THOU SHALT BE A COMEBACK

Prairie Fire Marathon

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Location:

Wichita,KS,

Member Since:

Sep 14, 2008

Gender:

Female

Goal Type:

Local Elite

Running Accomplishments:

marathon pr:  2:59:49.  Saint George 2011

Praire Spirit 50 mile winner 7:36:30 2013

I accidentally ran 100 miles in November 2013.  it was hard.  I threw up a lot.  decided to do a better job next time

I did it again on purpose October 2014--Heartland 100 winner and CR 17:38:37

Heartland 50 winner May 2014

Psycho Wyco 50k winner February 2012

 

Short-Term Running Goals:

Run enough to hold off the middle-age spread

 

 

 

 

Long-Term Running Goals:

 

Sub 3 hour marathon--SOMEDAY!  Done!

 

New long term goal:  ....run enough to feel kinda like I did when I was fit

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Personal:

I was a single mom.  Two times over.  We all survived, despite the fact that I make atrocious decisions.  Then, I met a man I didn't deserve.  And he loves me so much.  And I love him. We lived in sin and bought a house for two years then hired a judge and officially got married(to our great delight and also the delight of our mothers), then a month later he was diagnosed with cancer.  Well we survived all that and he's 100% fine now.  But, we're really out of shape and really busy with kids and jobs and running just isn't my priority and there's so many other layers to all of it, but I'm running anyway.  This is my failure blog now.  Just to log that one run a week if I snag it.  
Somehow that matters and I want that run recorded.

Favorite Blogs:

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Miles:This week: 0.00 Month: 0.00 Year: 0.00
Mizuno Waverider 12 Lifetime Miles: 333.61
Nike Air Pegasus Lifetime Miles: 507.20
Pink Pegs Lifetime Miles: 595.58
Pink Nike Avant Lifetime Miles: 624.04
Crappy Asics Lifetime Miles: 146.72
Adidas Adizero Mana Lifetime Miles: 113.32
Blue Avants Lifetime Miles: 653.33
Crocs Lifetime Miles: 18.08
Lunarfly Lifetime Miles: 468.47
Race: Prairie Fire Marathon (26.57 Miles) 03:16:10, Place in age division: 5
Total Distance
26.57

Well, this is something I will keep forever, so a long write-up, and many confessions, so read on if you are ready to see some ugliness as well as goodness.

I have to start by saying my marathons tend to be metaphors for life, and this was one was no exception.  So I have to tell the story of the year as background.  One  year ago my nasty devastating divorce was complete.  On December 3rd, I lost custody of the stepsons I had loved and raised from diapers, my sons, and my heart....broke.  I have never been the same.  I didn't eat for 9 days, and I smoked like a chimney(old additions always come back).  I drank too much.  Thanks to a  mom who always holds my head above water, a daughter who needed me, and wonderful friends, I slowly pulled out of the mud and started running again.  By March I had won a 50 miler, won a few half-marathons, and was on top of my game, and handing my new life.  In April, disaster struck, I was nailed by a car, thrown 60 feet into a ditch, and my left knee was torn open and my fibula was broken.  My left calf was missing a chunk.  I was lucky to be alive.  I spent 6 weeks sitting at home on disabilty comtemplating "Why?" I had been spared.  I should not have lived.  I was mosty, on a whole, grateful to be alive.  At the same time, I struggled in another relationship.

In June I was back running, a fast recovery that was nothing short of miraculous.  I was doing well, and began to rack up the miles to the highest ever, and my fitness came back with a vengeance.  I PRd in the half in August, and all was going well.  In September, things turned.  I began to struggle again, as birthdays passed and my relationship failed, I began to miss my boys and my life, and a sort of delayed emotional reaction set in.  Although I knew I should be grateful I was taken over by a depression that I could not shake, and I began to sink like a ship.  I was even smoking here and there, drinking a little too often, and I began to gain weight.  I fought and I fough to keep it together but I was like a time bomb that was exploding.  my estranged father began to call after many years which threw another wicked emotional loop at me.  I fell apart.  I tried to hide it, but those close to me were on to me.  3 weeks ago I decided to start an antidepressant in a wild attempt to get myself back together.  It seemed to help, and when I arrived at the starting line today I was calm, enough bandaids were in place to get me through.

