Tuesday, June 18, 2013
June 18: Eating Like a Lumberjack
I have serious concerns about my ability to carb up for this tri event. I'm really trying to eat like a lumberjack for a few days and so far today I've gotten down a veggie burger, a few Doritos, and a lemon scone. And I'm stuffed. Like I won't wanna eat the rest of the day. When I was a young woman I was a professional at pigging out (much to my chagrin at the time). What happened?
June 17: Longest Bike Ride Ever
Today I rode from Vienna out to Ashburn on the W&OD
trail. Things to remember before
undertaking a trip like that on a sunny hot day: sunscreen.
And sports goo. Oh, and it helps
to have eaten a decent meal sometime beforehand. A cup of yogurt doesn’t give you much to go
on. So I was kinda riding on empty but
thankful for my natural nervous energy, which I can channel into physical energy,
it turns out. I finished in time to change
my clothes in the parking lot and head to wonderful Dr. Krakos, the
chiropractor who tuned me up to be in perfect alignment (or as close to that as
possible for me).
What I learned from this bike ride: I have no desire to ride much further than I
went today. Two-plus hours on a bike
just seems like ENOUGH. While riding I
thought about the distance I was covering and how people used to get around on
horses to cover these distances, and how much physical energy it took just to
go a few measly miles that I don’t even think about when I’m in my Prius. My
only exhaustion from driving around here is from sitting in traffic. But our pioneer people, they must’ve been
exhausted all the time and chowing down like lumberjacks just from the sheer
physicality of their travel.
With the Tri only 5 days away, I feel like I have to focus
my training on learning how to eat like a lumberjack.
Saturday, June 15, 2013
June 15: Who can tri without yoga?
After my 2+ hours of training yesterday I got up and did hot
vinyasa power yoga this morning, Down Dog Yoga style. My thinking was that this total sweat-dripping
experience would help drip out the lactic acid build-up in my legs. I’m not sure if that’s true (see previous blog
entry about beginner’s mind), but it sounds good.
Honestly, I don’t know how any serious distance athletes survive
without yoga. All that cycling and
running yesterday left my legs like concrete and my joint tendons and muscles
all tied up in tight little knots. Boy
does it feel good to stretch everything out in a 92-degree, high humidity
environment! And how do athletes SURVIVE
without doing backbends or headstands?
What great counter-moves to being hunched over on a bike and upright for
so long.
So I noticed while in warrior 2 pose (one of my least
favorite yoga poses, btw), that my legs, while tired, didn’t burn like they
usually do. My quads, which usually hate
that pose, were completely silent about the matter. The “ugh, I hate this pose and it seems so
easy for everyone else and why do we have to hold it so long, this sux!! “ banter
was completely absent. Could my female
warrior energy be growing stronger?
Taking on a different perspective?
Soon I’m going to the gym to complete my training for the
day by swimming a mile. And I will attain
one of my other tri goals, which I forgot to mention before: time my workouts so that I only have to wash my
hair once a day. Who said I wasn’t
goal-oriented?
June 14: Am I a "Serious" Female Warrior?
Today I did a 20 mile bike ride and followed it with a 3-ish
mile run. In between, Doritos and
Cheetos were consumed, I’m not gonna lie.
The run was easier this time, but I was still sloowwww and my foot
ached, even taped with KT tape. Pain:
just gonna have to make friends with it.
A friend commented that I am really taking this tri training
seriously. Well, duh. It never occurred to me that working out for
2+ hours a day could be interpreted as serious, but I guess it is. I often tell people I love working out, and
if someone would pay me (a lot) to do it, I’d do it all day long. I once had a leadership coaching client who
spent some time as an Olympic hopeful, and I secretly salivated with envy when
she described to me her Olympic training schedule, which basically consisted of
inhaling her sport or some kind of training preparation for 12 hours a day.
There’s nothing more head-clearing than good hard, sustained
exercise. In fact, since I’ve been
training for this tri, I have found that the room in my brain usually reserved
for useless chatter and worry seems to have shrunk. It’s like I’m just not “thinking” as much. Don’t get me wrong, I don’t want to become a
Ryan Lochte or anything (although I do admire his “qualities”), but what a gift
to have a semi-quiet mind! It is easier
for me to achieve this through exercising all day than it is through an hour of
meditation.
The other reason why I never considered that I am being “serious”
about this training is because I am approaching it with a STRONG beginner’s
mind (we’re talking pre-school consciousness).
I’ve never done a sprint tri and I haven’t set a goal time. My outfit matches poorly, I’m clearly no pro. But I do have goals, and they are as follows:
1.
Finish, and not in last place (any other number
is fine).
