Sunday, October 30, 2011

My first 70.3...Samadhi!

There is a word we reflect on in yoga called "Samadhi" meaning a "state of joy and peace".


My choice earlier in the year to focus on triathlons and take a break from doing solely marathons twice per year has led to this. This choice has brought a lot of happiness into my life, allowed me to branch out into two other sports I've grown to love, and I've met some new amazing friends. The pool has become therapeutic - trust me the early alarm at 5am makes me want to yell out loud, but once I get myself to the pool nothing beats the feeling of a good swim workout where the inner fish is released. I also can't say enough about the athlete community we have here in Seattle. I haven't experienced this type of community anywhere else and that alone keeps me here in Seattle. If it weren't for my friends/training partners I might be considering warmer locations where strapping on fenders to a bike in the winter isn't required. To my stellar friends...thank you all for being reliable training partners this entire season and for all of the encouragement.


I also set a goal earlier in the year of doing a 1/2 ironman/70.3 distance, and with the urge from my friend Cara I signed up for my the Soma 70.3 in Phoenix. Cara gets credit for introducing me to triathlons and I can only aspire to be the talented triathlete she is someday. This past weekend I completed my first 70.3 distance, and definitely was one of the hardest events I've competed in. Props to all my friends who do full ironmans since the one thing that crossed my mind when I crossed that finish line was that I'm really at peace with sticking to this distance for awhile!


This all leads me to a quote I have posted around in a few places from K. Pattabhi Jois which is "Practice and all is coming!" Pretty simple concept meaning you typically get out what you put in for practice and another way of looking at it is consistency is proportionate to growth experienced. I know there is a lot of people that probably roll their eyes at why I put myself through all the training and races when I could be spending that time elsewhere. I realize I'm not an Olympian bound athlete, but I value good health, goal setting, and positive environments. My choice gives me all of this so with those sports I've chosen t do I want to put in a solid effort so I can see what I'm capable of. Simply just that.


So now onto my experience with the 70.3 race...The week leading up to the race was eventful and our triathlon community was shaken up with the loss of our friend Lee. I was getting emails, phone calls of encouragement before I left for my race and Weds after work my friend David called me with the news about Lee. There were a few of us closer to what was going on with him, and the emotions that followed that call were shock, anger, sadness, and then now peace. I won't write entirely about this, but I have found peace with knowing that I was a there for him as a friend and did what I could do to help. I saw his friends David and Porter amongst others pull together and be there for a friend in need. It's apparent how much the guy was loved when you see all the comments on his FB wall and look at all the people who made it out for his memorial ride today. The passing of Lee carried heavy into several of our race weekends, and I did miss having my friend post or text me "BOOM in your face" to get ready for the 70.3 distance he was eager to see how I'd do at. If you knew Lee he was a super computer when it came to people's race times. He always knew everyone's PR's, race stats, and could typically project where he'd thought you'd turn out. I found this out when he asked me to be on his Lake Steven's relay this summer after he recapped my race results he found on athlinks before I even knew him that well - funny guy but I did take what he did offer with me and know he's up there looking down on all of us now.


I arrived Phoenix and was greeted by a heat wave and hug from Cara at the airport who helped kick off the spirit of the weekend by greeting me with a welcome to AZ race bag of goodies. Kicked Fri night off with some sushi in the evening and on Sat. morning we went to ASU for a shakeout swim in the outdoor pool. Swimming under the sun is something I could get used to. Definitely looking forward to spending some more time there since AZ is the ultimate training playground.


Expo and bike check-in was on Sat. so I spent the morning after our swim building up my bike. Big thank you to Sean Harwin for spending several hours with me teaching me how to properly take my bike down, pack, and build back up. Huge help! Once we arrived the expo the AZ temps started making me nervous. I could barely take standing out there for a few minutes since the temps were about 90. My friend Bobby reminded me that it was a good thing I was nervous about that since that means I'm aware so I followed that awareness for the rest of the day and drank plenty of water including salt tablets in my water to store up for race day.