The race started perfectly.  I felt great, energy was great, slept well the night before.  I held back and ran well within myself the first half, coming through in 1:31:xx or so.  My new shoes that I had run a 16 miler in 2 weeks prior and seemed fine were giving me a little problem.  I was blistered under my big toes and every step was starting to hurt.  The outside of my left foot was burning with each step.  I thought this was something I could ignore and picked it up as planned at 13, plenty of gas in the tank, not laboring at all.  By mile 16, despite my best efforts, I think I was curling my toes around the blisters, and my calves started to get tight and knot.  I clung to the hope that this would pass,but it was not to be.  By mile 17 I knew I was in big trouble,and the pace bleeding began.  By mile 18, every step was excruciating from the thighs down, and I began to mince along rather than run.  It stunk, because my energy was good and there was plenty of gas in the tank, but my calves and feet were fiery knots, and all I could manage was a short, jerky, painful stride.  I had brought my ipod just in case, something I have never done before.  I fleeted through DNF thoughts, but decided to put the music on and buckle down for a looooong 8 mile death march.

And then I death marched.  Occasionally I entertained the DNF, but dismissed it.  I quit looking at my watch, knew it was bad and didn't want to know how bad.  At mile 22 I stopped, sat on the curb, pulled my shoes off, pulled my socks up tight, tied my shoes tight, thinking it might help a little.  The 3:10 pace group passed me.  I got up, minced along, and watched them go.  A friend of mine came by on a bike and offered an S-cap, I declined, because I knew sodium wasn't the issue, it was my knotted calves and biomechanics.  Occasionally I would try to be tough and open it up but it was a no-go, the knots just got tighter and the fire in my feet took over.  I would limp on one side, and then the other.

At mile 25 my friend Nancy jumped in.  I told her I was toast and cramped and she ran me to mile 26 at the bridge.  So glad.  I needed a boost.

And then it was over.  I saw my mom and bawled into her chest over the barricades separating us.  Then I went and found my Badger friends.  Marcus ran a 2:47!!  Wow!  We are proud indeed!  Many great accomplishments out there today, I cannot even begin to speak of all the incredible stories from my running friends today.

What is next?  I feel like a broken record, I have been up and down so much the last few years that it has reached the point of ridiculous.  That said, I don't think fitness was the problem today, it was a new-shoe-biomechanical issue.  I think. Although I am not entirely sure of my next plan, I think it will involve a few weeks off and some counseling to work on the issues in my heart and mind, which can no longer be ignored or fought through without help, and then perhaps go to a local running coach, Nathan Wadsworth, who has reasonable prices, like 50 a month, to analyze biomechanical issues and get some solutions, some of which are lingering from the accident(like running on the outside of my left foot completely and then toeing off, I still cannot dorsiflex that foot much), and to get a solid running plan, and work towards Boston hopefully with my head, heart, and body in a better place.

I am a bipolar runner, although we all are to a point--do great, do crummy,do great, do crummy lol.  I am still very grateful for tons of increbile support and family, and for this blog that I have hung on to for 5 years and is more or less a diary.  I am going to have to allow myself a little cry-laughing for a few days and then make the next plan.

Good day bloggers!  I promise I'm not done yet and I will do better!!  :)

Weight: 0.00
Comments
From allie on Sun, Oct 13, 2013 at 14:18:44 from 97.117.87.43

april - wow. congratulations on finishing this out. i'm proud of you for fighting through to the end when things got so tough -- sometimes that can mean just as much, if not more, than a big PR.

thank you for sharing your journey -- what a story. you have been through so much, but you have fought hard through everything. what i always love about your posts is that you do your best to see the positives in your situation and you carry on through hardship with grace (in running and in life).

best wishes to as you recover from this race and from the past year. we are all here for you for e-support and friendship. i really enjoy reading your blog because of your refreshing candor, and i admire your attitude and your determination.

all the best to you, april.

From Bonnie on Sun, Oct 13, 2013 at 15:00:17 from 64.119.33.134

Running/racing is a fickle master!

You are an amazing person, and you have much to be both grateful for, and sad about. What is for sure, you are strong, you are brave, and will come back stronger, in all facets of your life.

