NYC Half Marathon. Andy (front) is having way more fun than I am. Photo: CheerEverywhere |
If it’s been said once, it’s
been said a thousand times: the marathon doesn’t owe you anything. You can put
in countless hours of work over days and weeks and months. You can eat the
right things, do the right exercises, run the right paces, train on the right
terrain, hire the right coach, get the right sleep, buy the right gear, choose
the right course. . . . You still aren’t guaranteed squat. And that’s scary
enough under normal circumstances, but this time, I feel like I’ve invested so
much more. I’ve tried incredibly hard to do All The Right Things. I cut way
down on desserts and alcohol, and I focused on eating nutritious food both
before and after workouts. I prioritized sleep. I passed up very tempting vacations
with very good friends. I vigilantly performed strength sessions twice a week,
committed to “recovery” activities* at least once if not twice a day, kept a
hand-written training journal, and actually stretched. Give yourself
the best shot, I kept telling myself as I shelled out hundreds upon
hundreds of dollars for preventative physical therapy (when my foot started
hurting) and for acupuncture (to manage ongoing lower back issues). Just
get to the starting line.
Now the starting line is almost
here, and I’m scared of the pain that I know is coming. Scared of the Big
Feelings that await me if I fail.
About a year ago, in an episode
of the Ali on
the Run podcast, the host (Ali Feller) talked about being scared to
fail at something she really, really cared about. She was scared because,
according to her, she had never failed at anything she wanted that badly
before. At the time I thought, Huh, I don’t think I’ve ever failed at
anything important to me, either. But the thought nagged at me, until
eventually, I remembered something.
When I was in high school, I
wanted very badly to go to Governor’s School. Governor’s School is a summer
program where the best and brightest students in the state of Pennsylvania go
off to a college campus and study their “specialty field” with other equally
gifted students. A friend of mine (who is now a professional Broadway musician)
had gotten into the Governor’s School for the Arts in music, and when we
visited her that summer, I immediately knew I had to attend. Everyone seemed so
smart, and the campus was so beautiful, and the activities all looked so fun,
and the performances were so amazing. It just seemed like a mecca for
creativity and advancement—a place where the best went to become even better.
And within my high school, I was arguably the best creative writer. At the very
least, I was the most decorated. Plus, I had never failed at anything. I would
apply, and I would get in, and I would have the best summer of my life.
The spring of my sophomore
year, I received my first rejection letter. Just one piece of paper, folded
into crisp thirds inside a standard envelope. It was a form letter. I was lucky
they had even bothered to insert my name. In my junior year, I received a
second, identical letter. Seniors were not allowed to apply.
The reality was crushing. My
writing wasn’t good enough. I wasn’t good enough. And all this time, I had
thought I was great. People had told me I was great, talented, special. But
these canned, impersonal letters showed me that I was living in a very, very
small pond. I couldn't even beat out students in the paltry state of
Pennsylvania. It was devastating.
The only tiny consolation I had
was that no one else knew about my failure. I think I might have told my
parents and maybe my best friend that I had applied to Governor’s School, but I
honestly don’t remember telling them I’d been rejected. I kept those rejection
letters in my top dresser drawer, where no one would ever see them, and
eventually they were smothered in socks and threadbare T-shirts, and I put the
whole thing behind me—so far behind me, that I forgot about the event entirely.
Until now.
Now I’m older and, if not
wiser, certainly more realistic. I don’t have the luxury of assuming I’ll
succeed, because I know better. I know what those Big Feelings are like, and how
heartbreaking it is to come up short.
Yet as I was spending all the
hours doing All The Things, I couldn’t help but imagine the other types of Big
Feelings, too. The kind where if everything clicks, and my legs feel fresh, and
the weather stays cool, and my stomach cooperates, and I have runners I can
hang with, and my brain shuts up, I will get to mile 26.19 and look up at the
clock and . . . cry? Or maybe I will smile. Maybe I’ll give a fist pump, or I
could fall dramatically to the ground. I’m a writer—I’ve come up with a lot of scenarios.
The important thing is that this moment will be one of the very few when I feel
complete, genuine pride.
However, there are no
guarantees; that’s the gamble we take with Big Goals. So in the last few days
before this race, my job is to find pride in what I’ve done to get this far and
to express gratitude for those who have helped me along the way. This time last
year, I was just returning to running after three months off. I am so grateful
to have stayed “in the game” since then, and proud of the patience and persistence
it’s taken to rebuild fitness. I have a ton of people to thank, but the short
list includes my coach J. Lakritz; my PT A. McGinnis; my acupuncturist S. Park;
my “unofficial” teammates (Justin’s Joggers and beyond!); my ever-supportive fiancĂ©;
and the many friends who are always in my corner, no matter if I’m running
fast, slow, or not at all.
Finally, it wouldn’t be a
season recap without some highlights, so here are just a few:
Biggest Change: Joining Distance Project NYC.
Historically, all of my sporting endeavors have been as part of a team, and
there’s a reason for that. I like to contribute to something larger than
myself. I like rooting for others and having them root for me. So by “running
unattached” for the last two years, I’ve missed out on that camaraderie.
However, being teamless also been good for me, because the lack of structure
and built-in running partners has forced me to broaden my running circle . . .
and ultimately led me to help start DPNYC, where I’ve met even more
accomplished, speedy, enthusiastic women.
Toughest Run: Long run,
in Guadeloupe. I had
envisioned running along flat sandy beaches. Instead I wound up on unevenly
paved, extremely narrow residential roads that were literally built into the sides
of cliffs (and not the pretty “ocean view” sides, either). Also it was 80
degrees and humid, and I drank zero water throughout the entire run. (Yes, this
does make me an idiot.) In the last half mile, I proceeded to trip, skin my
knees, and tear my shorts. What’s the French word for “fury”?
Most Helpful Tool: Believe Training
Journal. There
is something about writing by hand that affects me in a way typing never will.
The prompts in this journal and the routine of writing in it helped me to
mentally focus each week-long block of training and (I think!) grow as an
athlete.
Favorite Race: Gridiron 4 miler. I ran
this race early in the season and it went better than expected. I took a risk
by approaching it with a “go out hard and hang on” attitude (not my preferred
racing style!), but I still managed to finish hard and pass other women. Can’t
ask for more than that.
* My recovery activities (and these vary by athlete) include: foam rolling, Hypervolting, and voodoo banding, often interspersed with text messaging, Instagram, Twitter, and Netflix. Still testing whether the media additions confer any advantages; stay tuned.
Good luck Allison!! I loved this blog post! Even if something does go wrong, I think you can be very proud of yourself that you put in so much work to get to this point. And it will still pay off in other ways so it won't be wasted either.
ReplyDelete-- Lauren Q (from writer's group)