Race Morning
I woke up at 4am and started up the coffee and oatmeal followed by banana, gatorade, and water. Calorie consumption!
On the way to the race I became so nervous that I felt like I was going to throw up. Cara was dealing with her race nerves by focusing on some pre-race pump up songs but that didn't even seem to help me. I felt nauseous and questioned whether I could handle this race. Put in my headphones and let the music settle me down. Once we got to the bike transition the body marking and setup began and from there I was shifted into auto mode going through the checklist I rehearsed a dozen times. During the bike setup there was a girl next to me that started asking me questions. She said "You look like you know what you're doing, can I ask you a few questions?" I thought to myself that confidence you're sensing is not real lady - fear is behind this pose. But I realized after chatting with her that I wasn't the only one out here racing this for my first time and I've done everything I could to prepare for the race. It was now time to go out there and go through the motions I've prepared for.


Swim - 1.2 miles (40:29.1)

Temps for race day started at 71 degrees so the lake plunge was pleasant! The swim started in waves where all the Pro's and men went off in the earlier waves followed by the 1-34 age group wave for women. I started towards the far right nestled up behind the first row of women. Cara and I exchanged some thumbs up to each other before the wave was sent off. The starting position worked out well since I didn't get trampled as much as I have in some other races and the body dodging for the first few minutes wasn't too bad. When we started catching the masters men's group that is where the body dodging began. I managed to keep a consistent pace without any major interruptions by looking for the open pockets to swim into. Only thing that was hard was when the sun started coming up since that blinded my sighting until we moved away from the angle of glare. I worked around this by following the swimmers on my left side until the bouies came within sight. Exited the swim smoothly (they have to help lift you out onto stairs which can be tricky) and kept moving forward towards the bike.


Bike - 56 Miles (3:01:09.7)

Bike course was 3 legs, mostly flat terrain, and a technical course (A LOT of turns!). Got onto the bike and plan was to spend the first part of the ride hydrating from the swim and not focusing on eating too much right away. I didn't get off to such a smooth start since after the first few turns I missed one and kept riding straight until I reached a volunteer who yelled that was going the wrong way. Seriously such a bummer to do that. It felt like I rode ~3 min out of my way, and all I could think is that I was going to get disqualified for doing that even though I didn't cut the course short. That is when I reflected on what my friend David Cook sent me before the race which was to "keep a clear head and a full heart". That stuck with me the entire bike and run leg David so thank you for always have the right words to offer!


My watch was going off as a reminder to hydrate/intake calories so I let the plan kick in and followed that closely. I was nervous that if I didn't fuel properly I would bonk on the run so I drank and eat like it was my job. Took down my 2 bottles with salt and ironman formula, 2 Honey Stinger waffles, pack of shot blocks, and salt, salt, salt! I had recently picked up the salt stick tab for my bike after Nik over and over reminded me of the importance of that and staying on his wheel ;) There were 2 aide stations on each bike loop and the volunteers were fantastic. I had not practiced grabbing the water bottles so I was really nervous about this, but they put the aide stations right after 2 of the slower turns which allowed you to ease into grabbing the bottles. I took water at every aide station and kept replacing current bottle; taking a bottle of power aide at the last one to take in some sodium for the run. My feet went numb towards the end of the ride and was hoping I'd feel my feet when I got off for the run. Once I pulled into transition and got my bike split I felt pumped! I landed a time far above what I predicted I would do and I think that is due to letting all the hectiness of the nutrition plan distract me.


