Category Archives: Goals

The Mile High Wind Tunnel Marathon report

I felt like changing the title given the circumstance.

The quicker version

I went through the first half at 1:23:30 feeling pretty good. The weather was perfect.  50 degrees, sunny and mostly calm for the first two loops.  I ran smooth and hit my pacing goal pretty close. I had a goal of 2:45 and felt that I had the fitness for it.   My awesome bike support crew Steve and I were loving the weather.  The ponds down by Valmont road were glassy smooth.  Hardly a breeze in the air.

I thought I might have dodged the recently forecast wind bullet!

Not so fast…the morning isn’t over yet.

In the 3rd loop the wind picked up. When I reached the 4th loop it was on in full force.  At mile 21.5 I was nearly stopped in my tracks by a monster gust of wind in the face. Running along the edge of the flatirons golf club the entire sky in front of me was full of twirling blowing leaves.   It was a really cool sight!  But not the easiest of running conditions.

I was getting blind-sided by the leaves in the face.  By this time  my pace had deteriorated, and I was knew the goal was out, so I tried to focus on pushing through the wind and fatigue.   And I was not successful in pulling the pace back from the dead until the last mile.

I ran a 1:33:49 for the second half turning in a 2:57:19 for my first attempt at racing a road marathon.

I’ve got to start somewhere right?

Here were the loop splits:

  • Loop 1 – 41:21 – 6:19/mile average
  • Loop 2 – 42:09 – 6:26/mile for the loop, 1:23:30 for the half – 6:22/mile total
  • Loop 3 – 45:03 – 6:52/mile for the loop, 6:32/mile total
  • Loop 4 – 48:46 – 7:26/mile for the loop, 2:57:19 total – 6:45/mile average

The numbers might make that look like a classic blowup and suffer-a-thon.  But actually there wasn’t much suffering going on.  That was the problem.  I wasn’t able to motivate myself enough to push through the pain required to keep the pace near 6:20 the whole way.  So I just ended up slowing down to basically a jog by the last lap (7:26 avg).

So I didn’t hit my time goal.  But how about these positive takeaways:

  1. I set a PR!
  2. I took 1st place!
  3. I totally annihilated the Course Record!

OK, that’s totally lame.

There are some actual takeaways though, but first…

The lengthier details

Pre-race – The weather forecast on Tuesday was looking perfect.  Saweeet!  I love you weather!  November 12 could serve up all sorts of nastiness if it wanted to, but 50 degrees and Sunny??  I accept!

Oh wait…what’s that?  Severe WIND WARNINGS started popping up on Thursday.  NOOOOOO!

That was bugging me.  But I wasn’t going to change the date.  I was already tapered and the next time to do it was a week away which was less than ideal from a tapering standpoint.  So I decided to go forth.

But Jeff V gave me the great idea to just change the route…and head straight east with the wind.  I remembered Boston this year and got excited about the idea of running a marathon with a 30 MPH tailwind.  So I mapped out a backup route. I decided to use the new route if after one loop the wind proved too brutal.

But I was surprised to find no wind at my 7 AM go time.  It was almost eerily calm as I took off my jacket and got ready to push start on the watch.

Loop 1

Steve met me at the start and after giving him my liquid shot flasks and water, I jogged around for 1.75 minutes to warm up.  Then promptly got the project under way.

As expected, the first lap was easy.  Steve and I chatted, it stayed calm the whole time, and everything was right on track.  I thought I might do the first loop in 42 minutes and try to decrease from there.  I did 41:21 which was right on goal pace, so that worked.

At 30 minutes in I started a pretty regular schedule of taking a swig of EFS every 15 minutes along with water periodically.  I kept this up consistently for the next couple hours.

41:21 – 6:19/mile average

Loop 2

I slowed down a bit on this loop and chatted a bit less with Steve.  I saw my mile splits a bit slower, but didn’t try to increase, because I still felt like hitting the half in 1:23 or so would be optimal.

