I Can Do Hard Things

Dogtown Half Marathon

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Location:

American Fork,UT,

Member Since:

Nov 27, 2009

Gender:

Female

Goal Type:

Boston Qualifier

Running Accomplishments:

St George Marathon

2011 - 4:11:52 

2017. -4:01:17

2021 - 4:03:05

Salt Lake City Full Marathon

2013 -  4:23:03 

Ogden Marathon

2012 - 3:58:35

2013 - 4:17:20

2014 - 4:02:51

2017 - 3:55:22**

2023 - 3:57:09

Utah Valley Marathon

2019 - 4:05:37 

Top of Utah Marathon

2014 - 4:09:27

Mt Charleston Marathon

2019 - 4:05:33

West Mountain Marathon

2015 - 4:42:34

 

St George Half Marathon

2012 - 1:55:00

2013 - 2:03:00

2014 - 1:46:00

2015 - 1:48:00

2022-  1:42:45**

Salt Lake City Half Marathon

2012 - 1:51:00

2014 - 1:44:01

Hobble Creek Half Marathon

2001 - 1:40:00**

2011 - 1:45:00

2012 - 1:43:00

2013 - 1:43:00 

2022 - 1:48:53

American Fork Half Marathon

2013 - 1:48:24

2014- 1:53:23 (pacing Tim)

2017  - 1:47:54

2018 - 1:48:12

2019 - 1:47:50

Timp Half Marathon

2012 - 1:47:18 

2022 - 1:49:40 (AF Cancer course)

Utah Valley Half Marathon 

2011 - 1:55:00 

Top of Utah Half Marathon

2010 - 1:48:20 

The Haunted Half Provo

2018 - 1:51:28

 

Goblin Valley 50K

2014 - 5:58

Red Mountain 55K

2018 - 7:31:37

Antelope Island Fall Classic 50K

2017 - 6:14:23

Antelope Island 50 Mile

2015 - 10:10:00

Antelope Island 100 Mile

2018 - 26:53

 

 

**Personal Best 

 

 

Short-Term Running Goals:

 

 

Long-Term Running Goals:

To qualify for Boston

Personal:

Married for 23 years. I have 18 year old triplets and a 15 year old. I love to sew, garden, and run!

Favorite Running Quotes: 

1.  

"Sooner or later the serious runner goes through a special, very personal experience that is unknown to most people.

Some call it euphoria. Others say it's a new kind of mystical experience that propels you into a elevated state of consciousness, a flash of joy.

A sense of floating as you run. This experience is unique to each of us, but when it happens, you break through a barrier that separates you from casual runners. Forever. And from that point on, there is no finish line. You run for your life. You begin to be addicted to what running gives you."  

~Nike Poster

2.           A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.

Lao-Tzu

You’ve no doubt heard this.  And you’ve probably recited it in your mind on a run or at the gym when you’re just beginning to get in shape.  You have a goal in sight and this quote brings you back to the current moment.

 

But the problem is that many runners forget all of the steps between the first one and the goal.  If your goal is to run under two hours for the half marathon then you need to be honest about all of the little steps to get to that goal.

 

…and what I’d rather see you do is to get the goal out of mind completely, but rather focus on the process, not the outcome. -Jay Johnson Process orientation, not outcome orientation.

 

You should have goals, but you should take it one step at a time.  And you should be honest about the fact that you don’t know how many steps it will take to get there. ~ Vernon Gambetta

 

3.  Human beings are made up of flesh, blood and a miracle fiber called COURAGE! ~ George Patton 

 

4.   Find the courage to be patient.

Favorite Blogs:

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Miles:This week: 0.00 Month: 72.21 Year: 455.58
2014 - Minutes Lifetime Miles: 28605.00
Race: Dogtown Half Marathon (12.87 Miles) 01:52:14, Place overall: 183, Place in age division: 21
Slow milesFast milesTotal Distance
12.870.0012.87

AP: 8:43

Tim and I left American Fork around 12:00pm on Friday.  I was so excited he was coming with me (to support my *habit*).  We stopped in Washington city center to pick up my race packet.  They gave away shorts instead of shirts.  They were nice shorts, but have "Get Bit" on the back of them...lame!

We checked into the hotel, ate some pizza at the Pizza Factory and decided to see the movie "This Means War" (which was very funny).  I got to bed around 10:00pm.

I slept great but my hips were still aching.  I guess you never know what to expect on a race morning.  Since it's been 4 weeks since my last race, my main goal was to beat my 1:55 St George Half Marathon time.

Tim drove me to the start.  I was very surprised to see how small the race was (405 runners versus 1400 for the SGH).   Though it was a bit chilly, the sun was shining and it was definitely going to warm up.  They played the National Anthem - I LOVE when they play it!  I was so grateful I was able to run today (versus not being able to run).

Mile 1 (8:02) - It is always hard to judge how fast to go out on a steep decline.  They had the race running on a tiny trail.  I finally got off the trail and ran on the shoulder of the road - too many people.  I was really worried I had gone out too fast.

