Practice To Suffer So Racing Becomes Easy

Boston Marathon

Recent EntriesHomeJoin Fast Running Blog Community!PredictorHealthy RecipesHamdog Alum's RacesFind BlogsMileage BoardTop Ten Excuses for Missing a RunTop Ten Training MistakesDiscussion ForumRace Reports Send A Private MessageWeek ViewMonth ViewYear View
JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDec
201120122013
15% off for Fast Running Blog members at St. George Running Center!

Location:

Fort Atkinson,WI,USA

Member Since:

Jul 25, 2011

Gender:

Male

Goal Type:

Local Elite

Running Accomplishments:

High School and Collegiate Major Accomplishments

1997 Illinois State Qualifier 4x800 meter relay, 2000 MIAC All Conference Cross Country , 2000 Division III National Cross Country qualifier, 2001 MIAC All Conference 1500 meter, 2001 Division III National 1500 meter qualifier

Personal Bests (Collegiate) 1999-2001

400 meter 52.9 (1999), 800 meter 1:58 (2001), MIAC Conference 5000 meter 15:01 (2001), Last Chance Qualifier 1500 meter 3:53.8 (2001), 8K 25:01 Division III Pre-National (2001)

Personal Bests (Post Collegiate) Began running again July 2010-

Capital Mile 4:50 (2011), *Luck of The Irish 10K 35:12, *Luck of The Irish 5K 16:24 (2012), Bank of America Shamrock Shuffle 8K 26:18 (2012), Monumental Marathon 2:41:13 (Nov, 2011), 1/2 Champs, Dulth MN 1:16:22 (2012)

*Back to back races




 


Short-Term Running Goals:

2012 Accomplishements

Post Collegiate PR's in 5K,8K,10K

Lifetime PR in 1/2 marathon

Top 10 finishes in Madison Mini and Brewers Mini

Won my 1st 1/2 marathon (River to Ridge)

2013 Plans

Rehab my hamstring and build mileage

Crazy Legs?

Fort 1/2 Marathon?

Lake Front or Madison Marathon?


 

Long-Term Running Goals:

 

Personal:

 

Favorite Blogs:

Ukraine Can Win With Crowdfunded Drones!
Click to Donate
Miles:This week: 0.00 Month: 0.00 Year: 0.00
Saucony Hattori Lifetime Miles: 308.68
Nike Zoom Streak III Lifetime Miles: 201.43
Adidas Adizero Adios Lifetime Miles: 141.13
Saucony Fasttwitch II Lifetime Miles: 256.48
(Red) Nike Lunarlon Lifetime Miles: 562.75
(Black) Lunar Glide Lifetime Miles: 462.51
(Black II) Lunar Glide Lifetime Miles: 387.34
Air Pegasus 28 Lifetime Miles: 267.03
Saucony Type A Lifetime Miles: 27.31
Brooks Adrenaline Lifetime Miles: 249.18
Race: Boston Marathon (26.2 Miles) 03:02:05, Place overall: 617, Place in age division: 458
Easy MilesMarathon Pace MilesThreshold MilesVO2 Max MilesTotal Distance
0.0026.200.000.0026.20

Went through the hardest race I’ve ever faced in my lifetime.  The last 24 hours have been absolutely miserable.  Flu like symptoms kept me in bed sick as a dog last night.  I ran my 2nd slowest ever marathon in 3:02.05 (about 25 minutes slower than I wanted) and wound up hooked to an IV, but I’m satisfied with the result!  It was my 1st hot weather marathon and I stayed with my plan.  In hindsight my plan should have been different, but if you make a decision good or bad you’re the one that has to live with the results and I’m not discouraged.  It’s a learning process and if you race the marathon long enough it’s a matter of time before a humbling marathon becomes part of your race history. 

I must admit I was a little worried about this race being a blow up before I even started due to my inexperience of a hilly marathon course and even more lack of experience with nutrition and the heat was just an additional factor that no one could have predicted.  Who would have predicted it to be the 2nd hottest Boston in history?   

Every marathon I’ve run I’ve failed to stay on pace and I haven’t quite found what works for my nutrition during the race.  The plan this time was 2 cups of water every water stop and electrolyte pills with GU gels every 4-6 miles or whatever my body could handle in the heat.  Of course this was all just a guess because the longest training run I did in this kind of heat was last summer!   My nutrition plan turned out to be a catastrophe!  I hydrated and ate well leading up to the marathon and I have no doubts about it.  During the race Ishould have been drinking the Gatorade instead of water.  At my last marathon the Gatorade was not sitting well, so I abandoned it for this one.  Big mistake!  The electrolyte pills weren’t enough.  I was on goal pace for about 10 miles when I started to run out of electrolytes and my body stopped absorbing the water.  Somehow I stayed tough and maintained a 6:02 pace through the ½ marathon mark, but I knew I was in trouble because shortly after 1/2 I felt my 1st calf cramp.  I took the cramp as a warning sign.  I made a very smart decision to back off the pace and start switching over to 2 cups of Gatorade.