Around mile 10-11 the remaining 16 seemed a bit daunting.  But I wasn’t hurting and I moved my thoughts back to the current mile and that felt better.

When we got back to the park for the half way point my family was out there cheering me and giving me high fives.  I enjoyed seeing them…but it also made me kind of want to go play at the park with them and relax.  I think I was tiring of the pace already at this point, mentally at least.

42:09 – 6:26/mile for the loop, 1:23:30 for the half – 6:22/mile total

Coming through the half is pretty much just smiles and staches

Loop 3

I slowed for a minute or so to regroup after leaving the park, then pressed onward.

At mile 16.1 I looked at my 3 mile split from the half – It was about 20:10 – so 6:42 pace.  I knew my goal pace needed to be at 19 minutes for that 3 mile section and this was discouraging.

It was mainly downhill yet I was falling off pace.  What I didn’t think about yet was how much the wind had picked up.  But I was feeling a bit tired and it was disheartening to notice myself off the goal pace so much after 3 miles.

Then we passed the pond that was glassy in on the first two loops.  Now it was pretty choppy and wind was coming at us from all directions it seemed.

That made me glad I didn’t change the course to go straight east.  At least on my loop course there were sections that were protected from the wind.

At this point I was still on a pace to be able to run 2:50 or so.  But I didn’t think to latch onto a new goal pace.   Instead I just started avoiding looking at the mile splits not wanting to know anymore.  That didn’t help with my motivation to run fast or push through the fatigue.

My mind was pretty tired at this point.  And I think that was amplified by not having a defined goal any more, since the original goal seemed out of reach.

And the wind continued to pick up.  Running north under the Arapahoe tunnel I felt like I was trying to pull a parachute or something.

45:03 – 6:52/mile for the loop, 6:32/mile total

Am I too happy for 19.65 miles in? Maybe I need to learn to suffer (or not)

Loop 4

It was nice to have the family cheering section again as I got back to the park.  I was pretty far off pace at this point, but at least I was feeling encouraged now by being on the final lap.

And then the wind got relentless.

Which did a fairly decent job at destroying my newly acquired ‘bell lap’ motivation.  6.55 miles is kind of a long bell lap by the way…just fyi.

This is where 5 inch leaves were blasting me in the face repeatedly.

Then rounding a corner trying to pick it up only to have a 50 mph (estimate) gust nearly stop all progress.

Then finally getting back to the ponds only to see them fully windblown with waves and the trees and leaves going crazy everywhere.

I can’t complain about the sun and temperature, even if the wind was brutal

Just kept plugging along.  Looked down at the watch periodically to see the pace in the 8 min. range.  Tried to pick it up and at least get it back to the 7′s.

I pretty much threw in the towel on the 6 minute range 5 or 6 wind gusts prior.

The 22 mile face

Going north under the Arapahoe tunnel for the final time was twice as hard as the previous time.  All the wind being focused directly down the tube in my face.

Oddly enough, 1/4 mile up the hill the wind was at my back.

Hallelujah!!

1.5 miles to go and I’ve got myself a solid tailwind.  And it was pushing me for about 1/2 mile which was extremely nice and much appreciated at that point!

But it was too little too late to even come close to salvaging the original goal.  And anyway I made a left turn and the tailwind was gone.

I was able to cover the last mile in about a 6:30 though, thanks to Steve.

He said:

Pick it up, nobody has ever regretted going too hard in the last half mile.

The truth of that statement made me laugh to myself.  And I was finally capable of picking it up again.

Finished:  48:46 – 7:26/mile for the loop, 2:57:19 total – 6:45/mile average total.

Finishing is nice.

And of course it’s all grins and goaties when you finish a marathon.

Though I didn’t hit my initial goal, I was fine with it for a couple reasons.

  1. I didn’t know what to expect.  I gave my best attempt at a goal time and went for it.  It didn’t work out.  Now I know better what to expect for the next time.
  2. That wind was rough!

My observations post Marathon

Loop running can be kind of challenging mentally.

I can use work on the mental middle game.

