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Posts Tagged ‘Ironman’

How I Became A Triathlete

Thursday, July 29th, 2010

This whole blog is about being an average working Joe attempting crazy athletic adventures. A while back I decided that the whole story doesn’t make too much sense without stepping back to figure out how it all started.

Let’s start back in  elementary school real quick to give some perspective.

Just like most kids, my mom tossed me in the local soccer, baseball and basketball leagues. Unfortunately, I was about half the size of all the other kids and SUCKED at soccer, baseball and basketball. The whole hand-ball coordination thing was just not my thing. I stuck with little league for a while because all my friends were on the team, but it was more of a test of my mental endurance than my baseball skills.

I was the tiny kid stuck in right field picking daisies and not even paying attention to the score because I hated being there. The one time I made solid contact with the ball, it was a laser of a line drive. But it went foul. And almost took out my coach standing on the first base line. That was my one “hit.” At the end of the season I won the award for most walks. I was a joke.

Basketball was no better. Having awful hand-eye coordination and always being at least six inches shorter than all your classmates makes it pretty hard to become the next Lebron. I almost scored a basket once. Almost.

The one thing I was good at was running.

Running the mile fitness test in middle school

When I got to high school, my mom refused to let me become one of those kids that came home from school at 3pm and played video games all night. She forced me to pick a sport for every season. She didn’t care what it was, she just wanted me out of the house, being active and making new friends after school.

High School Runner

Freshman year cross country

Since ball sports clearly weren’t my thing and the one thing I really loved about middle school gym was the annual mile run test, I went with Cross Country. I knew a few guys in the team from Boy Scouts and jumped right in. They introduced me to people that would change my whole high school experience and I never turned back. Over the next four years, I  went from the skinny, shy and nerdy kid who could barely run two miles to the guy that was the captain of the winningest (is that a word) athletic team in the school and bringing home bad ass conference championship trophies. Sure, I still was skinny as hell and looked like an albino Ethiopian, but that was fine.

I was running. Running was me. All was right in the world.

two runners

track finishing sprint

Cross country in the fall, indoor track in the winter and outdoor track in the spring.

I went from the quiet awkward kid to the captain of the team. I wasn’t breaking any state records, but the team we built went deeper than any other in our conference and we started to build a little running dynasty at my High School. It was all about being a part of something bigger, and more awesome, than yourself. Our team rocked.



My senior year was a major turning point. I switched from “that tiny quiet kid” to the captain of the team and leading us to another championship. While living four years of pure running was great, I was burnt out. I was a six foot tall, 140 pound stack of ashes. It wasn’t the end of my athletic career, but there was some twinkling of more endurance sports to come. I just needed to get off my feet for a while.

I broke away from my pack of running friends and dove in to the pool, literally. From seeing a flier at the grocery store that I worked at for a local triathlon and watching Kona on TV, I started to think “hmm, maybe I’ll do one of those some day.” To get there, I figured out that I  needed to learn to swim freestyle. Joining the winter swim team quickly became the next step in my athletic career. Plus, it meant hanging out with cute athletic chicks in bathing suits six days a week. In High School, 90% of the decisions I made revolved around girls, so this was a pretty easy call. It was well worth having to rock the speedo.

I swam. It was fun. I almost drown at first, but slowly got faster and faster.

Swimmers

College came, and I was still burnt out on running. I had no desire to pick up my racing flats and go back at it. Instead, I focused on school, pizza and cheap beer. On top of that, I realized that college chicks, unlike High School girls, didn’t like 140 pound toothpicks. I started hitting the weigh room hard. Over the next four years, I ended up gaining more than 50 pounds, losing 100% of my running fitness and picking up myself a pretty cute girlfriend. Things were changing fast, but it was all in the right direction.

Still with that twinkling of triathlon in  my eye, I asked for a road bike for my  21st birthday and I got just a little closer to being a multisport athlete. Cycling kicked my butt at first, but I didn’t give up and took my bike to class whenever I could to get faster and faster.

Once I had my undergrad and grad degrees under my belt, I decided to finally take the step to complete what had become a race six years in the making: my first sprint triathlon.

I floundered my way through the swim only to battle back and forth with a 300 pound, 60-year old man and a 15 year old girl in cheerleader booty shorts on the bike. Humiliating. The run? It was clear that I was nowhere near the hard core single sport athlete that I once was, but I made my way to the finish.

Holding back vomit, I remember Sam meeting me at the finish line and asking “How do you feel?!”

All I remember saying is “SO HARD! Let’s do it again!”

And that is how I became a triathlete.

Tags: , , , , , | Posted in Cycling, Ironman, Life, Running, Swimming, Triathlon | 12 Comments »

Feeling of The Finish Line

Sunday, July 25th, 2010

You know that feeling when you running along and you can hear the buzz of the finish line in the distance? You know that it just out of sight and you can feel the anticipation building in your body.

I imagine that the feeling is a little different for everyone, but for me the pain in my legs goes away, I get a huge smile, a burst of adrenaline and my entire body gets that “pins and needles” tingling. It doesn’t happen at every race, but when it does, I know it has been a great day.

Rev3 Triathlon Tennessee

At Timberman last year, the run course was a two loop out and back. At the half way point as I passed by the buzz of the finishing chute, I started to get “that feeling” and had to mentally calm myself down because I still had 6.6 miles to go and didn’t want to drain my adrenaline reserves with so much left in the race.