The damage had already been done though.  I would eventually fall to 7:30 pace and to eventually a walking pace when I experienced a very scary cramp that went up my neck into my head.  The cramp caused me to become dizzy and almost fall over.  I thought at 1st I might be having a stroke when it 1st came on.  I now think it was just a neck cramp that moved up along the back of my head, but it caused me to become disoriented.  It was a very scary feeling!  I walked it off and it came back one more time later in the race, but again I immediately started walking and it went away after a minute or so. 

I would also go on to walk several more times with cramping.  I have no doubt the switch to Gatorade was the only reason I was able to finish.  From mile 14 was a long slow race to the finish.  Something I’ll never forget.  It’s such a helpless feeling to be so far away from the finish with no gas left in the tank.

There’s an old saying that says death smiles at us all we can do is smile back.  My loving wife and friend’s family all took the train to mile 17 to cheer us on.  When I ran by them at mile 17 I pointed at my legs and yelled, “My legs are shot” and smiled at them.  The rest of the way I stayed focused on getting to the finish, but that was one moment I really enjoyed in the race.  My family had a miserable time getting around the course.  It was a long day for them.  I felt much love on a very miserable day not only from my family, but all of the amazing spectators, volunteers, and medical personnel.  The medical teams had the hardest job in the city, when I made the medical tent it had just reached 50% capacity.  When I left it was at 100% and the line to get in for medical attention was 200-300 feet of people sitting in wheel chairs with no shade available!  My friend Todd finished almost 2 hours above his qualifying time.  He said he say a lady fall down with her eyes rolled back in her head.  Spectators swarmed her immediately.  He said he saw another guy fall down at mile 26 and had to be wheel chaired away.  A spectator told me 95% of everyone finishing over 4.5 hours were walking.

My 2nd marathon was the journey to our condo.  I barely made it back without the assistance of an ambulance.  I was in the tent for an hour and a half while I received an IV of fluids.  I felt a strong desire to get up and out of there because I could see the strain on the medical teams and I knew there had to be more people outside waiting to get in. 

After about an hour I struggled to get to my feet, but once I was up standing I was steady and feeling okay to walk.  I walked to the family area and found my wife and son.  I started feeling sick again, so I found a shady spot to lie down.   I would stay in that spot until about 5 pm.  I couldn’t get up; every time I did I would throw up or get dizzy. 

I was holding down the water and started taking down chips, so I knew I was on the upswing, but it took a LONG time to get back on my feet.  Once I eventually made it to the train and back home I was confined to a toilet and a bed the rest of the night with what I would call terrible flue like symptoms.  Jen thinks it was heat exhaustion to mild heat stroke due to the temperature swings I was experiencing last night.

From a competition standpoint I stayed on my goal pace through 10K  (5:57 pace) going 6:18, 5:52, 6:00, 5:48, 6:05, 5:48 for a 37:02 10K (All of these felt good, I was just rolling with the hills.  I had faster splits on the down hills and slower splits on the up hills, but everything was in check).  I did exactly what I wanted to do. 

The next 7 miles to the ½ went 5:54, 6:02, 5:56, 6:09, 6:12 (struggled with a side stitch), 5:58, 6:13 (legs were starting to fall apart here) for a 1:19:02 ½ marathon (6:02 pace).  I was still on pace to be in that 2:35-2:40 time range.

After the amazing high of the Wellesley college girls at around mile 14 I was seriously worried about hitting my goal, little did I know I’d soon be worried about finishing!  I went 6:20, 6:38, and 6:26 desperately trying to hang on for miles 14, 15, and 16. 

Mile 17 is when everything came crashing down on me for good.  I split a 7:16 and saw the family, which gave me a little boost going into the hills, but my legs couldn’t muster much.  Miles 18, 19, and 20 were 7:33, 7:32, and 7:44.

I was so out of it I didn’t even realize I ran heart break hill.  The next miles were 8:16, and 8:06.  I had to walk mile 23 and 24 because of the painful feeling up my neck into my head that made me dizzy enough to almost fall over.  These miles were 9:56 and 9:25.  My competitive edge got me going again when I saw a few Kenyans struggling to finish.  Mile 25 I managed 8:08 and my final mile came out to be a 7:16 as I found a stride that seemed to be holding of the cramping.  I crossed the finish line running 6:21 pace with leg cramps and walked to about where they handed out medals.  I started to feel like I was going to faint so I sat down in a wheel chair and I was off to the med tent. 