My legs aren’t sore the next day, and I can easily run up and down the stairs at home.  That tells me my mind and not my body was the limiting factor.

I think I needed to set a new goal at mile 16.1 when I realized 2:45 was out the window, in order to find new motivation.  My mind didn’t have much to work with at that point.

A solo time trial effort is a very different animal than an organized race.

I have a lot more respect for the marathon today.

The Free Fall Marathon?

Would I do that again?  Sure, why not?  I thoroughly enjoyed training for it, and the price was right!  But I do want to do an actual marathon event sometime…perhaps this spring even.

Thanks for reading!

Posted in Goals, Running Logs, marathon training | Tagged | 7 Comments

This Saturday: Free Fall Marathon/Half/10K/Kids run

The forecast is looking good this weekend.  So the Free Fall Marathon is on!

For anyone interested in celebrating the end of fall with some ‘flat’ running with me and my family (and anyone else who wants to come) this weekend, here are the details:

  • I will be starting a Marathon at 7:00 AM (thanks to daylight savings for making an early start much nicer)
  • I will be running four loops of the 6.55 Mile course and I’ll be aiming at 41:15 per loop (6:18/mile or 2:45 marathon pace)
  • Anyone who wants to get in a good 10K or half marathon effort is welcome to jump in with me on any of the loops and the company would be more than welcome I assure you.
  • The start and end point is at the end of Holmes pl where it meets up with Arapahoe Ridge Park just south of Arapahoe/Foothills in Boulder
  • See the official course map here – MapMyRun is surprisingly accurate to exactly what I measured it with a magnetic bike wheel computer.  The key is that you have to run on the ‘into traffic’ side of eisenhower and merrit drive at the end of the loop or you will end up slightly short.
  • I plan on coming back through the park at approximately these times to start each new loop:
    • 7:41, 8:22, 9:03
    • Shooting to finish before 9:45
    • Anyone is welcome to run any (or all!) of the loops with me, or run the course on their own as much or little as you want
    • You can look on the map to see where the 10K mark is by the mailboxes on Merrit drive, in case you want to give the 10K a shot.
  • We’ll have a stockpile of First Endurance Ultragen and water for everyone to partake of after the run, as well as fruit and bagels and juice etc. depending on who RSVP’s.
  • At 9:05 or so, while I’m doing my last loop, Nan is planning on having a kids fun run around the interior of the park.  There’s a perfect little loop that the kids can test themselves on, and see how many loops they can run or whatever.  We’ll have little prizes for any kids that show up and give their best effort, as long as I know they are coming (so far it’s just the Kennard kids excited to do their own individual time trials on the ‘mini marathon course’)

I can’t think of any more details at the moment.  Hope you’re all enjoying the Autumn!

Posted in Family fun, Goals, marathon training | 7 Comments

Last long run before the big day

I had a really nice/easy medium long run early this morning.

I saw a runner up ahead about 3 miles into the run out on the south end of marshall, so I decided to catch up rather than trail behind him a minute indefinitely.

We were running a similar pace so I just picked it up a little for a while going down cherryvale and caught up to him after 5 or 6 minutes.  It ended up being Nick Pedatella, which was a nice surprise, and we were heading the same way for the next 7 or 8 miles.  So it was really nice to have some company for an hour or so.

After Nick turned off for home I also turned for home the other way and ran the last 3.5 or so at a somewhat quicker pace..6:30 ish.  It was a nice last long run before the marathon next week and everything is still just feeling remarkably good.

I have really enjoyed this marathon training block, and have noticed significant aerobic fitness gains.  I’m kind of bummed its coming to a close actually!

Not sure exactly what I’ll focus on next….I think I would like to see how low I can get my 5K and 10K times this winter.  I think I may just do that with a focus on shorter faster intervals for the first couple months to start out another longer marathon training block for a spring marathon.  But I will wait to be the judge on another marathon until I actually do it next week.  I have loved the training!  Will I love the actual event and want to do it again?  That is yet to be seen.