2.
Be fit enough that my brain is unflappable, so I
can stay anchored in the present moment even when it’s tough.
3.
Have fun, yes, fun.
4.
Honor the female warrior in me (actually this
goal will be a by-product of goals 1 - 3)
Wednesday, June 12, 2013
June 12: On the Bike
Today was the day to get comfortable with Jan’s racing bike
and clock some distance on the road. I
am happy to report I achieved those goals:
I biked 20 miles on the w&od trail on a really hot, humid day. After getting the bike seat adjusted at the
bike store in Reston and figuring out (almost!) how to work the gears, I was in
really good shape, I thought. About 3
yards into the trail, I made a sudden stop because I thought I forgot my car
keys, and my left clip didn’t unclip so down I went. Yay, I thought. I knew I was gonna fall sometime, and I
wanted to get it over with early. It was
only a bloody knee, but probably a mis-aligned knee too, as I was gonna come
home and run but my knee felt too funky.
Off to the chiropractor first.
Thanks to the helpful guys in the truck who stopped to see if I was
okay. And how embarrassing that I couldn’t
have just fallen out of sight of everyone!
That bike trail is another world. A very testosterone-laden world. It was not highly traveled during the time I
was on it, and of the people I encountered I only saw one or two other women. Mostly it was fine; one or two times I was on
high alert. But no evil came of anything
so I’m gonna go with it’s a safe trail.
Covering that distance was not hard, although it took a lot
of time and I was so afraid at times of going airborne, so I just backed it
down. Who can account for a cat running
out in front of you, or a dog that an owner isn’t watching who suddenly wants
to visit? All the critters, they
gravitate to me, which is fine, but not when I’m going 35 miles an hour.
I am still wobbly on the bike and feel like a total outsider
to this biking world. It’s kind of like
a cult. I just tell the other cult
members hello, I’m clueless, I don’t know what I’m doing, forgive me, I will
try to stay upright and ride in a straight line.
June 11: Approaching the Limits....Again
Today I did power hour hot yoga, which was fun and it GAVE
me energy. So, still in my sweaty mess
mode, I went to the gym and swam 42 laps again.
I swam quicker this time, even though my arms felt more tired. I think I’m finally starting to figure out
this swimming thing, which is really embarrassing to say after all these
years. But the “crawl” is basically named
that because one does indeed “crawl” down the lane. I never really felt that before, but I did
today. I tried to remember all the
stroke advice I’ve received from the “experts” who have done this forever and have
good-naturedly shaken their heads in disbelief at how lousy my stroke is, but
it’s so much HARDER when you have to do the proper stroke! I watched other
swimmers at the gym and they were SO doing it wrong and they could go
forever. That’s my idea of swimming!
After swimming I sat in the sauna with argon oil all over my
hair. This swimming stuff is tough on
skin, hair, etc. My hair color is gonna
be neon blonde/white soon. My head is like a
beacon in the dark.
June 10: I love exercise
I love exercise. It’s
just amazing how the body works and movement feels like magic. It's the only time when my mind really lets go and lets my body take over. So yes, I’ve recovered somewhat from
yesterday, even though I felt massively tired most of the day and at first
thought I couldn’t possibly do dance class.
I did a little yoga on the deck in the heat and humidity, which helped
limber me up a bit. And which also
showed me that I had tons of energy for yoga.
But then yoga tends to put energy INTO the system (all that breathing!)
and sweating out toxins. I could’ve done
a full yoga class if I had the time, but decided instead to head to dance class. Dance class starts with a warm-up that is
super core-intensive…lightweight by power yoga standards but I felt it this
time. I followed the choreography
surprisingly well and gave my inner female warrior a high-five afterwards.
June 9: Why do people do this?
Exercise sux. Let me
state up front however that I have nothing but pure gratitude for the people
who are helping me get ready for this tri endeavor and that my bad attitude is
just something I have to get through, it has nothing to do with any of you.
So my lovely neighbor Jan offered me the use of her racing
bike for the tri, and I rode 9 miles on it, in 90 degree weather, really high
humidity, no big deal. The bike is darn
light, though, and I felt almost airborne a couple times. Then I couldn’t figure out the gear shift and
was only able to add on more oomph and not take it off. Not really sure how I got up some of the
hills in the neighborhood, because I was going so slow I almost succumbed to
gravity and toppled over. But the shoe
clipping into the pedal was no big deal.
Pretty cool that my spinning shoes are useful also on the open
road. Yes, they are 10 years old and a
fashion violation, but this whole event is gonna be a fashion violation for
me. I have paired together the most
mis-matched set of exercise garmets between the swimsuit + jogbra plus biking
pants combination, it’s a lost cause.