A character building marathon to say the least!    

Update on the race issues.  Two nights after the race I woke up at 3 am ran into the kitchen and compared the electrolyte pills with my vitamins.   I thought I was taking electrolytes during the race, but they were actually my calcium/magnesium/d3 vitamins.  I had mixed up my vitamins with the electrolytes!  That explains the nausea after the race and the reason I got heat stroke during the race.  I can't believe I could make that kind of mistake.  Unbelievable!   

Saucony Fasttwitch II Miles: 26.20
Night Sleep Time: 8.00Nap Time: 0.00Total Sleep Time: 8.00Weight: 0.00Calories: 0.00
Comments
From MarkP on Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 09:14:37 from 75.169.14.5

Wow, great report. You really ran your body into the ground. I hope you never have another race like it. Incredible job. Congratulations!

From allie on Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 10:44:34 from 161.38.218.168

wow, what an experience. i'm sorry you had to go through all of that yesterday -- sounds very scary. way to pull through and get to the finish in spite of the cramping, disorientation, etc. i hope you are feeling better and recovering well today. the next marathon will be a breeze!

From fiddy on Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 11:40:18 from 155.101.96.137

Character building and a little scary. Glad you're alright.

From Kam on Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 11:47:52 from 98.191.61.126

It sounds like you just barely survived. I'm glad you are okay.

From I Just Run on Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 13:32:49 from 67.79.11.242

Whooo...Hooo...mark it down as a "finish" and be proud of it!!!

From Jake K on Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 13:50:05 from 50.138.183.237

Wow Erik - I don't even know how to respond to this. I'm seriously just glad you are OK. I had no idea it got that bad for you... had I known, I would have come looking for you afterwards and tried to help you out. You are a fighter, dude. I don't know how you made it through all that.

It was really great to finally meet this weekend. I enjoyed the time we spent running and hanging out on Saturday. I'm looking forward to meeting up again this summer in Duluth.

Hope you are feeling better today.

From Andrea on Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 13:56:53 from 50.138.183.237

Whoa...scary experience. I wish I would've been able to find you on the course (although I know I couldn't really have helped much).

You were laying until 5pm?! And then it sounds like it was a pretty brutal night. I hope you start feeling better!! This really puts the difficult race conditions in perspective.

I know you were in shape to run that 2:35. You will get another chance...and just like you said - if you run enough marathons you will have some kind of epic experience. I will say that I am impressed with your 3:02 given the obviously rough conditions you were in.

From Scott Ensign on Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 14:58:59 from 70.58.98.19

geez that is pretty scary. glad you are OK. Boston is such a crapshoot, I don't think anyone can plan on having a great race there, it just depends on the weather. well, you will remember this fondly in 10 years. maybe. anyway well done and get some rest

From Rachelle on Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 19:19:01 from 66.7.127.115

Wow what an experience. You are incredibly strong for finishing. My very first marathon went down exactly like this so I can totally relate to not being able to move for hours. I am so so sorry you had to go through that but you are right about a character building experience.

You are so strong and should be proud that you endured to the finish. It was nice to meet you Sunday morning.

From Dan on Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 22:27:05 from 24.209.83.20

Erik, I read this in the car (as you probably know by now) , you are one tough runner. It was great meeting and running with you Sunday. Hope you are feeling better and getting rest!

From jtshad on Wed, Apr 18, 2012 at 05:03:43 from 12.189.157.238

Erik, congrats on finishing a tough race, I am so glad you are ok. The conditions were hard and this is a hard course to run in the first place.

It must have been great having your family here for support.

Congrats on finishing one of the hardest Bostons ever. Spend some good time recovering.

From JG on Sat, Apr 21, 2012 at 08:00:49 from 71.57.246.108

Erik, wait to hang tough ... glad you recovered pretty quickly from pushing your body past its limits! I was keeping everyone in my prayers who went out aggressive ... I was overheating by Mile 4 I think, & I went out conservative! It was great meeting you Sunday ... hope to see you there next year so we can get some revenge on the course on a kinder day!

Add Your Comment.
  • Keep it family-safe. No vulgar or profane language. To discourage anonymous comments of cowardly nature, your IP address will be logged and posted next to your comment.
  • Do not respond to another person's comment out of context. If he made the original comment on another page/blog entry, go to that entry and respond there.
  • If all you want to do is contact the blogger and your comment is not connected with this entry and has no relevance to others, send a private message instead.
Only registered users with public blogs are allowed to post comments. Log in with your username and password or create an account and set up a blog.
Debt Reduction Calculator
Featured Announcements
Lone Faithfuls
(need a comment):
Recent Comments: