But I scientifically digress.
My marathon is looming. Loom loom loom. Sunday Sunday Sunday. I keep trying to sabotage myself, like buying multiple pieces of new training gear this week such as shoes and running capris and skirts and crazily thinking, "MAYBE I SHOULD WEAR THIS FOR MY MARATHON!" I am also driving my husband bonkers, waking him up at 4:45 AM just to talk because, for once, I'm not busy running in the dark and have nothing better to do but because my alarm went off at the regular time I am wide awake. My taper madness knows no bounds, it seems.
When I'm not busy being tapering madly, I am thinking about my goal for this marathon. Actually, I have several marathon goals:
- Try to maintain my time goal. (10:00/mile)
- Try to not think about my time goal when I realize I probably started too fast and this is my first marathon and I shouldn't really have a time goal anyway, unless that time goal is specifically for former fat chicks who smoked 2 packs a day for 16 years.
- To cross the finish line without suffering a crippling horrific injury.
- To hang out with the 4:30 pacers and then try and gradually pass them if my legs are feeling good.
- To stay behind the 4:30 pacers if I am not feeling strong and make friends with my fellow back-of-the-packers until we reach a point of friendliness that we leave the course and hang out at the first bar we pass.
- To wear my Camelbak and look like a total nerd (or draw other running nerds to me as they ask where I got my SWEET backpack).
- To not lace my shoes so tightly that I give myself another case of tendinitis by mile 19.
- Not to cry.
- Not to walk.
- To try and get a few molecules of water in my mouth as I try to drink and run through water stations.
- Not to sit down in the middle of the course and beg for my mother (who would just tell me to suck it up, buttercup).
- To remember to eat the gels I bring with me before they start handing them out at mile 17.
- Not to snot rocket until I get onto the bike path.
- To set my Garmin to show me my pace after each lap rather than my instantaneous pace so I don't get all kooky over numbers.
So some of those goals are really contingency plans in disguise; at least I'm preparing for contingencies. But my main goal, as trite and overused as it sounds, is to have fun and enjoy the experience. I will be stopping to take pictures. I will crack jokes with other runners. I will try and remember to shut off all the annoying beeps on my Garmin. (That reminds me of one more goal--actually bring and wear my Garmin. Remember, it is the boss of me.)
But I will mostly try and remember that I can do this. I can finish. Dammit, if Oprah can do it, so can I.
No comments:
Post a Comment