cindyruns

I did not finish.

This past Sunday was one of the toughest running days ever. I had high expectations for the Newport Liberty Half Marathon. It was my first half marathon last year and since it is a course I know well and so close to home, I chose this race again in hopes of breaking two hours and setting a new personal record.

I’m the nutty one with the visor and sunglasses,
looking happier at mile 3

Last year, I ran a 2:05 on this course and in my most recent half – the NYC Half Marathon in March, I ran a 2:01 with a teammate. We had talked about how we should go for sub-two hours during this marathon training cycle while we are in tip-top shape. He completed his months back and even in high altitudes. Since I knew the Newport Liberty Half Marathon is a good, flat course, I figured it would be a good race to PR in. Unfortunately, it didn’t work out that way for me this weekend. I ended up not finishing the race, not because I was injured, but because I stopped myself from doing so around mile 11. I know I could have finished, PR no, but finish, yes, but it was a conscious decision to stop running. A lot of factors went into why this race did not go well and why I chose to stop running.

By mile 9, I made the decision that I would not continue the race. That was a tough decision because I knew I was physically capable of finishing but I also knew that if I finished, I would beat myself up about the time. It was already bad enough I would beat myself up about the poor showing, I didn’t need to add to it. At mile 9, I called Josh crying on the phone for over three minutes (yes, I was overly dramatic and emotional) and was surprised to actually see that no one on the course (and I wouldn’t expect the runners to, they are running a race, but the police were just feet away from me) stopped to see if I was okay. At that point in the course, there wasn’t an easy to get off of it, so I had to continue the run. I ended up running another two miles to meet up with Josh and head home.

I still question whether or not I made the right decision to not finish, but deep down inside I think it was the best decision given the circumstances. I still don’t know how much of it was my stress and anxiety and how much was dehydration or being sick, I’ll never know. I have a feeling it was a good combination of both and I am trying very hard to hold my head up high and plow through the last five weeks of training.

My family, friends, teammates and coaches have been great supporting me through my craziness this weekend. Today at practice, Coach Brian pulled me aside and gave me a pep talk that had me tearing by the end of the conversation. He reminded me that I had been working for two years for this race (NYC Marathon) and to not let anything screw it up for me. He reminded to have fun and that is exactly it, on Sunday and leading up to Sunday’s race, I forgot to have fun. I run for fun and I run in hopes of helping end Alzheimer’s. I cannot forget that.

While the outcome was not how I would have wanted it, I am glad I received the rude awakening now instead of weeks later. I am glad for the lesson and reminder to have fun.

What do you do to overcome a bad run or race? Any advice is welcome! I need it! 🙂

Exit mobile version