Although while I have been loving the long tempo and marathon pace runs, I do kind of miss the lung/heart burning short/fast stuff lately also.  And I’m pretty curious to see how the increased aerobic fitness will help as I train again for the shorter distances.  I’m guessing it’s going to come in handy.

15 miles for the morning in about 1:50, casual pace until the last 3 or so.

Posted in Goals, Running Logs, marathon training | 1 Comment

My first 30 mile run

Golden Gate Dirty Thirty 50K Race report

That race was incredibly cool and fun!  Pretty much blew the Bolder Boulder out of the water in fun and coolness…sorry Bolder Boulder, you’re cool, just not ‘that’ cool.

Here’s the short version of the race report:  This race lived up entirely to my prediction of “31 miles of pure gorgeous weather mountain running beat down”.  Everything was absolutely perfect about the race and the day…so much fun.  I finished and felt great and I still feel surprisingly great and energetic and not very stiff.

And here’s the long version of the report:

The night before

My buddy Jentry arrived with Nicole and his friend Matt, and then Adam arrived at about 10pm from AZ, he was also signed up to run with us.   We stocked up on a bunch of pasta and veggies and then just got our stuff together for the race.  My plan for the race was to just go out easy for the first 10 miles and try to stay with Jentry and Adam.  I tend to want to push it sometimes and I thought it would be best to really not push it at all at first considering I’ve never run longer than 21 miles before.  We got to bed about 11 and had to get up about 4 in order to head up to the race.

The Morning

We loaded up on Oatmeal and headed out to the race.  I drank a vespa on the way.  My plan was to drink a Vespa every 2 hours, and eat salt caps every hour minimum.  Then for food I was going to just eat at all the aid stations and make sure I had 2 gels with me to eat in between stations.   We got there about 25 minutes early, got all geared up and headed to the start line to sign in and give them our drop bags.

We were all complete newbies to the Ultra racing scene and so we felt like everyone there was a complete ultra rock-star all decked out in their gators and mountain gear.

I was originally just going to wear my waist strap with two 10 oz bottles for water.  But when I saw half the people there with 40-100 oz of water they were going to carry, my judgment got the better of me, and I ran to my drop bag and grabbed a hand held 20 oz. nathan water bottle.  VERY GLAD I DID THAT!  I would have been seriously suffering out there with only 20 oz. of water between aid stations, because the critical stations in the middle and end of the race were about an hour and a half apart with huge mountain climbs in between.  I finished off 40 ounces within 5 to 10 minutes of each aid station as it was.

The race is on

About 5 minutes after 6 they started the race.  We were in the VERY back of the pack to start.  After the start I kind of regretted that because we were stuck walking in the single file line on a lot of the initial single track…but really that only lasted the first mile or so and it probably didn’t make any significant difference.  In fact it was probably good to force myself to go out really slow.

But my plan to stay with Jentry for 10 miles failed miserably after about 1.5 miles.  It turned out our comfortable paces were too different.  I didn’t go out too hard at all, I was walking a lot of the uphills right from the beginning, but I still ended up ahead of Jentry and Adam after about two miles.  It was clear that we were going to need to do our own things, so I just proceeded forth and got into my own groove.

I clicked my lap button on my garmin at each aid station so I could see how long I was stopped and be able to see the progression of the race in the stats afterward.  Otherwise, I only used my garmin to see my running time so I could gauge when I should eat and take s-caps and vespa.

Section 1 –  1 hour – 4.75 miles – 2000 Feet ascent – 1324 Feet descent – 12:48/mile avg

This first lap was super easy, cool, shady, and just plain fun.  It was such amazing weather up there on the trails at 7-8000 feet.  Words can’t describe how perfect the weather was.   And the trail just meandered up this valley crossing the stream on bridges about 11 times.  Simple gorgeous way to start the day.  I was so thrilled to be out there just soaking up the cool mountain air and cruising up the pristine single track.

First Aid station – 18 seconds, just stopped to top off my water bottle and eat an orange and I was on my way

Section 2 –   1:18:47 – 6.8 Miles – 2283 Feet ascent  -  1754 Feet descent – 11:35/mile avg

This section was equally as fun as the first.  I was surprised to notice afterward that this section is where we actually reached the highest point on the course, because I don’t remember it being a very challenging climb.  I’m so accustomed to running the hills in Boulder that are much steeper, so these hills felt really moderate.  I’m glad I was training on the steeper terrain, because mentally it really helped a lot I think.  The view from the top of that peak was amazing though.

I had fallen into a pace with a dude named Mike Enger who was really nice and great to run with.  He had just done a 50K the previous weekend in Gunnison that runs in Hartman Rocks.  I was impressed he was out there on this steep 50K a week later.  We ran with each other for a few miles here and then I went off ahead of him at some point…because I kept running pretty solidly up most of the hills since it was pretty moderate.  At this point the pace was still so leisurely I was taking photos with my phone and some video…I video documented a lot of the run, we’ll see how that comes out.  Much more at the beginning, not much at the end.  Here’s a shot of Mike.

Nicole and Matt were taking pictures of us and there to provide support at the entrance to aid station 2.

(Adam coming into Aid station 2)

(Jentry approaching Aid station 2)

Aid station 2 – 2:30 – I stayed here a little longer this time because I wanted to eat peanut butter and jam, bananas, and more oranges.  Then I was off after filling up my bottles.

Section 3 –   1:08:26 – 5.23 Miles – 1524 Feet ascent  -  2064 Feet descent – 13:04/mile avg

This was by far the most fun part of the race for me.  The coolness was just building up between each aid station and this one took the cake.  It had plenty of climbing, but was more of a descent, and the descent was fast down a lot of smooth rolling single track.  My tunes were blasting, I was feeling fantastic, and I was passing by a people pretty consistently.  And most of all I had multiple miles of absolute runners high around mile 15 and 16.  Just an extremely euphoric joyous feeling as I was flying through the mountains and feeling amazing.
I absolutely loved it.  When I came up to aid station 3 I was still on running cloud 9 and probably just grinning from ear to ear.  Nobody passed me in this section and I put a lot of distance on the people I was leap frogging with (payment for that to come soon…)
(Jentry running into aid 3, Nicole ran that section with him)

Aid station 3: 2:21 – At this station I had my drop bag, and so I ate more pb and J, bananas, a bunch of accelarade and then I grabbed my final Vespa out of my drop bag and dropped off my shirt which I had tucked into my belt at about mile 5.

Section 4 –   1:39:22- 6.61 Miles – 2532 Feet ascent  -  2551 Feet descent – 15:01/mile avg

My pace dropped a couple minutes per mile here.  I still felt great at the beginning of this section but it immediately started up a 2 mile climb right out of the aid station.

I passed a guy Chris from Louisville pretty quick who has years of Ultra experience and seemed to be struggling.  We had leap frogged a bit and we chatted for a while, then I kept charging up the hill.  But Chris commented that he would probably see me at the end, and I told him not to be so sure because I was in new territory from never having gone that far, so I had no idea how long I would stay ahead of him feeling great.

Sure enough, by the time we got to the top of the climb I was getting pretty tired and he and a lady from Boulder passed me as I stopped to dump the pebbles from my shoes.  I never saw them again until the turnaround at the top of windy peak on the next climb and we finished within 5-10 minutes of each other it turned out.

So at about mile 20 or so, I started noticing my legs getting pretty tired.  And I had the classic thoughts of 10 miles of pain to finish the race.  But I pushed those out and focused on the next steps and reminded myself how amazing it was out there, and it helped a lot.  I ran out of water with a mile to go to the aid station here.  Fortunately it was downhill so it wasn’t as bad as a 15 minute climb with no water.

Aid station 4: 4:45 – I hung out here for a while just eating, drinking and not being in too big of a hurry to move on…felt the need to recover a bit here at mile 24.  7 miles to go with a big climb coming up and then down hill to the finish/start area.

Section 5 –   1:41:17- 7:16 Miles – 2079 Feet ascent  -  2770 Feet descent – 14:08/mile avg

This section was mentally tough to start, which is probably why I hung out at the aid station longer eating up.  At this point, starting to run again was slow and the bounce and smoothness in the step was not really there that much any more.

It was a mile or so down hill, then the final big climb started.  At this point I was just getting through the down hill, and then the uphill was more enjoyable…it was a great excuse to walk!  Also, it was a pretty steady steep climb and it was absolutely gorgeous.  With every switch back going up new panoramic valley views opened up.  It was beautiful and enjoyable to power hike up the mountain, I was able to just get lost in it and really enjoyed it despite being tired.  My overall energy level and legs were feeling great actually…tired, but plenty of strength.  Nobody passed me at all through to the very top of the climb.

The summit was a 3/4 mile out and back so we had to get our race number marked at the top.  On my way up I saw all the people just ahead of me in the race and we exchanged greetings.

When I started down the hill I felt pretty slow.  It was a 1200 Foot descent over 2 miles, and it hurt more than the uphill.  The steep descents at this point required a lot of strength and were a lot more jarring.  A couple people passed me on this section.  I didn’t really care since I wasn’t concerned at all about racing others…but I was interested in getting back to the finish in under 7 hours at this point.  So I pushed it as much as I could muster, but I didn’t like going too hard going down hill here.  This course had 1 more little trick up its sleeve before the finish though, another steep 400 foot climb and then a fast 400 foot descent.  I hiked the uphill, but at the top there were several more moderate rollers of 50 to 100 yards in length.  I started passing a few people again here because I decided I was done walking any more uphill.  I powered through the final two or three little climbs and felt really good and had plenty of strength.  I seem to like pushing a lot harder on uphills than downhills.  But then I was feeling good from powering up those hills so I passed a couple more people on the descent.

FINISHED!

At the finish, my wife and kids were there to greet me which was really cool.  Nan timed it perfectly and arrived just minutes before I got there, which was pretty cool.  I was pushing hard to make it in under 7 hours at the end and I just made it by 2 or 3 minutes! (by my watch, I haven’t seen the official results yet).

My kids were all running after me to the finish, which I only noticed later in the pictures…here are a bunch of pictures at the finish area of the race. It was such a fun run, but it was SO nice to be done after 7 hours.  I’m really happy about accomplishing my goal of running 30 miles finally.

(Abe laughing at me totally crashed out on the lawn)

(Ali putting flowers on the corpse)

(Adam finishing VERY strong on the home stretch)

(Jentry finishing, looking a bit tired, awesome finish for his first ultra also!)

(Mustering the energy to gallop his steed across the line…then his calf cramped up!)

(I’m still trying to figure out the meaning of that pose)

(My wife is amazing!  I was so glad she came up to the finish with the kids)

(Breanne and Abe climbing up and down a steep hill side by the finish, totally proud to declare themselves mountain climbers)


(Soaking off in the creek afterward was incredibly refreshing)

(And now its official, we’ve run an ultra.  Coincidentally all of us are 30 years old right now and we all just did our first 30 mile run in our 30th year…except Breanne, but she’s a mountain climber now.)

This is what my garmin said at the end of the race.  I think I stopped it for a minute waiting for Adam near the beginning, otherwise I left it running including aid station stops and when I stopped to stretch and dump rocks out of my shoes one time.

30.61 Miles – Time: 6:57:15 – 13:33 per mile avg – Total Ascent: 10,571 FT  Total Descent: 10,590 FT


Conclusion:
I really like trail running and trail racing.  It’s super fun.