Run 13.1 miles (1:35:55.5)
1st in age group, 3rd female overall

Started the run in 96 degrees and I knew hydration was the only thing that was going to get me through this last section. Once I got out of transition the run stride kicked in and I was off to a smooth start. Practicing running off the bike throughout the summer helped a lot since the start of the run felt easier to where I only feel awkward for the first 400-800 meters of the run. There was an aide station every 2 miles on the 2 loop course, but some of the stations could have been staffed a little better. I managed to grab 2-3 cups of water at every station but there were some where the cup offered a few sips of water and ice cubes. Who wants to drink ice cubes!?! I took one gel packet per lap and on hot days taking those down a dehydrated mouth can be challenging. I knew I'd pay for it later if I didn't so I would choke a packet down right before a station and take in 2 cups of water to wash them down. That seemed to do the trick since I held together pretty nicely on the run compared to everyone else I was going by. This is the leg where I have to work since it usually comes down to this if I want to place decent. Time to pass all the bikers that whooped me on the roads ;) I predicted I would be much slower on the run so when I ended with a time somewhat close to my open road race times I was stoked especially since I managed to pull that off in those hot temps. Paying attention to hydration and fueling properly I feel are the key things that helped make this all come together nicely.


Results - 5:20:53.55
21st Overall Female (244 women competed)
9th in Age Division (30-34)


To give you an idea of how much the run counts for me...I was in 78th place coming off the bike, after leaving transition 2 (racking bike) I gained 8 spots, and then ran myself up to 21st place overall. Everything in these races count. Few minutes off in the swim, speedier transitions, and some improvement on the bike will serve me well next year. I'm excited to keep working at it!! I've already started by joining the bikesales team to where I get to look forward to riding outdoors this fall and spring racing, and anxious to get back in the pool to put in the laps!!

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Learning to respect the process of improvement...

I competed in the Black Diamond Olympic Triathlon this past Sunday and continuing to be humbled and reminded of the required patience the sport of triathlon requires. Black Diamond is the 5th triathlon I've competed in. 1 Sprint and 4 Olympics sum of my triathlon race experience so far. A little different when compared to my experience in the sport of running which I've been competing in since I was in 7th grade up through the collegiate level. After college I discovered marathoning which carried me all the way into my discovery of triathlons. I'm learning quickly that swimming and biking don't come as naturally to me, but I am starting to respect the process of improvement. I work hard at improving and appreciate every little inch of progress I get from the effort.
I was urged by a colleague to update my blog so with that little nudge thought I'd shared some summer race updates since the ChelanMan Olympic triathlon that kicked off my tri season. Since ChelanMan I've competed at Portland Olympic, and Black Diamond Olympic. I have one race left this season which is my first LongCourse (1/2 ironman) triathlon Oct 23rd in Arizona. Scared and excited at the same time when typing that! ChelanMan started the season really well, and Portland humbled me. The Portland bike course broke me in two on the continuous hills presented, but I did get a PR in the swim and had a solid effort on the run. So walked away from Portland continuing to be reminded that biking improvement will come with time. My summer triathlon race results summary:

ChelanMan Olympic - 2:34:48 (July)
11th Overall, 5th Age group
  • Swim - 30:45 (11th)
  • T1 - 2:04 (8th)
  • Bike - 1:17:14, 19.3 mph avg (8th)
  • T2- 1:53 (21st)
  • Run - 42:50 (1st)
Portland Olympic - 2:45:02 (August)
8th overall, 4th Age Group
**Received a 2 min penalty for drafting on the bike :(
  • Swim - 28:37 (18th)
  • T1: 2:06 (4th)
  • Bike - 1:30:34, 16.6 mph avg (19th)
  • T2: 1:32 (15th)
  • Run - 42:11 (2nd)

Islander Aquathon (Swim-Run) August
2nd Overall Female
  • 1000M Swim - 16:18
  • 10K Run - 41:24 (Pretty happy given I just got back from running Hood2Coast the weekend prior!)