Even my helmet doesn’t match.
Enough about fashion. I’ll be
sure to get my nails done the day before.
Taking Jan’s advice about the killer part of the tri being
the transition from bike to running and how I should practice that, I went
right out on a run (still 90 something degrees and really high humidity, but
felt like a spring day compared to hot yoga so I thought, no big deal!). Except it was a big deal, and my legs felt
like concrete, and my poor arthritic foot throbbed, and the whole run, done at
a lousy, unpublishable pace, was just pure punishment.
Hence the comment: exercise sux.
I was so sore during the night I kept waking up (more than unusual!),
this time due to physical pain, and finally popped some pain medicine to take
the edge off and get some sleep. I hate
taking vicodin because it makes me feel SO annoyed and moody when it wears off,
but I was willing to put up with that for some relief and sleep. I’m annoyed and moody generally anyway lately,
so I figured nobody would notice.
Saturday, June 8, 2013
June 8: Biking Bling
My day of no exercise yesterday left me with a night of no
sleep. Literally, I was wide awake until
close to 3 am. I even resorted to half
of a sleeping pill: no effect. It seems I have to physically exhaust myself
to be able to sleep for even a few hours.
What happened to Julie the professional sleeper?
So today I went to the bike store and bought a bike
helmet. It was surprisingly fun. Helmets these days are really cool looking,
kinda like the fashion statement hats I saw worn by the stylish attendees at
the Royal Wedding. Plus, they fit so
well! Nothing like the last helmet I had
(a decade ago) that was like a styrofoam globe wobbling all over my head and
making me feel like an astronaut in Apollo 13. Ugh, maybe Apollo 11.
So I came home and helpful husband pumped up the bike tires
of his hybrid bike, which I intend to ride in the race, and I set off with my
GPS tracker and just tooled the neighborhood for 45 minutes. And discovered, luckily, that “tooling” for
me is more like becoming a machine with piston legs. Thank you spinning training. There will never again be any such thing for
me as a la-de-da kinda bike ride. I get
on that thing and I want to hammer it.
My main fear is going super fast and hitting a bump or pothole and
becoming airborne, so I tested that out with this bike and am happy to say that
it’s heavy enough that I felt pretty securely tethered to earth even when going
at jet speed. I only rode 9.5 miles and had to stop at a bunch of stop lights, etc., but
I could’ve easily done twice that distance, even with a bike seat that felt
like a concrete slab.
Friday, June 7, 2013
June 7: Yes, limits exist
The day after day 2 of hard-core physical activity and I’ve
resurrected my own little wall of exercise exhaustion. Trying to tell myself that this is a good
thing because it’s better that I constructed this wall in full consciousness
than having it coming crashing down upon me out of the blue. So now I know one of my limits, and I shall
therefore not trespass against it again….maybe.
That limit being: working out
hard (to the point of being drenched) for 2+ hours, 2 days in a row, is not
good. Doing that leads to being overtired and a
night of restless sleep and weird dreams where I feel trapped in a grueling
physical struggle and I just have to keep going because there’s no other way
out except spacing out, and that’s not working, at least not in the dream. Hello trauma response. Maybe Christine was right when I told her
what the sprint tri entailed and she said it sounded “traumatic.” But NO! I’m doing this because I WANT
to. My female warrior WANTS to; no one is
making me. (repeat to self 10 times)
June 6: Limits...do they exist?
This day was about integration: forcing the muscles to work together in a way
that results in overall physical harmony and prowess. That’s what yoga and dance do, as opposed to
isolated working out of legs or arms (kinda what spinning and swimming feels
more about, altho the whole body is obviously used there too). Power hour yoga felt surprisingly
effortless. All that swimming really
does stretch out the lungs, to the point where power yoga in a room so humid it
feels like breathing water does not feel hard.
And balancing on arms upside down does not feel strenuous (swimmer’s
shoulders!).
I was so amazed at how do-able yoga was, I decided why stop
here? And went to Zumba class with Canz at the gym, looking for integration
benefit from dance. And thinking that it
would be easy. Uh uh. There was not one part of me free from sweat,
and it ran down my head into my eyes, just like at power yoga. And my poor brain was losing traction after
awhile trying to keep up with the choreography.
And HOW in the world does that instructor shake her hips like that? I thought I had flexible hips but, whew,
apparently not. I just followed the little
Asian woman in front of me who really seemed to know what she was doing and
later secretly blessed my daughter for driving and for not making fun of me. I was so tired I was not sure how I made it
into and out of the car to get home.
Lesson learned: just because power
yoga feels great doesn’t mean you have to keep going.
