Sunday was
the day for my high-water distance 21 mile NYC Marathon prep training run. I always try to do three runs in the twenty
mile range before a marathon. Usually
something like 20 miles, 21, then 20. Sometimes
I do three, sometimes I do two but three is always the plan to begin with, at
least.
After my
first 20 miler two weeks ago and the leg destroying 15.5 trail running last
weekend, I was as curious as all of you about how this would turn out. My right shin was still a bit tender from the
trails at DwD last weekend and both quads had been complaining like sweatshop
workers from this week’s track work. And
like a good sweatshop supervisor, I ignored them and told them to work harder
anyway or get turned out on the street.
Once you've built up your stamina and overall conditioning for regular 17-18 mile runs, you
know that the first 15 miles of a long run are no sweat. Well, not no sweat literally but
figuratively. I’m a sweater by
nature. I sweat a ton. Sometimes I have to change my shirt after
going #2 in a poorly ventilated restroom.
Three miles in to any distance, I look as if I've been dipped in magic
waters.
But the hard
part comes in those last 5 miles.
Everything else is just biding time until you get to about mile 15-16
and then the legs want to start chiming in with their opinion about this whole twenty
mile run business. Funny thing is…it is
never the cardio that gets me. My
breathing is nice ‘n easy; my hair, moist but impeccably well-coiffed; pecs,
buoyant and inviting. Legs? That’s where the trouble starts. The one constant through all the years –
somewhere around mile 17 – has been the soreness in the legs. Marathons have rolled by like an army of
steamrollers. They’ve been erased like a
blackboard, retrained, and erased again.
But leg pain has marked the time.
The entire preceding paragraph is all my invention by the way.
Twenty miles is the distance that exposes your
body’s weak spots. For most of you, that
probably means your jaw or looks or sense of humor hurts. For me, that right shin and left hip and
quads were aching. When you enter the
twenty mile zone, it’s payback time for any pre-existing weakness you were able
to cover up on shorter distances.
As I limped
into the house and barely managed to stop myself from curling up on the floor
and sucking my thumb for an hour, I poured a nice tall glass of chocolate milk.
There is nothing better tasting after a
long run than chocolate milk. It’s like
having Blatz beer injected directly into your veins.* Try it and see. As I gulped it down, I noticed my daughter
peering at me strangely, as if I was James Earl Jones that just wandered into
the house. I was seated at the table
rocking back and forth and stamping my feet.
Oh, the right shin wanted to cramp out and I was battling by the second
to keep it stretched and loose. I've had
a shin cramp one other time – during the marathon leg of the Goofy Challenge –
and it took out the calves and feet with it as my entire lower leg turned into
a pretzel. I smiled meekly and croaked
“I’m fine” in between convulsing and stamping feet. I must have looked like a Crystal Blatz addict.
But the 21
miles were accomplished. After a half
hour of torturous leg pain, my body gave in and me and my stupid marathon plans
won again. In two weeks time, as I set
out for my last 20 miler, I’m sure I’ll have completely forgotten about this
run. So load up the canon and fire off
the 21 Run Salute! Stand on an aircraft
carrier 8 years prematurely and declare Mission Accomplished! Crush a case of Milwaukee’s finest! Whatever your preferred form of
celebration.**
But the celebration
shall be short-lived. The marathon waits
for no one. It does not care about your
tough training runs or leg pain. It
cares only about the distance and the people who dare to run it. It reminds us of all that was once good, and
that could be again. And people will
come, reader, people will most definitely come.
I came up
with the preceding paragraph entirely on my own.
/jamesearljonesvoice
Happy
trails.
* "Crystal
Blatz"
** For me, it
was actually standing around a soccer pitch and watching the filly knock in 4
goals (and hit two other crossbars, arrrgghhh) in a 5-1 victory over one of the
better club teams in southeast Michigan.
Like how I added a soccer update in there?! Buried it right down here in the asterisks so
you’d have to work to get it this time.
Clever, no? Don’t worry, soccer
season ends in less than three weeks.
_________________________________
Ian introduces himself at Bottle Fed Parents today. You might remember him as the guy who used to call himself Vanilla and leave snarky comments here before I chased him out of run blogging. Go there and give him a gentle pat on the back and a "Nice job Buddy!" like people do to the slow kid. Go ahead and pop over for a visit to the BFP.
2 comments:
I'm still a running blogger, just not as frequently as I used to be. Just enough to still get free shoes occasionally.
When I was training for my one and only marathon I'd spend the rest of the day (and part of the next week) telling people just how far I'd run. It was like a verbal 21 run salute to myself. Bragging about how you came to hurt so much somehow takes away some of the pain.
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