Black Diamond Olympic - 2:38:29
10th overall, 3rd in Age Group
  • Swim - 29:22 (31st)
  • T1 - 2:26
  • Bike - 1:23:53, 17.78 mph avg (32nd)
  • T2 - 1:32
  • Run - 41:15 (1st)

Triathlon race season is nearing wrap up for me. One last race to prepare for, but by far will be the most difficult one of the season. The long course will double the biking distance which is going to challenge my legs. I've found that throughout this summer's racing that running off the bike has gotten much easier so hoping the additional time on the wheels doesn't completely crush me for the run. I'm looking forward to Soma 1/2 since I get to race with my friend Cara who was the first person to ever introduce me to triathlons. After Soma the fall is going to be spent on gaining some bike fitness and preparing for January kickoff where I will begin to start getting coached by Kainoa. I'm looking forward to working with her and getting tougher while I focus on the 70.3 distance next year.

Final update to leave you with is that I have a sexy new set of wheels. Officially unveiling the name of my new toy....drum roll please! Meet my P2 "Paciencia" meaning patience in Spanish. Hoping with consistency and "paciencia" good things will come :)

Sunday, July 24, 2011

ChelanMan Olympic Tri - Have fun and Compete!

If you've followed by earlier blogs last year was my year of being a "run-aholic" and earlier this year prior to the Boston marathon I felt burned out. I was having a hard time motivating myself to keep training as hard as I did in the prior year. I was questioning giving myself a break from it all and once again left for South America alone to find balance for a few weeks. Not sure why exactly but South America is starting to become my new OM...I usually return feeling recharged both physically and mentally. After returning in June from the trip I felt ready to get back to training and missed the structure. I decided to spend this summer focusing on triathlons only, and not sign up for any fall marathon. Instead I've setup a race calendar for one triathlon per month ending in October with a 1/2 iron (Soma, Arizona) - thank you Cara Payne for + influencing me to sign up for my first 1/2 :)

"Have fun and compete" was my mantra heading into ChelanMan Olympic triathlon this year. My sis and friends are often reminding me to have fun since that is usually my breaking point - if I'm not having fun it's obvious and my training suffers. Pre-race encouragement from my sis, Jane, and Tesia were the things that stuck with me throughout the race - Angel (have fun!), Jane (have fun and compete!), and Tesia (kill it on the bike b/c you'll be fine on the run).

Pre-Race Day/Evening
Blaine and I arrived Chelan on Friday afternoon and un-winded from the road trip by getting in a tune up swim in the lake and shake out on the bike. The swim felt great. Chelan is one of my ultimate fave lakes to swim in. The waters are crystal blue when the sun is shining down on the lake and usually pretty warm in comparison to the surrounding Seattle lakes. After the bike spin and gears/tires in check I went and setup Blazing Daisy on the rack. She looked ready for tomorrow.


This year we stayed at the Bauer's cabin - big thank you to Joe Bauer for being an amazing host! Post the race meeting we all headed back to the cabin to whip up dinner and get everything setup for race morning. Triathlon race prep compared to marathon race prep is on a whole different level. Checklists are involved due to the insane amount of things you need to remember! This year I made sure to use one since I didn't have my iron Tesh to ride back to our condo 10 minutes before the race to grab my goggles. Definitely didn't want to have a redo of that freak out scene again…

After dinner wrapped up I snuggled up in my sleeping bag and listened to some pump up tunes with Jay's headphones that are about the size of my head (I looked like Warren looking for his baseball…)and got myself to sleep at a decent time.

Race Day!
Alarm clock went off at 4:30am and Jay and I were instantly up and brewing coffee and getting breakfast together. The others got up shortly after and we put in the Chelan mix to get things started :) Thank you Mikey for the Repatriated song on the mix since that was voted the race theme song of the weekend…

Took down my routine breakfast - coffee, oatmeal, banana, lots of water/Gatorade. Car was packed and heading to the start line at 5:15am. Arrived to the race with plenty of time to grab a stellar parking spot near the start and beat all the crowds to get marked up for the race.

The transition grounds were soaked on the side where my bike was racked making setup a little challenging. I couldn't lay down the towel and put my things on top since it would be a complete mess when I finally needed everything so I just went without. Setup all the tips/tricks I've learned along the way and practiced running to the rack from the swim area a few times to lock the bike location in my memory. Last year I was running in circles around the transition area from not doing this beforehand.

Sydney and I went for a warm-up run to calm the nerves which ended up helping a lot - definitely a new pre-race tradition. After the jog we watched our friends start the 1/2 iron swim and quickly got back to our transition to get suited up and ready for our start. Got in the water 5 minutes prior to our swim and acclimated to the lake temps and environment. My nerves started kicking in at that point and I was really unsure of where to start with the swim. I knew I was a stronger swimmer than last year, but you can never tell where other swimmer's abilities are when you're standing there at the start and you have to make the decision to plow or get plowed. I made the decision to not go in the very front but went for a direct shot in the second row to the first buoy. I knew this was somewhat risky since if I didn't swim out hard enough I could get plowed since everyone is going for the most direct path.

Swim 1500 Meters (30:45)
The direct path to the first buoy worked out and I didn't find myself getting plowed too much but definitely found myself having to look for open spots between bodies to swim into to get past swimmers. Had some moments of feeling claustrophobic and each time I looked up to spot and could see bodies in front and on both sides made me feel a little more panicked. I tried to think about something logical and focused on breath to keep myself out of the emotional side of my brain. Popped up once when a large mammal tried to overtake me aggressively and ended up grabbing his arm pretty hard since he needed to back off. Outside that I would say the panic/large mammal attack only lasted for 3-4 minutes top and then I felt myself get into a groove.

I felt so much more comfortable out in the water this year. The only thing I find myself struggling with at times is I tend to get cozy and somewhat forget I'm suppose to be competing at race pace. When I find myself doing that I quickly snap out and apply what my friend Lilia suggested awhile back - imagine you're doing a hard track workout and keep pushing yourself the entire time. With swimming this involves ensuring I'm both kicking powerfully, striding out long, and pulling back with my arms correctly. It's hard for me to get all three in place at times since when you're in race mode you usually resort to sloppy form your body feels comfortable in.

Overall, finished the swim feeling good and took off 1:09 from my swim time last year. Ranked 8th in my age group coming out of the water.

T1 Transition - 2:04
Took off 37 seconds from last year's transition time. This is an area I need to further improve since I wasted some seconds on doing silly things such as bike gloves (who needs these for a short ride!?!) and having things better positioned.

Bike 24.8 Miles (1:17:14 - 19.3 mph avg)
The bike leg is my weakest link, but improved my bike time 5 minutes over the prior year which was a huge thing for me. I'm an inexperienced cyclist and this gave me confidence that with time I can keep getting stronger and more knowledgeable which will help lower that even further.

I kept what Tesia said in mind "kill it on the bike" and tried to make sure I was pushing myself as hard as I could on the uphills and maintaining a solid rhythm on the flat sections. My quads tired at times but as I took in nutrition on the bike (Powerbar drink/shot blocks) that seemed to give me the energy to pick it back up. It was so encouraging to see all my Pauole teammates out there and felt the Pauole love from them and others (people seem to dig our team so thank you to all you strangers who said go "Pauole").

Towards the end of the ride a girl in my age group came up which helped me rally until the end. We ended up playing yo-yo the last 5 miles of the race - constantly moving back and forth with passing. It helped a ton to have her there and I actually enjoyed it :) I was secretly thinking to myself you won't last on the run - boom in your face. Ended up ranking 21st in my age group for the ride so this is an area I need to keep improving.

T2 Transition - 1:53
Got off the bike and legs didn't feel as bad as I had imagined they would but my feet felt numb. I sat down to put on my shoes with socks! Last year when I wore yank laces without socks it ended up being the worse idea since it resulted in bad blisters!