June 5: Wonder Woman defeated by Target
Today I jumped on the spinning bike at the gym and cranked
through an hour workout, full-on dripping to the beat of Green Day’s best anarchy-filled
tunes. Felt awesome. I stretched and headed right to the pool,
jumped into the 81 degree water and swam 42 lengths, the approximate distance
of .61 miles. It took me 28
minutes. In an outdoor swim situation,
which is what this tri entails, I’m not sure how much longer it will take. I tried to imagine the feeling of swimming
that long with no flip-turn after 25 yards, and it honestly seems like I will
be swimming forever. Even in the pool, I started getting antsy
after 10 lengths, thinking “I can’t do this; what was I thinking just because I
could swim a mile in college, etc.” I
kinda had a mini-panic attack going on in my head but my body just kept going,
and at length 27 it clicked: I can do
this.
After all that physical exercise, I didn’t feel exhausted
like I thought I would, so I ran a bunch of errands. Turns out a trip to Target is more exhausting
than 2 hours at the gym. Like I didn’t
know that already.
That night, I slept the whole night through without waking
up once: a first in maybe 6 months.
June 3, 2013: Day 2 into crazy decision
Two-mile run on the treadmill in the morning: fun, fun, fun. I can’t super-train in the running area of
this competition, because of my arthritic foot, so I’m just gonna take it in
spurts and when the event comes, do the best I can. But it sure felt good to run, even with the
pain in my foot. Ended the day with jazz
dance class, where the teacher put us through a warm-up that clearly indicated
he had no knowledge of what my legs had already done that day. (Oh, and just before that I RAN up the whole
Bethesda metro escalator as well, which is like a mile long.) My quads were on FIRE. Dance was sorta physically challenging, but
mostly mentally challenging with the choreography. It so hurts my brain to focus on opposition
while moving and turning, when all my brain wants to do is space out when the
going gets hard. But I made it stay and
work for me, and my almost total lack of ego (thank you, yoga) made it possible
for me to stay through a class where I am 25+ years older than everyone else,
oddly the most fit by far, and yet also clearly
the dorkiest dancer when it comes to getting the routines. I’m sure people wonder if I have a learning
disability. I wonder if I have a
learning disability.
My blog about preparing for my first sprint triathlon with 3-weeks notice
June 2, 2013
I could be nuts. I’m
still not sure I know what I’ve gotten myself into signing up for this sprint
triathalon shortly after turning 53, the most miserable birthday of my
life. Not because of the age; just
because of how it marked a day that should be happy, and I was not. Not even close. The “let’s-celebrate-a-birthday” call to
action could not be answered by me on that day, and that’s the first time in my
life where that has happened. It kinda
scared me, to be honest.
But that’s not why I signed up for this sprint tri. Or maybe it was, partially. Anyone who really knows me knows I’ve been looking
for the next thing to “birth” in my life, what with the most important job I’ve
ever had, being a mother, pretty much fulfilled. Nothing compares with witnessing two young
women become the awesome people they are and realizing, looking back, that this
activity consumed a lot of time, energy, attention, devotion and that every
moment was pretty darn sacred. It’s hard
to find anything else that seems as important, and duh, that’s because nothing
else is. Realizing this now I would have
had another child (maybe 4 more!), while I still could just to prolong that
active motherhood phase. But prolong is
all it would do. Eventually we all have
to show up for our own role call.
My search for my role on this planet continues. And the undertone to this search is fraught
with questions about what it means to show up, to just be present and engaged
in a powerful way. I am that for other
people when I coach. I am not that for
myself.
And so I started getting little inklings that my female
warrior energy was in need of being “oomphed” up. The huge hornet in my bathroom sink (=
shamanic symbol of female warrior energy), which I ended up drowning because I just couldn’t deal
with how powerful it was (me who once saved a poisonous spider and set it free).
And then the hornet that alighted on me… just making a guest
appearance on my sweaty arm after my Power
yoga class. And then my overwhelming
urge to get back to swimming laps, hard and long as I can. I just wanna feel really powerful. And I think that’s because feeling physically
powerful will help translate into feeling powerfully present. And yet a real part of me also keeps wanting to
run away, to escape, to find safety. And
being powerful lets you escape readily, at least physically. So I’m still trying to sort out what this
whole sprint tri activity is about for me. One thing I know for sure: I have always been hugely kinesthetic. How could I not let my body lead the way in
this endeavor?
So I’m gonna go with the idea that my first sprint
triathalon is dedicated to honoring my female warrior energy, the really
strong, robust part of me that holds firm and steady through anything; the part
of me that enables me to feel safe, all by myself, without looking to others,
without running for cover.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)