Yesterday, I did my longest training run so far for my first Ironman. 19 miles of running with only stops/walk breaks at “aid stations” that I set up to top off my fuel belt water reserves. At about mile 13, I started to get that “finish line feeling.”

It was the realization that all the pieces were coming in to place. My training is going smoothly. I am able to run farther than I ever have before with less effort. It was the ultimate “holy crap, I’m actually doing it! I’m going to be an Ironman!”-type of moment. But then I had to swallow it, calm down and knock out another 6 miles on my feet. There is still plenty of work to do between now and September before I can get that feeling again for real.

I’ve been dreaming of this day for at least 10 years and it is finally becoming reality.

I’ll be living the dream on September 12, 2010. Meet me in Sandusky, Ohio.

Tags: , , , | Posted in Running, Training Log, Triathlon | 1 Comment »

Commitment

Monday, November 30th, 2009

You may have noticed my regularly scheduled blogging has taken a few weeks off, but I felt like blogging about anything else would be just beating around the bush until I eventually answered the question in the last post. After plenty of soul searching, and finally getting approval and promise of support from Sam, I’ve decided to make Rev3 Cedar Point my first full Ironman! After three halfs in the books, I’m finally making the jump.

Rev3 Cedar Point here I come! 140.6 miles of speed, pain and roller coasters!

Since I already had the Half Rev at Quassy locked on my calendar, I’m really temped to make the trip down to Knoxville in May to do the entire series. Wow, the 2010 planning is going full-steam ahead and it isn’t even December!

In other news, I’m slowly getting back to training and I’m sadly realizing how much fitness a person can lose in 6 weeks of being completely sedentary. I’m taking a tip from fellow Trakkers teammate, Elaine, and focusing on consistency, especially with running. The goal for the next few weeks is to run 6 days a week, even if it is just for two or three miles to slowly trick my legs into being athletic again.

If any of you kids are planning to join me next year at any of the Rev3 races, hold up until next week. I’ll be getting a discount code for you to use to save some extra scratch on registration.

Tags: , , | Posted in Ironman, Running, Triathlon | 5 Comments »

Ironman Dreaming

Wednesday, November 4th, 2009

It has only been 2.5 weeks since my last race and my race mojo tank is already filling up!

I’ve been giving my body plenty of TLC in the form of good food, yoga, stretching and self massage. I knew for sure that my training mojo was coming back when I had a dream/nightmare about racing a tri with some of my blogger buddies, got my bike stolen and frantically ran around my home town in Connecticut trying to find it. I think my legs miss my bike and are trying to convince me to hop back on.

I’m still sticking with my “purposeful nothingness” training plan for another week or two, but I’m starting to get psyched for next year.

The biggest thing on the plan: IRONMAN!

Or should I say “Ironman??”

Finishline

As Sam can attest, I’m very slow and deliberate about making any decision. The thing is that once I do, I’m dead set on meeting my goal. Racing an Ironman has always been a part of the long term plan, but I’ve never really known when. I’ve come to accept that I will never have as money or free time as I want, and my job will always be more demanding and and stressful than I wish.

While on a run a few weeks ago, I saw a car with a bumper sticker that said “Don’t Postpone Joy.” Bumper stickers usually say some pretty lame and fleeting stuff, but this one really stuck with me. When you boil it down, it is really the reason why I race in the first place. Training, competing and crossing that finish line, so I do it. No questions asked.

There will always be another excuse to put off finally making that commitment to signing up for an ironman, but do I have it in me to try and pull it off in 2010? The half ironman distance used to be pretty scary to me, but now I have a really good understanding of the kind of training needed to pull off a half, and don’t have any worries about being able to get myself to the finish line. Now that I’ve gotten convident with the 70.3 distance (and only slightly faster) is it time to step it up?

As always, tough questions are always best answered by people smarter than myself. I asked some of my twitter followers. Here are the responses I got.

Question: Hey Ironmen. How did you know you were ready to take on the full 140.6?

  • PatWheeler don’t let people fool it’s so mentally hard because phyiscally your wrecked and your willing the legs to turn over. Sign up!!
  • bradbirkel easiest way to get over the mental hump is to close your eyes and jump… quickly.
  • cyktrussell Thought the first step was to pick out a tatoo?
  • DavyRockett I didn’t really feel ready. I just did it.
  • tahughes I didn’t know if I was ready, but I was inspired to take the plunge by a friend who signed up before me.
  • j_hirsch when your ready to commit to the training. Its mental, not phyiscal. Oh and be injury free if possible.If you want it,its yours
  • HardyBreed when you get tires of seeing those 140.6 stickers on the soccer moms minivan.
  • goSonja when just thinking about it made me giddy excited, and when I knew I was motivated enough that I could train alone for it.
  • bquigley you’re never “ready”… Just committed.
  • megankillian i did IM without doing any triathlon beforehand. i guess i just knew i’d like it. it was more of a “why not” than a “why”
  • IronmanBobby never did. Even after I did it I wasent sure :)

One thing is clear from my conversation with the masses. Mental commitment is more important than mental preparation.

I definitely have the desire to get there. I get rushes of adrenaline watching Ironman Hawaii on TV every year (but strangely fall asleep while watching the New York marathon…). I have the commitment to add it to my training pland and build up a solid base, but my main concern is keeping that up when the training gets tough in June and July. That is what I need to be sure of before drawing a line in the sand…

So tri peeps, what do you think?


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Tags: , , , | Posted in Ironman, Life, Running, Training Log, Triathlon | 11 Comments »