Showing posts with label triathlon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label triathlon. Show all posts

Monday, June 18, 2012

6 Days...

Note: I wrote a post about tapering that I really liked and then accidentally deleted it, here it is as close as I can remember it.  After deleting it I simultaneously wanted to punch something and cry.  This combination of emotions isn't that weird for me, but seriously, that violent of a response to something so minor?  Pretty much sums up my emotions during tapering.

So tapering...  Less working out plus more time to sleep equals more energy, right?  Hardly, I feel tired and sluggish, and my calves feel swollen, like they're too big for my skin (I think that's more from our 90+ degree weather than tapering though).  All I want to do is eat and sleep; I spend my evenings watching How I Met Your Mother, which is a great distraction, but then I go through withdrawal during the day when I can't watch it.  I feel grumpy and anti-social.  Even though I can't think of anything except Ironman, its the last thing I want to talk about with anyone because its impossible to put into words how I actually feel.  Yes, I'm nervous, yes, I'm excited, sure, I feel ready (the most usual questions).  I'm also dreading it arriving, dreading it being over, worried about getting injured or sick, worried about it being too hot, too cold, too windy, too rainy or some combination of those that makes the race directors cut the race short like they did with the Boise 70.3 last weekend  I'm excited to have my life back but worried what it will be like when the thing that's been consuming it for the last 11 months is over.  Since I started grad school my identity has been built around doing an Ironman and I'm not sure who I'll be when its over.

All those things aside, I am feeling pretty prepared.  I did another century ride a few weeks ago and it went much better than the first.  I started feeling grumpy towards the end again but this time there were mini-candy bars at the 70- and 90-mile rest stops.  A few chocolate bars did wonders for my mood; I think I'm going to put a few in my bike special needs bag (you put whatever random things you think you might want in it and can pick it up after 56 miles) for the race.  I ran for one hour right after the century ride (which took me 5:50) and for three hours the day after and neither was as hard as I was expecting, so that was good.  Yesterday Sarah and I went out to East Canyon reservoir (~55 degrees, the coldest body of water I could find here) and I swam for just over an hour (~1.5 miles according to Google maps) while she kayaked next to me and yelled at the jet skiers who came too close.  Between all the boats and a little wind the water was decently rough; nothing like IM SG but probably close to what a good day in CdA will be like.  I was fighting panic for the first ten minutes or so, the waves were pushing me around and making me dizzy and disoriented.  After that I found a good rhythm and started to enjoy the waves for breaking up the monotony: would the next breath bring a mouthful of water? Just a light splash in the face? Oh the little things that training makes you appreciate...  I'm feeling less nervous about the swim now, although having over 2700 people around me will obviously be a little different.  I'm planning on starting off at the back to avoid as much craziness as I can, probably on the left though, which will be more crowded than the right (the loop goes counterclockwise and I veer to the right when I swim so I don't want to end up even more off-course).  My plan is to just focus on making it to the next buoy.  That's pretty much my plan for the whole race: focus on making it to the next aid station or other marker, and only think about one loop at a time.

So yeah, that's where I'm at.  I'll drive up to Spokane/Coeur d'Alene on Wednesday; I'm excited to be surrounded by all things Ironman, it'll be nice not to have to pretend to care about anything else (not that I'm doing a very good job of that at the moment, clearly, since I'm in lab right now...).  I'll probably do another pre-race post, but in case I don't get around to it, my race number is 136.  You can look me up by that or my last name on the Ironman website to see how I'm progressing.  I'll ask my sister to post updates on my Facebook as well. 

Welp, see ya later!

Thursday, May 17, 2012

Training update! Weeks 22-24


Alright, I am finally sitting down and forcing myself to write a training update so I can continue with all crazy peak week training that will be coming up.  So, as briefly as possible, here’s what I’ve been doing the last few weeks. 