Mile 2 (8:25) - Still very down hill.  The wind was blowing from the side and my eyes kept watering.  I had tears running down my face.  Nice!  Hips are definitely aching and I'm hoping that they will stop soon.

Mile 3 (8:43) - Still down hill.  We start running on a dirt road.  Thankfully it didn't last long.  Water stop.  Feeling good.

Mile 4 (8:20) - Hell's Hole - the canyon's walls felt like they were close enough to touch!  There were a lot of "dips" - super steep decline...dip...super steep incline.  Those drastic changes are hard on the body.  The shade from the canyon was wonderful!

Mile 5 (8:31) - It started to flatten out which can be hard when you've been going down such steep declines.  Wondering when I am going to blow up!

Mile 6/7 (9:02/9:14) - Starting to climb.  I was pleased with how I handled these two big climbs.  I was definitely tired, but felt like I put forth an honest effort (knowing I still had a big climb at mile 10).  Water stop-GU.

Mile 8 (8:38) - A nice long downhill.  It was quite refreshing after a long climb.  I was starting to get tired.  I knew Tim was going to meet me somewhere along the course and I was getting excited to see him.

Mile 9/10 (9:04/9:22) - Climb, climb climb.  Tim joined in just before mile 10.  He knows me so well - he asked if I wanted stories (to keep my mind off of running) or just to keep quiet and run).  I only had enough energy to say "run".  Water stop - GU.  We got up through one climb, turned right on a street and started another climb.  When I turned that corner, I let out an audible"Uhhhhh". 

Mile 11/12 (8:45/8:39) - The course started to flatten out and we were running through farm country.  I was just trying to hang on at this point.  I looked at my watch and thought I could maybe hit a 1:52 if I could just hang on.  Water stop.  After this water stop, I started to feel the pukes coming on.  I hate the pukes.

Mile 13 (7:22) - I had a hard time figuring out where the finish was.  I knew the mile markers had been off and the race was slightly short.  I crossed the line and knew if I didn't get my breathing under control, I would lose my breakfast.  I had a volunteer run up to me and grab my arm.  I said I was fine and just need to stand here a minute and catch my breath.  He stood and waited a few minutes to make sure I was ok.  I was just hoping I wouldn't puke on his shoes. 

I grabbed some gatoraide and it made me feel more pukey.  I just sat for awhile till my stomach settled down. 

I was pleased with my time and effort.  I'm still trying to decide how this course compares to the St George Half marathon course...easier or harder.  I don't like having the steep decline at the beginning.  Though I felt pukey at the end, I think I pushed harder through the entire race (more so than SGH). 

We went back to the hotel, and cleaned up (no ice bath this time).  I had to sit for awhile and let my stomach continue to settle.  I'm so grateful for my husband who understand that sometimes I just need to be quiet (like during the race and at the hotel).  We ate a quick lunch at Cafe Rio (a pork salad does wonders for the stomach...NOT) and headed home.  Nap on the way home!

My hips are ON FIRE!!  I need to figure something out with them. 

St George Runner's Series DONE!

Weight: 0.00
Comments
From Smooth on Sat, Feb 25, 2012 at 23:05:41 from 174.27.219.252

YeeHaaw! AWESOME race!!! Sounds like a tough course to get in the groove with the initial downhill miles on different surfaces (narrow concrete trail, dirt, slot canyon, etc.) and what's with the dips then the uphills at the later mikes. You did great keeping a strong effort! Excellent race! Love that you push so hard you almost puke! I have only run in puke zone once...that was a 5k...so nothing to brag about! I am so proud of you! :). Glad you had Tim there for support! What a gem of a hubby!

Hope the hips feel better! Yay for completing the SG runner series...St. George is in the bag! :)

Sleep well!

From RAD on Sat, Feb 25, 2012 at 23:26:51 from 98.202.23.178

Awesome race Toby! I will have to remember that sometimes it is good to just run :) I'm always noisy and full of stories. You really did a great job, that course doesn't sound easy at all. Hills late in the game and those dips sound painful. There are some along a trail out here and I hate running them.

Congrats on getting the Runners Series done and having a good weekend out with hubby! I'm trying to swing taking Spectrum as a getaway weekend. You are hittin' it girl! I just hope those hips settle down. Always seems like it is one thing or another :(

From Chad on Sun, Feb 26, 2012 at 07:40:51 from 71.199.13.143

Nice race, good job. You really powered up those hills. Congratulations.

From Bec on Mon, Feb 27, 2012 at 15:08:53 from 68.206.133.141

Sweet race Toby! That sounds like an interesting half, glad you could finish it! Bet you are happy to be done with the series. Now off to the big race, right? :) (SGM)

From Scott Wesemann on Mon, Feb 27, 2012 at 15:18:48 from 205.158.160.209

Congrats on your race. You did awesome. I bet some ibuprofen would help with the hips.

Pork salad mmmmmmm.

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