The Stats:
Miles: Running 2317.86 (45.57 miles/week; 6.35 miles/day), Bike
533, Swim 1.
Races (24): (9) 10Ks (6 trail), (1) 10 miler, (3) half
marathons, (1) 20 miler, (4) marathons, (3) 50Ks, (1) 40 miler (100K dnf), (1)
100K, (1) 75 miler (100 miler dnf).
Lowlight: Canyons
100K.
Highlight: Boston
Marathon, running for my Dad. (With CIM being a close second, feeling home.)
Hardest racing
moment: Dropping from Tahoe Rim Trail 100 miler (sitting on a rock at mile
70, knowing my asthma had the better of me that day).
Proudest racing
moment: Cuyamaca 100K, having a solid race despite the heat and getting
that 5th Western States qualifier after a tough year on the ultra front.
Best salvage: Finishing
CIM decently despite my first road race fall in 28 marathons and 10 years of
racing.
Best racing while
sick: Way Too Cool 50K (5 days after a pneumonia diagnosis).
Best racing decision:
drinking that beer while going up Heartbreak Hill on a warm day in Boston.
Best trip for racing:
D.C. (Marine Corps).
2017
might have just been about survival on my racing front. I couldn’t have
fathomed having a rougher racing year than 2016. 2016 was about overscheduling,
blowing up, and overheating. I pulled back on the racing front for 2017 (yeah,
I know, it’s hard to tell), ditching the return to triathlon plans to try to
manage some running success. But, alas, my body had other ideas. I started the
year with bronchitis in January, then continued with fulminant outbreaks of poison
oak from February through May, pneumonia in February, a clogged ear with
hearing challenges (allergy related) from April through June, intermittent exacerbations
of asthma, on and off hemorrhaging , and bouts of leg numbness and cramping. I worked
hard to try to keep my running heart in the right place, but all of the
physical ailments tested me, especially as I wasn’t “injured” in any
traditional sense. Ultimately, that required a lot of shift in expectations and
an acceptance of my limitations.
The finish line at Redding Marathon. |
I
kicked off the year with the Redding Marathon- a beautiful but tough course,
somehow eeking out an AG win and my only BQ of the year (and a squeaker at that). I then stumbled
through my poison oak and asthma/pneumonia days. I walked in to Way Too Cool
50K prepped to take a DNF if my lungs could not manage the course. Instead, I
walked away minutes off my goal and with my soul fed from a fun and fast race.
I would do what I could over the following six weeks to prep for Boston, with
fits and starts, struggling to breathe some days, while sailing along others.
Pneumonia filled happiness at Way Too Cool. |
When Boston
2017 dished out another heat race, I shifted to enjoying the experience. This
one was for my Dad, as I was only able to return in 2017 (after qualifying and
missing the cut off) via a charity bib, raising money for Project Purple in the
fight against pancreatic cancer. Running for charity might have been the
greatest single running gift 2017 provided me. It allowed me to run for something
beyond myself and allowed connections in the process I could not have
envisioned. I remain grateful for that opportunity and for the people that came
in to my life as a result, as well as those I came to know better in the process.
I celebrated Boston as only Boston can be celebrated!
Cheers to you Heartbreak and Boston! |
Following
Boston was a quick transition back to trail and ultra racing. This provided my
lowest race point of the year at Canyons 100K. I was sick before I started and
the canyons wrecked nothing but pain on my ears, leading to an eventual drop 40
miles in. But I worried as I felt I lost my drive for ultra racing, unsure
whether the Western States quest remained a goal I still should strive for. In
the meantime, I was enjoying a 10K trail race series in Folsom and managed to
regroup to train for Tahoe Rim Trail 100 miler.
Mile 6 of Canyons with my dear friend Lorena. |
Tahoe
Rim Trail 100 miler in July would prove to be the prettiest course (road or
trail) I have ever run. It is also amazingly tough. I survived the heat of the
day, but my lungs and the altitude left me breathless. I would pull the plug on
the race after 75 miles. I’ve never been as sad about racing as I was following
Tahoe. The frustration I felt for so much of the year culminated with a blue
abyss of emotions at Tahoe. My body had and was failing me, again and again. Was
is my age? Too many years of racing? Crap luck?
Mile 31 of TRT part-way up Diamond Peak, before the lungs gave out. |
My original
plans for the back half of 2017 were to try once more for a marathon PR. But
the DNF at Tahoe and a need for one last chance at my 5th year of Western
States qualifiers would force an altering of my schedule. I found myself
training for Marine Corps and CIM with my core Boston training group with Charlie,
while being back on the trails as I trained for Cuyamaca 100K. A blazing hot
race on Mt Diablo in August gave me this concept I once knew as confidence
back. It parlayed into a patient and comfortable Cuyamaca 100K on another overly
warm day outside of San Diego. I exercised every bit of patience I could muster
during that race and found my heart filled again with the gratitude and nourishing
emotions that bring me to the trails. Not from a time standpoint, but rather
from a heart standpoint, it is the best ultra I have had since my first 100
miler in 2014.