10.23.2011

Hershey Half

Marcia, Tara, and Kathy


On Sunday, October 16th, Marcia, Kathy and myself ran the Hershey Half Marathon. What an experience! It was a gorgeous fall day, perfect for running. My high school cross-country coach was working the water stop at mile 5, and i got to give him a big hug. Jenny Jones, my very oldest and one of my dearest friends, drove down from Connecticut to watch the race and was out on her mom's lawn with her girls cheering us on, and my dad was at mile 9, right in front of the old junior high track that i used to compete on. I had an awesome race and enjoyed all 12 weeks of my training. At mile 11, i decided to go for it and at about mile 12.5 my left arch completely freaked out on me, and i started limping. But, I was determined to finish strong, because i felt strong. It was crazy awesome, tearing around the corner into the Hershey stadium, the crowd cheering, people yelling out my name, and the music pumping. Just for a moment, i was 15 again (cleverly disguised in a 40 year old body) when I ran like my life depended on it for no other reason than it was in my blood. I ran the race in 2:03:21 and placed 1588 out of 5000 runners. Not bad for a first time. i was actually thrilled because my goal was 2:10:00, but if my arch hadn't lost it, i think i could have come in under 2 hours.

I flew home alone to do this, after deciding that i needed something big to christen my 40th year of life. Originally, i had said no to the idea, but found inspiration in my daughter, who adores running at the age of 2, and from a book called Born to Run by Christopher McDougall. Both reminded me why i loved to run, why i ever ran, and why i wanted to do it again; watching Una running with her hands up in the air and laughing out of pure joy and me running after her thinking, “That’s how I used to feel.” In the book, it talked about what makes a good runner a great runner, and one of the reasons is simply because that person LOVES to run. They don’t do it to win awards or to fit into size 4 jeans; it’s not a chore or something they have to do. They run because they actually enjoy it, and because it’s in our genes. “If you don't think you were born to run you're not only denying history. You're denying who you are.”

However, I think what made the biggest impression on me was the idea that there is a connection between the capacity to love running and the capacity to love. “We wouldn't be alive without love, we wouldn't have survived without running. Maybe we shouldn't be surprised that getting better at one could make you better at the other.” That struck a chord with me because I know it’s true for myself. I am way more excited about life and my fellow man when I am running on a regular basis. In addition, some of my strongest friendships are with people with whom I ran. It seems like the act of running together somehow forms bonds between people that are unbreakable, no matter what the distance and time that comes between you. Somehow, you become family in a really weird and unlikely way, but it’s there nonetheless. “The reason we race isn't so much to beat each other,... but to be with each other.” And, while I don’t think that this book is the end all be all, I really gleaned a lot of useful stuff from it, for myself, and I really appreciate how it put me back in touch with something so basic and primal, something that makes me feel free and full and able to love and appreciate the world around me, while at the same time giving me the capacity to believe in myself, that I am capable…of many, many things. “We've got a motto here-you're tougher than you think you are, and you can do more than you think you can.”

~ the above quotes are from Born to Run, by Christopher McDougall

Here is a link to photos from the event (the photos are way too expensive to buy). My bib number is 3276.







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