Run 10K (42:50)
I laced up my fave Nike flats which always put me in race mode and felt confident moving onto my asset leg - running!! Started off with the slight jello leg feeling but got off to an easier pace to get through mile 1 and then found myself maintaining a faster pace than most of the athletes in front of me after my legs adjusted. One by one I kept counting the age group females I was passing which kept pushing me to keep it up. My run time was slower than last year which was a little disappointing but I did enjoy hearing all the kudos along the way from Pauole friends and other tri babes/guy friends I've met through training. My friend Darin put some pep in my step at the mid-way point when he told me "to get at it King" and from then on I was putting all I could into those last 2+ miles left. Ended up taking first in my age group for the run leg so just need to keep tuned up with track workouts and this should continue to serve me well.

Overall, I'm really pleased with how the race turned out. I went into this with no expectations since it's the first race of my summer season on limited training. Joining Pauole Sports tri team has helped tremendously - the team is fantastic and solid group to roll with.
I've changed my master's swim group to All Star with Kainoa which has been fantastic so far and putting more time in on the bike. I'm excited to see what further focused training in the pool and on the bike does for me this summer. My mood check is also really good. I'm happy and look forward to all of the training. There aren't many days where I find myself kicking to have to do a workout, but instead up and chipper, ready for the workout. Weird...maybe this triathlon bug has bit me :)

Race Results - Overall Time 2:34:48
Overall Female - 12th place
Age group - 5th place
6 minute PR over last year - woot!!

Next up Portland Olympic!

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Boston Marathon April, 2011

Oh Boston, the course that can go really well or leave you a little heartbroken. Well I finally had my year of where training had to shift in priority this season and as a result I knew going into the race I wasn't about to set any new PRs. I got myself to the start line, gave it my best, and finished which to me in the end says a lot more about my character than giving up or only allowing myself to run when I know I'll PR. Trust me it was a tough thing to do!

This past December I recorded my fastest marathon time in Sacramento at the CIM marathon (3:04)and after the marathon I felt burned out with running. This is primarily due to training for two marathons per year for the last 5 years consecutively. On top of that trend this past year was one of changes and to disconnect from everything I booked a trip to South America for the winter holiday. Vacation was exactly what I needed and I got back in early January to start the new year off fresh. I returned relaxed but not in the mindset for starting up training for Boston. I come back to my running crew who was running strong from continued training since December and here I felt like mush and lost all fitness I had from December. I contemplated for several months not running Boston and forfeiting my entry this year. But as most people know about me I value being loyal with my word. Several of my friends feared continuing with the training cycle would cause me to get even more burned out since I wouldn't enjoy the training or run a PR in the spring. Ultimately I decided to continue with training knowing I would just get in what I could to be prepared for 26.2 at Boston this year.

I ran 20 miles less per week on average than I normally do when I'm putting in a quality effort with training and I did not do any cross-training with weights which was part of my routine previously. There just wasn't enough time in my schedule to fit in the normal routine which was a little disappointing but I learned to accept it. I focused on logging the long runs I needed to get a comfortable endurance base and ran the typical Boston tune up races - Ft. Steilacom 15 Miler and Mercer Island 1/2 Marathon. Both races I ran approximately 2 minutes slower than I ran the prior year giving me early indications that I wasn't where I was previously even with the endurance base established. All of this led to the starting line at Boston...

Boston Marathon
I showed up to Boston without a race strategy or plan for time. It felt like it was my first marathon all over again - completely unprepared. The day before the race I was walking by Nike Town and noticed they were doing the pace bracelets which when the thought of selecting a projected time crossed my mind. I knew where I sat with projected marathon times based on the tune up races I ran and that landed around the 3:10 goal time so I went with that pace. I remember going back to my room that evening and chatting with my friends Katie and Larry about that pace should be okay since it's at least running 15-20 seconds slower than we normally run when in shape. Katie reminded me that it was still going to be tough and at that time I didn't think it would be that tough of a effort but I was quickly reminded of how hard of a effort 3:10 pace is!

Larry and I train together in Seattle and since our qualifying times were the same we were seeded in the same starting coral. Larry similar to me had training take a backseat for this year's Boston and we both showed up to Boston with the goal of finishing. Weather started slightly chilly with a tailwind present. After a few miles in the sun kicked in and it turned out to be the perfect running weather - a little too warm for arm warmers! I kept Larry in site as we clipped off the miles through the first 10K establishing a steady pace in target with the pace bracelet goal of 3:10. Larry was running a little ahead of me and I fell off a pace slightly at the start since I had a nagging foot pain that I wasn't sure would go away. I kept reflecting on one of Tom's tips "pain and energy levels wane in and out". It took through the 10K for the foot pain to either go away or I stopped thinking about it completely. I saw my friends Cathleen & Paige come by and both looked really strong as they passed by.

Through the 1/2 Marathon mark the pace seemed steady and legs felt okay although my mental focus was in and out a lot as I kept reflecting on my training preparation in my head which was not sending a positive energy flow through my body. As I started letting this thinking in my pace seemed to drain alongside - amazing how powerful the mind can be in one direction or the other. I passed through the 1/2 way mark and kept things together as I ran towards the hills that I'd be climbing from mile 16 through 21. The start of the climb up the hills was tough and I knew my friend Katie would be waiting for me at Mile 20 which was helping keep me focused. I felt bad for Katie knowing she was going to jump in with me at Mile 20 and I was going to be running off pace and a little out of it from the exerted effort this race was requiring. Katie jumped in at mile 20 which helped quickly snap me out of the slump, but everything in my body at that point was hurting. Mile by mile I kept debating the thought of stopping but then internally fought myself on that each time thinking "No, you're not a quitter!". That's right I'm not so I kept going knowing that at this point finishing was most important to me. I knew there would be friends tracking me online wondering what was going on with my time and friends that knew exactly what was going on with my time. I had to just put all of that aside and just do what I wanted at that point which was to stay with Katie and get to that finish line. Every step the last 4 miles was so painful, quads felt so tight and knotted up. We finally got the Citgo sign which indicated 1 mile to go and I started breaking it down in minutes. 8 minutes, 5 minutes, etc… You can do anything for 5 minutes. Finally reached the homestretch on Boylston and the crowds were crazy. I let the energy from the crowds carry me to the finish line.

This year's race wasn't my greatest, but I'm proud that I finished and gave a good effort!

Nutrition
· Pre-Race Routine
○ Wake up call: 5:50 AM for breakfast
○ Nutrition: Oatmeal, honey, almonds. Banana. Coffee.
○ Charter bus picked us up at the hotel @ 7:15am
○ Continued drinking water liberally until an hour before the race.

· Race Nutrition
○ Chocolate Excel Gel at miles 5, 10, 15, 20

The Stats
For reflection I included my 5K splits from last year's (2010) Boston Marathon where I had a PR and ran really well. Interesting when I break it down by the 5K splits and see that right out of the gate it wasn't going to be the same race… Nice thing is that Boston is there every year and when I want give it my best again I can.

Overall Place 4167 o 23879
Female Place 427 of 10073 (Top 7%)
Age Group Place 348 of 5202


Race Splits

2011 Boston Net
5K 0:22:11
10K 0:44:23
15K 1:06:28
20K 1:29:00
1/2 Marathon 1:33:51
25K 1:51:44
30K 2:15:38
35K 2:40:22
40K 3:05:03
Finish 3:16:11

2010 Boston Net
2010 Boston Net
5K 21:35
10K 43:39
15K 1:05:47
20K 1:27:59
1/2 Marathon 1:32:47
25K 1:50:18
30K 2:13:14
35K 2:36:18
40K 2:58:18
Finish Time 3:07:34



Next up - Berlin Marathon 2012!! :)