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May 15, 2024

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Location:

Cottonwood Heights,UT,USA

Member Since:

May 18, 2011

Gender:

Female

Goal Type:

Local Elite

Running Accomplishments:

Personal Records

Aided

5k-17:01 (Halloween Half 2011)

10K-36:06 (Halloween Half 2011)

Half- 1:22 (Halloween Half/Des News/HC 2011/2013)

30k- 2:06:49 (SGM 2013)

Marathon- 3:07:18 (TOU 2011)

Unaided and (some) outdated!

400M- 1:03 (HS 2000)

800M-2:23 (HS 2000)

1500M- 4:45 (USU 2001)

3000M- 10:33 (USU 2001)

3200M- 11:24 (HS 2000)

5k- 18:10 (USU 2001)

10k-39:36 (Classic 2013)

30k- 2:09:16 (WRC 2012)

50 miler- 9:46:43 (TNF 2015)

 

Short-Term Running Goals:

2019 Tenitive Race Schedule

4/15 Boston Marathon

7/24 Deseret News 10k

 

 

Long-Term Running Goals:

I love training with others both on road and trail. I also find benefits of running solo when I need to focus and regroup.

Fun fact: Although I prefer to run outside, I don't mind the treadmill for pace accountability and for the blind assumption that I can run really fast. I have a lot of secret treadmill PR's at 0% incline:) 

Personal:

 

 

Headsweats 25% off code: Summers_running

 

 

 

I am a Mormon

 

I am married to a supportive and driven husband. Together we enjoy geocaching, hiking, camping, reading and playing games with our three rambunctious children.

Aside from running, I am a homemaker and a Mental Health Therapist. Running has given me the ability to better concert my energies between my family, faith and friends. 

Favorite Blogs:

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I wanted to document some of my after thoughts from yesterday's race, for future reference.  

Someone commented to me that If I had known about the conditions and outcome, that I might not have ran the race after all. It made me think, because if I knew the weather was going to be like that and I wasn't going to be close to a PR, I think the only thing I would have changed would be my race plan and perspective. I would have taken it easier and enjoyed the route with more stops and had a good "long run." However, I am so glad I raced it! Kam fist convinced me to run the race in the first place so I could gain more experience in this distance, and then to apply to SGM.

Lessons learned from Ogden Marathon

1. Wetness does not equal blisters. Wetness with heat produces blisters! Not a single blister on my toe. That is extremely rare for me but now I know why, there was no heat:)

2. Unless it’s a hot race, I don't need to hydrate at each stop. Every 6 miles works for me. 

3. GU's with the consistency of frosting are just stupid, especially when they are near frozen. Gels are so much easier to take! Also, frozen hands will not open them or let you turn on your player, have it all planned out and ready. Also, for me, Gu's without caffeine are fine, but Gu's with Caffeine are great... always, even at the start;) 

4. No trainers, only Kinvara's/racing shoes next time. It really felt quite a bit more taxing over the distance with heavier shoes. 

5. Just tell my family to see me in the last couple miles or at the finish line. What a headache to spectate most canyon marathons for most. It's fun to see friendly faces in the first half, but so not necessary compared to those last daunting miles when you really need the support the most.

6. Muscles can warm up in cold weather to a certain degree, but not if rain is in the equation. I totally discredited the rain and the cold factor yesterday. I was certain I would warm-up quickly. That was totally wrong and quite the opposite. There was no way to do it with constant rain, wetness, cooler temps and wind.  Muscles just won't work under those conditions. I learned this wearing the thinnest top I could find with shorts. I should have been wearing a long sleeve shirt or arm warmers, gloves, and tights. That would have at least given me the option down the road to shed clothes. That was the most important lesson I learned yesterday. Also, keep my shoes dry with bags tied around them at the start. A poncho would have been brilliant! I was severely unprepared and ignorant.

7. I needed to be more aggressive at the start and go with the ladies that I knew were not going to blow up at the end.  As smart as it is for others, I just don't race well when I hold back and try to negative split. It sabotages me mentally and makes me stale when the time comes to push. I would rather go out with the other ladies and either die together or succeed together. In the back I am always alone and not always successful in my plan. I really should have gone out faster than I did.

8. I do better with splits to follow rather than going by feel. I did horrible at that yesterday and my mind wandered often rather than staying on task every mile. However, I do admit that not following the mile splits really did make the miles go by faster, even though I suffering.

9. Give back and keep pacing others. Until it's given back to you, you never understand the how helpful it is in those final miles. A pacer in the last miles makes an amazing difference.

10. I was more prepared for hills than I thought. I was less prepared with tempos in my training. I also need to weight lift more. My arms are among the sorest on my body. I'm not sure if it's because I was frozen and tense or if they need to be conditioned more. That is something I defiantly did not consider as an important part of training this training cycle. Maybe it's an anomaly.

11. I tapered and rested too much leading up to Saturday. I was sick so I didn't have much control, but in the future if I am healthy, I do best with less taper and downtime. No doubt a balance is needed here.

12. Always take the following Monday off of work. Done.

13. Everyone has a bad race. Waaah, then get over it. My experience is not worse than anyone else’s, just my perspective and maybe that's what needs improvement. Learn and move on to make room for great things in the future. For the record, I have not cried.

 Also, I have learned different ways to get down the stairs, post marathon. 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AowAqHO3GhQ

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-mIOGryLgks

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LNQxjO4Njaw

http://www.youtube.com/user/acornstairlifts?v=leTEArgHd7Y

I'd really like those last two installed in my house! 

 

Comments
From Bonnie on Mon, May 20, 2013 at 08:21:08 from 64.119.33.134

I think a zip line or hand /feet cups (so you could crawl down the wall) would be fun. :-)

From Summertime on Mon, May 20, 2013 at 16:46:05 from 174.126.50.21

Nice idea to document the race. I've learned something new from every marathon I have run. Little tricks that help to either shave off a little time or make the experience better.Give your body some rest days you earned it; and get back into training.

From allie on Mon, May 20, 2013 at 20:19:19 from 97.126.223.200

that's a great list of "lessons learned" -- definitely a good post to revisit.

i like all the clips -- especially that awesome baby. this is me using the stairs after a marathon: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ASoCJTYgYB0

From cborenrun on Mon, May 20, 2013 at 23:02:01 from 74.211.1.106

holy cow that race was crazy huh?

so I learned from this cool girl on the bus about a fast running blog :)

I too was scantily clad for this race and froze to the point I thought I might die... I stayed with the 3:25 pacers until my IT band took me out at mile 20 then I proceeded to walk and hobble six miles to the finish...talk about a cool down!! wow, I may or may not have cried because of how cold I was. The run was the easy part, injury and all...im buying a rain jacket asap!!!!

From Mikal Epperson on Wed, May 22, 2013 at 22:36:45 from 67.172.247.190

I'm impressed with your performance at Ogden, especially considering all the adversity there was to hurdle through! It looks like you have a very comprehensive laundry list of things to consider when venturing into the marathon beast again! Great work!

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