And, as allie pointed out, we have your e-back :) xoxo

From JulieC on Sun, Oct 13, 2013 at 16:52:28 from 63.224.119.181

No worries at all..i was worried your subthree today would not drive u forward to boston....lol seriously cause now that u had your down....manic moment in running it is time for your UP alongside me as your virtual training partner and roomie in boston. We are gonna have a fun winter :-) for right now easy peasy and working through our problems so mentally we can be the best we can at the moment....u never know what will happen the next six months but my hope is a sweet return!

From JulieC on Sun, Oct 13, 2013 at 16:56:02 from 63.224.119.181

Btw no new shoes on race day ever again! One time worn? Yikes. Been there done that. Ouch. Ice bath is in order.

From Fritzelac on Sun, Oct 13, 2013 at 19:20:11 from 71.56.127.243

Dear April,

Thanks for sharing the story. Reading your report, in terms of physical factors the injury in the springtime was definitely a key factor, so i think; i remember that you quickly returned to training after your happening in the springtime. And i was also surprised back then that you were able to get back that quickly. Someone might argue that a different runner with less mental strength would not be able to come back that quickly after such an injury. In addition, your comeback worked for the shorter distances quite well, however, for the longer distance you probably needed more healing time after your injury. So now it's about good recovery in every aspect after these "stress" tests. Best of recovery.

From Neasts on Sun, Oct 13, 2013 at 20:01:09 from 75.169.60.81

April, I'm so glad that you don't view this race as a failure, but rather something you can learn and grow from. Everyone on this blog knows that had things all come together--especially your shoes--that your sub-3 would've been a natural result. As far as I'm concerned, your comeback was a wonderful success. You are always inspiring me.

It sounds like your comeback was more than about running, really. Jeez, we are all works in progress, and I'm sure everyone on this blog has their own heartaches and things they would rather forget because sometimes coping is just so...hard. Too hard to do alone. You, though, are amazing, and you can do hard things. We've all seen it. Just doing what you did today is amazing, and I'm not just talking about the race.

From Jake K on Sun, Oct 13, 2013 at 21:48:54 from 67.177.11.154

Wonderful report and thoughts, April. I wish you had been able to knock one out of the park today (you deserved it!), but you have such great perspective. Crazy year of ups and downs. There will be lots more ups going forward.

I think your fitness was great... and no matter what kind of mental state you were in, there's nothing you can do to overcome a foot issue like that. Your stride changes, muscles tighten up, and all that work you did to become really efficient goes undone, because your form changes and you are not running like you have in training. There's not a lot you can do in that case. Kudos for sticking it out and still finishing in 5th place.

From I Just Run on Mon, Oct 14, 2013 at 08:41:37 from 67.79.11.242

April,

I truly admire you for your hard work and dedication. Way to stick it out and finish the race. I guess it's not much different than life is it? Your a strong fighter and I know you will tackle the other challenges in your life with the same fighting spirit! GO APRIL!!!

From SlowJoe on Mon, Oct 14, 2013 at 09:22:53 from 168.215.171.129

I think we all know and believe you will be squarely back in the 2:xx range again soon. I very much expected to click on your blog and see a 2:57 if that tells you anything (didn't know about the mechanical setback or the other stuff). As a fellow runner with bipolar results, keep it up. I think your plan is good, and I know from experience that having those competitive goals out there can help you cope through tough times and provide a good outlet. You are just around the corner from making it happen. I think we will have ourselves a good race in Boston!

From Rachelle on Mon, Oct 14, 2013 at 12:51:54 from 199.190.170.28

April first of all Congratulations on finishing a race when you could have easily (and understandably) DNF'd. You are insanely tough and as awesome of a runner as I think you are what I will forever admire most about you is your will to fight no matter what. We've all watched your journey and we all know what you are capable of. But what stands out to me above all has nothing to do with the workouts you do but rather the way you continue to fight through adversity.

Thanks for sharing your personal journey. I think so many of us can relate and learn from what you have been through. My friend & I had the best conversation this morning about how running is so much more than projected or executed times on a clock. It is truly the process that we grow the most from and at the end of the day the times don't really matter.

Hang in there and know that there are tons of people in your life who love and support you in life and in running.

From rockness18 on Mon, Oct 14, 2013 at 16:35:28 from 24.191.233.12

Congratulations on persevering!

From Eric Day on Sun, Oct 20, 2013 at 17:26:37 from 189.169.94.64

Oh April, I hear you on a hard year. Maybe mine is not the same or as bad, but I hear you.

I'm proud to see to keep your head up and a positive attitude.