Week 22: 4/23-4/29 (the week right after RAGE):
 I really didn’t do any training this week, I fit in a 20 minute swim Wednesday morning, but I was so stressed about school that I wasn’t getting anything out of the workout and headed home.  There, I proceeded to have a mini-breakdown before finally asking for help with my grant proposal (I have a hard time asking for help with pretty much anything…).  I was up all Friday night finishing the proposal, so I only ran 3 miles on Saturday (on my way to a BBQ), biked for 1.5 hours on Sunday (I intended to do more but my tire ripped as I was getting back to my car at the end of my first loop) and ran for 45 minutes. 
After eating way too many cookies and gummy bears this week I decided to really focus on a healthy diet until Ironman; without the stress of school this should be a lot easier.  Quick note for those of you not in Salt Lake and therefore aren't all too familiar with my dietary changes: I essentially became vegan January first. I prefer to say “whole-foods, plant based” diet, because “vegan” makes me sound like an animal activist (I’m not – I work in a mouse lab).  There’s a good article on what that entails here.  Even though I cut out meat, dairy and eggs, I’d been allowing myself non-vegan cookies and cakes to make the transition easier (no cheesecake or ice cream though, my rule was: if I can't see it, it doesn’t count). However, now, no more cookie exception!  I’m going to make healthy bars and cookies at home and bring them to lab meetings or other times when I know there will be tempting, non-vegan, not-healthy desserts.

Week 23: 4/30-5/6 (slowly reintroducing myself – 9 hours total)
- Monday: normally a rest day, but since I got plenty of that last week I did a ten mile trail run (1.5 hrs). I also got an iPhone over the weekend, so now I can take sweet pictures during my workouts to post on my blog!
Pipeline Trail in Millcreek Canyon

At the end of the trail, the other direction overlooks the city, but this was way prettier.
- Tuesday: Swam for just over an hour, no weight lifting this week.
- Wednesday: Met Holly in Draper for a 6 mile run (50 minutes), which was a lot of fun.  I’d been in a bad mood all day and probably wouldn’t have had the motivation to get out for a run on my own, so I’m really glad we had planned that.  As usual, I felt much better at the end.
- Thursday: 1 hr bike on trainer
- Friday: 1:20 run in morning
- Saturday: Volunteering for IM St George! (more on that later) I went for a 2 hour run around Sand Hollow Reservoir in between shifts.  It was so windy; my legs were getting sandblasted and there were drifts of red sand up to a foot deep on the road in some places.
- Sunday: I was too emotionally and physically exhausted to do much (also more on that later); I managed a 1.5 hr bike ride before I got too cold and sad.  I went home and watched The Help with Sarah (great movie, I highly recommend it) and worked on post-Ironman tattoo ideas.    

Week 24: 5/7-5/13 (only 7 weeks til the race! 17 hours total)
- Monday: rest (didn’t feel like I deserved it, but figured I’d need it for the week ahead)
- Tuesday:1:15 swim and weight lifting/core in morning and 1 hour run in evening, I did some intervals in a cemetery, which was kind of fun and made me appreciate the burning in my legs and lungs. 
- Wednesday: 45 bike on trainer to 30 run
- Thursday: 1:05 swim and weight lifting/core in morning and 1:30 bike up Emigration Canyon in evening (10 miles/1 hour up then 30 minutes descending)
- Friday: 40 min swim (cut short because of Saturday) in morning and 1 hr run in afternoon with Chase (made me run fast!).
- Saturday:
I got up at 5:30 to start my long run and met up with the lab at the Susan G. Komen Race for the Cure after 1:30, did another 22 minutes of running during the race, ran home (10 minutes), took off my shirt (yay!) and did another 17 minutes (yes, those 17 minutes were important).  I met up with lab for breakfast, bought new bike tire finally (it had been patched, but not very well for the previous outdoor rides) and headed to do an open water swim with some women from work. We did a few laps across a nice calm bay (probably around 1.5 miles).  One of the women had done St. George the week before, and even though she finished the swim and has completed lots of Ironmen, she had a hard time getting back in the water.  By the end she was fine but seeing this  made me a little apprehensive; CdA could be as windy as St. George was, I need to swim in something a little rougher than a pool before then.
- Sunday:
I drove over Big Mountain to East Canyon reservoir, rode to Henefer and back, put on sunscreen, then to Morgan and back for 5 hours total. I sunscreened up and ran for an hour, which was really challenging; my legs didn’t have much left by then.  It was the hardest and longest workout I’ve done so far; there was lots of chafing, more hills than I really expected, and despite all the sunscreen my back still got burnt.  My shoulders and neck were really tight by the end; I could barely shoulder-check getting on the freeway to come home.  I had been planning on including Big Mountain in the ride but talked myself out of it after driving up it.  I’m sure it’s doable, but I might wait until after the race when my legs aren’t perpetually sore. 

Not a bad way to spend the afternoon...