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Hindsight is 20/20, Fella
Yes, yes, but it's invaluable when assessing a race. First off, I'm jazzed to have:
A. Finished.
B. Finished ahead of my goal time. (5:30 or five hours and thirty minutes.)
C. Finished eight minutes ahead of my goal time. (5:22:49)
A set time helped me focus and not just in training. Without one I'd have settled for "just finish the wretched thing." (In the later miles, that temptation paced in the back of my mind, then settled in by the fire for miles 21 to 24.) Or else the more diabolically commercial "just finish the wretched thing and write a little book."
Loop Courses Have Issues
Which is saying I have issues with loop courses. I didn't before. But then I'd never run one for a marathon. Every pleasing downhill grade must be run uphill twice. In the case of Surfers Point, the longest uphill grades were on the return trip. It was psychological. I kept thinking, 'I've got to do this again."
For slower runners such as myself, everyone passes you more than once. With multiple races and a wave start, runners from the half-marathon zipped by. Fast 10kers showed me their heels. Fortunately, zero 5kers left me in the dust. This constant passing triggers a hurry-up gene often experienced while driving. You must concentrate to suppress it and remain on pace.
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On the Subject of Pace
Training Woes
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2 comments:
To err is human. To admit it, ....maybe not DIVINE but much needed humility. Congrats on the finish and knowing what might be improved upon for another marathon, when and if. Jot it down under "LESSONS TO BE LEARNED" . When all is said and done, you got 'er done. 👍🏃
Yes, finally.
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