Not all our running can be perfect, we have our ups and downs, but we always keep running.

Remember that from way down here, we send you only the best and may you receive the peace and happiness you receive.

From Christie on Mon, Oct 21, 2013 at 18:58:17 from 66.111.126.9

Sorry I am so late to this... I echo all the comments above. Especially what Rachelle said - so dang easily you could have DNF'd but you fought through.

Quite a journey. Thanks for sharing. I find it admirable and commendable that you are not complaining about these hard times; rather accepting them and using them as fuel to fight. Keep that fire going lady.

From seeaprilrun on Mon, Oct 21, 2013 at 20:30:36 from 205.172.12.210

Thanks for all the kind comments. This blog is incredible, so many great people. I feel encouraged. Thanks all of you so much.

From Sasha Pachev on Wed, Dec 25, 2013 at 09:11:41 from 72.250.218.114

April:

Merry Christmas - I finally got around to reading this.

This is actually an amazing result given the circumstances, shows you have some serious talent. Now to realize it you will need to nail a few nails, so to speak, into your canvas of preparation so that it will keep hanging firmly when the wind blows.

After reading this, a thought came to me that if you were to be placed in a solid smoke-free alcohol-free emotional abuse free environment you would run sub-2:50, and possibly even OTQ. The question is how this can be accomplished. I am sure many people on the blog, at the very least I will count myself, will be willing to do our part to help. What are you thoughts?

From seeaprilrun on Wed, Dec 25, 2013 at 10:02:09 from 68.102.189.33

Sasha,

deep within myself I feel that I have unrealized potential. I do think I am capable of sub 2:50. I believe that. As you said, I have to get on a solid rock and stay there for a while for it to be possible. I am currently in a position where if I am careful, I can surround myself only with loving people and friends that will support a healthy lifestyle, emotionally and physically. I have ran for the last few months purely for health benefits and maintenance, no training, but I am ready now to train, since the holidays are coming to a close. I am my own worst enemy, and have taken a lot of steps in the last month or so to pray, meditate, and surrender myself to my Creator and depend only on the love of my Heavenly Father. I have come to realize that I am much more fragile than I thought. I think I just need a lot of prayer to hang on, especially when the "wind blows", because it will. I have currently been running with some very wonderful, caring people, and some talented people to boot, definitely enough speed to be challenged in workouts and tempos, one of them is a 2:47 marathoner who did it on pretty minimal training. I appreciate your response and always appreciate prayers, wherever they come from.

From steve ash on Wed, Dec 25, 2013 at 10:53:30 from 174.52.100.252

Your definitely a survivor, take pride in that and keep pushing forward.

From seeaprilrun on Wed, Dec 25, 2013 at 14:16:17 from 68.102.3.235

That said...I'm game for whatever it takes to get under 2:50 and run at the full reach of whatever potential I may have. I can eat right, live clean, not drink....all those vices are for the birds anyway. Sugar and alcohol were never good friends. Training is tricky, my schedule is crazy...but I'm willing, and my ears are wide open.

From Sasha Pachev on Fri, Dec 27, 2013 at 08:03:04 from 72.250.218.114

April:

Some thoughts. Old addictions are a beast and must be taken seriously in order to win over them. You will need some kind of a powerful visual image that means something to you to kick the beast. I have had a few ideas to get you started:

- A 4x4 vehicle seriously stuck in the mud needs to engage all 4 wheels to get out.

- An ambulance rushing to the rescue must not stop at a convenience store for the crew to get a snack.

- Story of Lot's wife turning into a pillar of salt for looking back to Sodom (Genesis 19).

- Luke 9:62: "No man, having put his hand to the plough, and looking back, is fit for the kingdom of God."

- An LDS scripture that our missionaries get to memorize and recite frequently: "And faith, hope, charity, and love with an eye single to the glory of God qualify him for the work" (Doctrine and Covenants 4:5).

Once you become single-minded with regard to your purpose your health, both physical and mental, will begin to improve and 2:50 will happen naturally. In order for this to happen, though, you must see your purpose as something higher than just running a fast marathon with the physical goal being only one of the manifestations of a higher spiritual achievement.

I believe you already know what you should do. The training methods that worked before will work again if applied properly and if your life style is conducive to recovery. It is just a matter of developing the vision that will allow you to apply those principles consistently for a sufficiently long period of time.

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