This was a fantastic location for an event.  The trails and scenery were amazing.  I’m looking forward to many more cool runs like this in the future.
I’m extremely pleased with how well my body handled the run today.  I had no pains in my legs or feet…just fatigue.  If you would have told me last October I would be able to do a 31 mile run through the mountains without injuring my legs badly, I wouldn’t have believed you.  I feel blessed to have finally learned how to be able to run long distances without hurting myself.  It has opened up so many cool possibilities for great adventures for me.
My transition into a distance runner seems to be finally panning out after about 6 months of various minor injuries along the way and my various body parts seem to have finally adapted to my new running form.  Everything seems to be working together at the same time now, which is really nice.
Also I’m pretty happy with my inov-8roclite shoes.  I had zero foot problems.  No blisters, no discomfort, they worked Awesome!  I am so glad I got them for this race because I literally stubbed my toes at least 30 times today….and NOT ONE of those times caused me any problem or pain!  If I would have been wearing the FF treks to race it I would have probably broken a toe or two and not even been able to finish.  I love the FF’s, but for gnarly trails, its really nice to have more protection.  The roclites work fantastic for me since they are so neutral and flat with a big comfortable toe box.

Posted in Goals, Race Reports, Running Logs, Trail Runs | 8 Comments

Revised Goals

Because of overdoing it on my hip, I’m not planning on running 30 miles on my 30th birthday at this point.  The hip is recovering fine, but I don’t think it would be healthy for me.

I also clarified and simplified for myself my goals for this year with running:

  1. Be healthy, run injury-free, and listen to my body.
  2. Run 30 miles…someday soon.
  3. 5/31/2010 – Bolder Boulder (10K)
  4. 6/5/2010 Golden Gate Dirty 30 (50K)
  5. 9/18/2010 - Steamboat Springs 50 (50 miles)

I’m going to focus on those goals, and I think it will be a blast.  I think the races will be fun, but what really excites me is the excuse they will give me to head to the mountains and run every week in the meantime.

(Oh…and I just signed up for steamboat and golden gate…drew the line in the sand and crossed it.  Anybody want to join in on the fun?)

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New Year Goals – and December mileage

I’m really excited about 2010!  This is going to be another incredible year.  I predict even better than last.

2009 was one of the best years of my life.  On January 1, 2009 I was overweight and in a huge amount of stress with a struggling business.

I decided that day 1 year ago, that I was no longer going to let my financial stresses ruin my life and my health.  So even though nothing changed with my business, I changed the way I was living.  I started working out every day and made a goal to lose 15 pounds.

I immediately felt better about my life, and it immediately resulted in progress in all fronts including my business.

I did lose 15 pounds last year, but it didn’t take losing 15 pounds to feel great.  All it took was living differently every day.

Today I’m a much different person than I was 1 year ago, I live a much more healthy, balanced life, and I’m so much more happy.  And my business is thriving now which is a great side benefit.

At the end of 2009 one of the greatest things happened to me though, I FINALLY LEARNED HOW TO RUN!  That was just the icing on the cake of a fantastic year.  Now that one little fact has changed my life completely and opened up new worlds of possibilities and fun goals and adventures that I want to tackle this year and in the coming years.

So here are some of my fitness related goals this year:

  1. Live a healthy, injury-free, balanced life, always taking care of my body and spirit.
  2. Run 30 miles on February 23, 2010 (My 30th birthday)

Things I’m strongly considering doing this year if they can be balanced in with my other family goals:

    -Run a road marathon barefoot sometime this year.

    -Do the Breckenridge trail 10K on July 3rd followed by Firecracker 50 mile mountain bike race again – this time under 5 hours.

    -Run a trail marathon and/or 50K.  This one looks really cool and I’m STRONGLY considering signing up…Golden Gate Dirty Thirty.  Also, Jun’s “Quest for Kings peak” in august sounds really fun.

    -Ride the Leadville Traill 100 Mt. Bike race 8/14/2010 (I hope I get in in the lottery)

    -Do a 50 Mile Mountain trail run sometime in the fall – doesn’t have to be a race, but maybe it will be if I’m ready and there’s one around me at that time.  TheSteamboat Springs 50 looks pretty enticing on 9/18

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Oh yeah, here are my December 2009 mileage results:

108.97 running Miles total

77.51 in Vibram FiveFingers – 31.46 in Bare feet

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