It’s All About the Race

Pre-race photo with another Houston Blogger, April. 

I’ve been seriously slacking in the running department. Well, really, the fitness in general department. Since the end of February I would say I have averaged a run once every ten days. It’s not so good.

Couple that with my husband’s amazing homebrewing and my jeans are a little tighter than they should be. I had been avoiding the scale but I hopped on last week and didn’t like what I read. No surprise.

It seems that I really really need a hard and fast goal to keep on the path to fitness. My schedule isn’t THAT different lately, but I haven’t prioritized the running like I used to. I used to run first thing in the morning after dropping my kids at school. I admit that getting bit by that dog has deterred me from running that time of day…but I should just go a different direction.

Work has been busy. My grandparents have taken up a lot more of my time lately too. I have also been spending a little more time with my adoption community via social media lately. The main thing I haven’t been doing is running. Certainly not going to the gym or yoga class either. I haven’t done that since I went from working three days a week to five. I knew I would be making that sacrifice but the extra income is really important when paying for a crazy expensive adoption. Worth it, too.

This past Saturday the weather was perfect and my morning was wide open so I dragged myself out of bed at 5:30 am and met a handful of folks from my running club to get some miles in. It was tough but exhilarating. I loved every minute and only wished I had kept it up so that I would be faster and stronger by now.

Fast forward to Sunday night when my friend, Jennifer Patrick, asked if I wanted to run the Green 6.2 race with her in two weeks. Jen only recently started running herself and she has busted through all kinds of personal limits recently. She is fierce and determined and I love it.

I thought about running this race both last year and this year. I forgot when it was until she threw down the challenge. It’s very close by, very flat, and has the cool premise of being very eco-friendly. The environmentalist in me loves that.

The more I thought about signing up for the race the more excited I got. There’s a neat finisher’s medal! It would be only my second piece of running bling. I think two weeks is enough time for me to get ready to run 6.2 miles…not fast but I’m sure I wouldn’t die. Ha!

I’m sure I can get some of my other friends to do this race with us too. Running in community is awesome.

Run 4 The Children Recap

Run4theChildren13-109A runner’s high is more than just a momentary flood of endorphins during a run that make you feel good. It can be an overall sense of increased energy and elevated mood that last a whole day. Especially when you achieve a new goal or break through a new barrier.
That’s pretty much how I felt all day Saturday following Run 4 the Children.

Run 4 the Children is the four mile race my adoption group holds each year to raise money. The money goes towards families who want to adopt but need financial help as well as to sponsor a bunch of orphan children in Zimbabwe. This weekend was our third year to host this event and it really is a big celebration of adoption. The race combines lots of things I love: adoption, my church, families and running.

Things flowed very smoothly from packet pickup to sponsor booths to registrations and volunteers. Minimal bumps meant less rushing around and much more enjoyment than in previous years. Also this year my whole family planned to run the race, with Mike and the boys doing the official two mile short-cut. I practiced running intervals with my five and eight year olds a few times last week to make sure they could do it, and that only made them more excited about it.

Run4theChildren13-8Over the past few weeks I waffled over whether I would run the full race for an official time or just run with my family. Last year I hit a PR (personal record) of a hair under 48 minutes, or 12 minutes per mile. Since I trained for the half marathon I’ve been running much slower than that, only hitting about 12:15 on my best shorter runs. So I had it in my head that there was no way I’d do as well as last year.

My awesome husband challenged me on my negative self-talk. He encouraged me to just run my own race and not worry about the time so much. He promised me he’d handle running with the boys.

So I did plan to run the full race, but my mind stayed on everything else. I focused on helping out where needed, which included working the registration table the morning of the race. I even registered Roger (The Rocket) Clemens! That was an odd experience. I focused on the social aspect of the day, excited to see SO many people I know from my running group and my church. Even my friend April from my Houston Bloggers networking group came all the way from Kingwood to run! I was so grateful for such a show of support for our cause.

So I ran. I wasn’t sure at what point I would start walking but I knew based on last year that I could start out fast and it would help make up for some walking towards the end. I set my Runkeeper app to target a 12 minute per mile pace, even though I didn’t think I’d be able to consistently stay above that based on my recent runs.

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I didn’t quite as fast as last year, but after five minutes my pace was in the low 11’s so I was happy with that. It wasn’t long before a million people passed me and a lot of folks turned off for the two mile short cut and I was running alone. I hate that part, but I determined to run my own race and not worry about anyone else.

So I ran and ran and ran some more without feeling the need to walk. It really surprised me. My pacefinder kept telling me I was way ahead of my pace, so I knew I had some room if I bonked near the end. I began to believe I really could break last year’s time.

So I kept shuffling my feet and trying to keep my body up tall. The breeze and cool air REALLY helped me. I knew the last leg of the race down Peek Rd was deceptive and agonizingly long. I figured at that point, even if I slowed to running a 13 minute pace I’d PR, as long as I didn’t walk. But my legs got comfortable and felt pretty strong. Once in awhile I’d start to feel slightly winded and I’d see that I was running in the low tens or even high nines, so I’d back off and be fine again.

Seeing that clock at 47 something when I crossed the finish line was so exciting. My chip time ended up being 46:35, which means I was about a minute and a half faster than last year. My average pace was about 11:39 min/mile…definitely a new record for me. Shocked and thrilled, I walked around the rest of the day on a cloud. I wasn’t even sore…I hadn’t even left everything on the race course, which tells me I have faster races in my future.

It was the first time I’d ever run four miles continuously, with no walk breaks except to grab water.

I also beat Roger Clemens.

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My family didn’t fare as well as I did. They started the race near the back of the pack but only got about 200 yards before Nathan tripped and fell face first on the pavement. He had a huge goose egg on his forehead when I got back, and apparently Alex cried even harder at not being able to finish the race. Poor guys. They decided to fake crossing the finish line anyway 🙂

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I promised the boys we would keep training and enter them in other races in the future. Meanwhile they enjoyed the post-race party with pizza, froyo, water ice, Muscle milk and moonbounces.

I don’t have the final dollar amount raised, but the race was a huge success. A slideshow of lots more photos can be found here. Thanks to everyone who came out or sponsored or supported us! See you next spring.