt like home.  I've come home.


All checked in and now ironing out my pre-race mental tactics


Today during my last easy 20-minute swim, I reflected on my race plan and my mantras.  You know how Chrissie Wellington writes her mantra on her wristband?  I thought I'd give that a shot this time around. 


Last weekend, I was paralyzed with fear.  Fear of the future, fear of others' opinions, fear of not making a difference in the world, fear of dying alone and not being found for a week... I was fearful that I would crash again on my bike, not be able to fix a mechanical, and that all these hours of preparation and training would be worthless.  I came to my senses finally and realized I could choose fear or I could choose courage.  Because there is only room for one.  Everyone has fears, but we have the choice to confront them and face them head-on.


So I decided I am going to write "FEARLESS" on my wristband.


Today was filled with other pre-race traditions:


Pre-race mani: I thought red was the most "fearless" color.
Plus, it matches my bike and tri kit. Win win!
Stopped at Starbucks on the drive up for a Cool Lime Refresher. I'm clearly addicted.
 I was gonna buy another can to go, but today they were having a special so I got it for FREE!

Whole Foods for dinner.  Again, this is tradition.
 I'd rather eat quinoa and beets for carbs over rice/pasta any day!


I've heard that if you write down your goals, you are more likely to attain them.  So here you have them, folks, my "general" list for blogland:
-Finally meet Roe's friend Dana (she's heard enough about 'my' Dana).
-Find fast feet during the swim start and stay with them as long as I can, even if it means using my "get the heck off of me" wide swim stroke in the beginning waves of chaos.
-Swim the 2nd loop harder than the first. 
-Have my bike set in the easiest gear so I don't eat it while trying to get up that first hill (unfortunately have witnessed far too many people crash coming out of T1 because they couldn't clip in!).
-Thank the volunteers.
-Follow my nutrition plan on the bike.
-Encourage fellow bikers on the course who pass me.
-But chase down the girls who are in my age group.
-Stay in the moment and realize how much of a privilege it is to be able to physically and mentally race.
-To pee, or not to pee, that is the question (only I'll answer that for myself)
-If mechanicals happen, accept them. Deal with them.  Fix them.  Move on. 
-Finish strong.
-Finish smiling.
-Finish fearlessly.


Thank you to those who mentally got me back into the game this week. All the emails, hugs, and pep-talking was perfectly timed.  I've got my mojo back, just in time for Saturday.  I just found out a friend hid a bag of dark chocolate mint M&M in my freezer as a return-from-my-race present.  Seriously?  How did I get so lucky?  We race individually as athletes, but we do not get to the start line alone.  Thank you to Dana, who happily accompanied me for my long training days, to my Intrepid Motion coaches for life (!), and to all my friends who intuitively know me better than I ever thought and knew the perfect words to lift my spirits.  And BBB, if you're reading this, thank you too.  You have been a part of this journey and good memories of you are etched in so many parts of this race course.  I'll never forget you running back to the car to get the camera at my swim start, and then having to run back to the car a second time after I realized I didn't have my goggles!  Thank you for all you contributed to my triathlon journey.


Tomorrow is the pre-race expo and the mandatory meetings.  Tomorrow the sherpas arrive.  Excitement is all around, and I'm finding the perfect balance of calm and adrenalin.  And that, my friends, is one of the best feelings in the world.

Sunday, July 22, 2012

Storytime. Have You Told Yours?

One week until my big "A" race of the year.  This is the time when most prepared athletes consider tapering.  This is when underprepared athletes cram like scared little 10th graders taking the AP History exam.  I've done more crying and yoga this weekend than I did all year.


I'm not too sure where I fall, since my preparation for this was self-coached.  Like a total unplan plan.  Ever since I switched races from the Full Vineman to the Aquabike, all I've wanted to do is run.  Go figure.  I've learned that 10 miles feels normal now.  My mile splits are now consistently 30 seconds faster than they were before. My swim and bike are probably the same, if not slower than before.  Life is funny like that. 


Yesterday was my grandma's memorial service.  My uncle presented a 'brief' personal history of her 105 years; most of it was pieced together through stories and confirmations by the children.  There were 3 marriages and 11 children.  Some of the overlapping dates and gaps in time were a little fuzzy, but who are we to judge? In between those pieces of objective information, I knew there was a much more intricate and deeper layer of love, loss, rebuilding, fear, resilience, betrayal, strength, and overcoming.




It made me think about my own life story; for the random chunks that people know, and for all the fuzzy areas that I leave no one to judge except for myself.  People will always have their own opinions, but at the end of the day, you are the one who understands the intentions and truth.  I remember how someone who knew of the "chunks" had once asked me in the most lovingly way possible, "With everything you went through, were you ever suicidal?"  


I think about how my close friendships have been built upon the sharing of our own life stories, and how strong connections were founded upon vulnerability and transparency.  Yet few have the faith and strength to venture into that realm.  This makes me sad.  If only we could be bold enough to share the "in between" lessons with others, and not just the big pieces- perhaps we could positively influence the outcomes of their own stories...


Speaking of pieces- I'm hoping they all come together on Saturday.  Thank you to everyone who contributed to making this Vineman journey a success so far-  Thank you for understanding how much I love this sport, for those encouraging emails when most weekends were a party for one on the bike and in the pool, for not guilt-tripping me over missed late-night game/movie nights, for not fighting the early wake-up calls to go swimming, and for supporting my experimental pre-race diet plan and eating my sushi rice and letting me eat the fish on top.  Love you all.  May you all know how unique and significant your own life stories are, and how each of you has impacted my own journey that takes place off the bike and out of the pool.  xoxo.













Saturday, July 14, 2012

100 miles.

It's good to have stuff on the training schedule that scares the sh*t out of you.  Like riding 100 solo miles.  Everyone is out of town racing Vineman 70.3 this weekend, and I'm 2 weeks out from my event, so I penciled this one in.  In order to taper, you must peak. 


I knew this would be a mental and physical challenge, but challenges allow me to feel the most alive.  Really, they test my commitment.  Just like you can't be partially pregnant, you can't be partially committed


I chose a hilly route, and looped around part of it twice to mimic having to mentally tackle climbing the same hill twice.  Just like I will have to ride during Vineman.  There's something about that second time that can break you if you don't have your mind in the right place.  Like Charlotte Bronte said, "I feel monotony and death to be almost the same."  I needed to practice my mental tactics, because I know when my mind and motivation goes, everything else follows suite. (So unfortunate, but so true.)
Kinda looks like a dinosaur with a tail, huh?


I also practiced some new fueling strategies, which worked out perfectly.


Udi's gluten-free BB muffins. 2 of these bad boys kept me adequately fueled.


At the beginning of my ride, I passed a family along the side of the road holding baskets and picking fruit.  After looping around Cull Canyon, I came back and saw what treasures they were collecting...


I had to hunt hard to find a tree that they didn't yet 'harvest.'
Yellow plums!!
I rode this entire ride sans heartrate monitor; Caveman style.  Before, I used my heartrate to dictate everything.  Now I'm learning to be more like a body whisperer, tuning in and finding that place where I could ride steady and hard all day long, yet still hovering close enough to that razor-sharp edge where, if crossed, everything could shut down.  Sometimes I feel like the machinery has replaced our own intrinsic understanding of our own bodies.  So I'm trying to go without and look within.  It is simple but not easy.


At mile 75, I stopped at Starbucks for some caffeine.  I'll be honest, I was 0.5 miles away from home and was SO tempted to chalk this one up as a 75'er.  But then it went back to the commitment I had made to myself.  So I kept riding. 


First time drinking these. Hit the spot. And the "green coffee extract," whatever that is,
helped get me through those last 25 miles.
Before today, the most I had ever ridden solo was 70 miles.  Reaching 100 miles solo was another item I could check off my bucket list!  


100.79 miles brought to you by Udi's muffins, NUUN tabs, Accelerade, Starbucks, and
 a wholelotta commitment


Two years ago, I would have never fathomed being able to complete this.  Challenges are life giving, they help us grow and make us braver and better than we think we are.  So whether it's completing your first 5K or running a sub-5:00 mile, keep believing and look within.  Dance upon the edge.  You will be pleasantly surprised.  

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Pumpkin Chia Pudding.

I know what you're thinking.  This recipe is so seasonally inappropriate.  Here we are in the middle of summer, and I'm pulling out pumpkin recipes.  But if Target can get away with bringing out bikinis in early February after the biggest binge season of the year, and start stocking the shelves with back-to-school items during the prime-time of summer (ahem, the end of June), well, I can post pumpkin recipes in July.


And everyone knows that I'm borderline inappropriate most times, so here goes nothing:


My new favorite snack/recovery food.


Pumpkin Chia Pudding
Ingredients:
-1 c. pumpkin puree
-1 c. almond milk
-1 scoop vanilla or unflavored whey protein 
-2 Tbs. chia seeds
-3 small scoops of glutamine powder
-2 tsp of cinnamon, nutmeg, or pumpkin pie spice 
-sweetener of choice: maple syrup, agave, Splenda, sugar, high fructose corn syrup (kidding, just checking to see if you were reading carefully)


Directions: Mix the above ingredients together and let the mixture sit for at least 2 hours in the refrigerator.  This will allow the chia seeds to expand and absorb the liquid, creating a pudding consistency.


I add this to all of my recovery smoothies. It's like Wellbutrin for my muscles. Keeps 'em happy.
I glammed this recipe up and am now using this as a "recovery" pudding- hence the addition of protein powder and glutamine.  I used Bipro protein powder since it was unflavored and dissolved well.  I love how this is brimming with superfoods- 

  • Pumpkin puree: contains high amounts of the antioxidant beta-carotene
  • Chia seeds: contains omega-3 fatty acids, fiber, protein
  • Whey protein powder: has branch chain amino acids to help strengthen, build and repair muscles
  • L-Glutamine: helps support muscle growth and recovery, immune and intestinal health, and preserves muscles after intense training and during times of stress
  • Cinnamon: helps control blood sugar, reduces LDL cholesterol levels, and reduces pain linked to arthritis
It's like the modern-day pumpkin pudding version of the Showtime rotisserie...you set it and forget it.  I mixed all the ingredients together and put it in the fridge.  After doing some weights/core work, and sweating through a Sufferfest trainer video, my pudding was done!  Boom.


*Btw, I used to think Spinervals were the gift from the cycling gods. I used to think Coach Troy Jacobson was the man, and I would secretly try not to hate him from my stationary trainer, as he would hold his timer in his hand and "coach" you.  Then Dana told me about Sufferfest videos, and my life has been forever changed.  Instead of watching other sweaty people as miserable as you are on your trainer, you are instead in a simulated "race."  So much more fun.


From Sufferfest's "Hell Hath No Fury" video...how can you not hammer when you see THAT on the screen?


So go ahead and train hard and celebrate summer.  Go big.  Eat pumpkin chia pudding.  

Saturday, June 30, 2012

Same Route, Different Journey

"No man ever steps in the same river twice, for it's not the same river and he's not the same man."  -Heraclitus

Speaking of rivers, today I issued an eviction notice to the E. Coli residing in the Russian River. They have less than a month to evacuate.  Or it's on.  Like Donkey Kong. (or maybe off, like Vineman is completely called off, we'll see...)

Today was the Vineman recon ride, where we had 85 miles to preview the crappy roads and ride up the infamous Chalk Hill (it's not really all that it's "chalked up" to be, eh guys?).  I have a soft spot in my heart for this course because it helped establish the journey to my first Ironman.  I used the Half Aquabike in 2008 to give me courage to sign up for my first half Ironman in Oceanside (2009), and used the Full Aquabike (2009) to convince myself that I could physically do a full Ironman (2011).  You know, just add a marathon at the end, and we're good!  For me, it's all about setting small goals, achieving them, and setting larger goals and going after those.  Baby steps, people. 

Mike decided he didn't have enough practice last week changing my flats last week, so he helped out another rider this week who flatted near the beginning.  We ended up getting dropped by the main group, but between the 4 of us, we had enough tubes, patch kits, tire levers and nutrition to keep everyone happy.

Reason #433 as to why I'm not the ride leader. I can't even understand my own map
Luckily, we just followed the boys' rears
Guess who is gonna do the Full Aquabike?  Hammerhead on the left.
I'm betting he's gonna win the thing and then register for Ultraman at the rate he's been going.
With the exception of a few additional mechanical hiccups in the ride, it was an incredibly gorgeous route with perfect weather.  Next time we're ditching the bikes and just hitting up the wineries.


Riding this course brought back so many memories.  I remember at first how Chalk Hill was THE HILL at mile 46.  Like you would shiver in your chamois and take 2 gels at mile 40 and pray to the cycling gods that you wouldn't blow up and vomit all over the Team in Training volunteers with their cowbells.  But now, it's just chalk hill (doesn't even deserve caps!).  Nothin' crazy.  It's funny how the route has stayed exactly the same, but each time I've ridden it, I can see how much I've changed.  

The first time racing the Full Aquabike in 2009




A few years ago I rode this route with someone that I thought I'd spend the rest of my life with.   I remember first riding this course on a road bike, and a year later, on a road bike with clip-on aero bars.  And now as I ride it with new friends, a new TT bike, and a new triathlon kit, I am grateful (and relieved in other areas) that things change in life as we grow as athletes and individuals.  It's good to try out new riding routes, but there's something special about coming back to the old ones and seeing how much you've grown since you've last ridden them.

But some things will always stay the same.  I still love riding my bike.


Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Lapped.

"There's always room for improvement.  It's the biggest room in the house."  
-Louise Heath Leber




Tonight at Masters, there was a guy with his own lane and his own 'long course' workout.  Naive and curious, I asked if I could join him, while the rest of the team did shorter sets with more breaks in between.  He welcomed me and was friendly, and then the hell began.  After the 600 yd warm-up (this was an all-out sprint for me, basically to stay close to his feet), I knew why the rest of the team had left this man alone.  He obviously had missed his flight to the Olympic trials and decided he would just stay local and swim Masters instead.


Next, we did 2 x 500s, the 1st was a swim set, and the 2nd was a pull set.  During the pull set, as the distance increased, he gradually kept gaining on me.  I was red-lining the entire time, and eventually the time came when I stopped at the wall to let him go ahead of me.   I had been lapped!  We finished the entire set of 3400 yds in 45 minutes.  I would have vomited on the pool deck, but luckily didn't have anything in my stomach since I came straight from work.


I love this sport because there is always room for improvement.  Our "ultimate potential" as athletes is an elusive target, but in fact, this is a good thing.  In the words of the great Chuckie V, "If we knew we had capped out our potential, we'd be a lot less happy, as there'd be little to strive toward, and little to hope for.  Remember, the journey is the destination."


And perhaps the above demonstrates why we show up to the pool deck, day after day, rain or shine.  By chasing our ultimate potential, we hope that we will end up lapping the uninspired and stagnant version of ourselves with our old dreams and stale goals.

Sunday, June 24, 2012

Flats and Friends.

There's really nothing good about anything flat... being flat-chested, riding a flat bike course (hello, headwind!), having a flat butt, or getting flat tires.  I've been up since 3am, but now the events of the day are finally settling in.  Yesterday I talked to my dad and told him how a lot of people who had signed up for the Silicon Valley Long Course triathlon had dropped out because of the change in swim locations, the early bike drop off, and the logistical challenges.



"So, why are you doing it, then?" he asked kindly.  I was speechless.  The thought of quitting even before the event took place never even occurred to me.  I was reminded of this athlete's point of view.  "When it comes to living, it is better to DNF than DNS."


I came into today with a specific time goal in mind.  Only one other person knew about it; we had done the math on my splits and it seemed achievable....definitely not easy, and definitely cutting it close, but still somewhat within my grasp.  I've never had a time goal in a race, and we were banking on the fact that if I achieved it, I would be joining her on a flight to Oklahoma in September to race. 


I saw Jamii at the swim start.  This girl deserves an entire post dedicated to her and her exponential growth as a triathlete.  Seeing her made me happy; familiar faces at race starts always help to calm the nerves. (btw, today was her birthday, and she welcomed another year of her life with a podium finish.  Not to mention she just started doing triathlon less than a year ago!)


I was happy with my swim and ended up with the fastest time in my age group. (At least one good thing came out of today!) The wave starts were so spread out so far between the men and the women that I ended up swimming the entire swim alone until I caught the slower men from the earlier waves.  I love my new TYR Hurricane wetsuit.  It was our first swim together (so much for 'not trying anything new on race day,' huh?) and so far it's love at first swim.


Check out the tongue action!


I told myself earlier today I was going to RACE my bike.  Not just meander along and use it as a "training ride," but really see what these legs had in them. I kept thinking of this poem:








But I changed the words around and made it, "Swim like your coach is watching, Bike like you've never crashed..." Today was the 3-week mark from my horrible crash, but I biked fearlessly (and safely) today.  When others were spinning, I was laying down the hammer.  I was racing my bike!  Then, the party ended.  Halfway through the bike, I discovered I had a flat tire in my front wheel. It was such a Debbie Downer (wah-wah-wah).


"This is good practice. You know what to do..." I told myself this to stay calm.  I've never flatted in a race.  I was doing fine until I was trying to fit the tire over the new tube.  I flagged down a guy who happened to be the perfect person to "bother."  Turns out he was completely off course from his sprint triathlon bike course and was totally lost and totally nice, so he didn't mind.


To make a long story short, it took 5 different cyclists and various tubes and patch kits to get me up and running again.  During those 45 minutes that we were all on the side of the road, I wanted to quit and just wait for the SAG vehicle.  I really didn't care anymore.  But then it was fixed, so Mike decided to finish up the long course bike route with me.  He was good company, and made the remaining miles go by faster.  My attitude completely changed.  It was more about being thankful for genuinely good people in life and enjoying a beautiful day on my bike with my new friend, rather than a time goal.


We came into T2 and lost each other for a bit.  I ran the first 2 miles alone and hated every step. I thought how much fun I wasn't having, and how I wanted to quit. (How do you even drop out of these races? Should I finish the first 6 mile loop and then turn in my timing chip? But weren't they giving out swim preems for the fastest times? If I dropped out, I wouldn't qualify, right?) These were the delusional thoughts that were going through my head.  Until I saw Mike.  He was like my freakin' angel in a blue jersey.  Apparently, he had run ahead of me and spotted me on the turn-around running to mile 3.  He really was going to run 13.1 miles! This was huge since he's never done more than an Olympic distance triathlon before. It gave me new purpose to finish- to see someone accomplish their own big goal.  


I was tired and couldn't spare any extra oxygen to talk, so I asked him to tell me a story.  He kept me entertained for 11 miles with his stories about his traveling to Bolivia, New Zealand, Ecuador, Peru, Rome and France.  We shared Clif Shotblocks and jokes, and he kept my mind intrigued and made the miles pass so much more quickly.  He ran with me and never made me feel slow.  He called it "steady" and assured me that it was the best way to quadruple an anticipated race distance and best assimilate a "sprinter" into a long-course athlete.  






Today I learned that the company you surround yourself with is a large predictor of your own success and your attitude.  Alone, I wanted to quit. Together with Mike, we both achieved our own version of "success."  Success for me today was merely finishing and not throwing in the towel, and his was defined by reaching a new milestone in triathlon distance.  By stating his goal, it gave me renewed purpose in finishing.  






As we were nearing the finish chute, I asked if we could hold hands as we crossed the finish line.  He agreed.  To me, this symbolized the heart and soul of this sport- overcoming obstacles, persevering, and helping one another achieve something greater than he or she could accomplish alone.  And that, my friends, is so much more important than nailing a personal time goal.






Friends for 38 of the last 70.3 miles, but memories to last for a lifetime

Friday, June 15, 2012

Delicious Ambiguity.

"Life is about not knowing, having to change, taking the moment and making the best of it, without knowing what's going to happen next.  Delicious ambiguity."  -Gilda Radner


I'm back in the saddle.  And it feels oh so good. 


Returned from SB with the fixed-up bike, a new Giro Aeon helmet and TYR Cat 3 Hurricane wetsuit.
And I thought Costco and Target were moneyholes!


After a quick swim sesh with Dana, we both met up with her teammate Kim for an easy, no-hammering 50 miles.  The good thing about riding with others is that they call stuff out on the road- glass, potholes, wood pieces, dead squirrels, $20 bills (I don't call those out, I just reach down and grab 'em).  Some roads that you ride are pretty clean, others you feel like you're riding the Tour de Bris.  I'm now hypersensitive to everything in my path; I'm sure eventually I'll calm down and be able to eat, apply make-up, and talk on the phone all at the same time like before.

Today I was driving and I spotted some glass.  Immediately, I could hear a girl's voice scream, "GLASS!!!!!!" in my head.  And I started to think, "What if life was like riding in a pack of cyclists, where someone would always scream out warnings- LOSER BOYFRIEND!!  SALMONELLA SUSHI!!  DEAD-END JOB!!  CRAZY AND DANGEROUS RESCUE DOG!!" In a way it perhaps would be helpful, but I think it would take the adventure and excitement out of life.  There's something thrilling about discovering what's beyond the next corner, without someone ruining the surprise for you.  Delicious ambiguity.


Who would have thought this amazing woman would finish her life at 105 years, leaving a legacy for future generations and taking a ton of secrets to the grave?


Celebrating her last 105th year on this earth.


Who would have thought that our new rescue dog would maul this innocent girl and also attack my dad after 2 weeks of being calm inside of the house?


Yes. I made her read my autobiography. In my bed.


It has been quite a week.  But I have found that it is more fulfilling to take risks- to ride a bike, to adopt a rescue animal, to open yourself up to love another human being...because without risking and taking a chance, life is empty.


This Monday starting at 12pm, I'm going to take a risk and see if I can be one of the lucky ones to be registered for this inaugural event... 


Ironman Lake Tahoe- Sept 22, 2013


Will I get in? Will I be on the waiting list? Delicious ambiguity.